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Games for Your Mind: The History and Future of Logic Puzzles

Autor Jason Rosenhouse

Editorial PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

Games for Your Mind: The History and Future of Logic Puzzles
-5% dto.    34,00€
32,30€
Ahorra 1,70€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular
  • Editorial PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780691174075
  • ISBN10 0691174075
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 352
  • Año de Edición 2020
  • Idioma Inglés
  • Encuadernación Tapa dura

Games for Your Mind: The History and Future of Logic Puzzles

Autor Jason Rosenhouse

Editorial PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

-5% dto.    34,00€
32,30€
Ahorra 1,70€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

A lively and engaging look at logic puzzles and their role in recreation, mathematics, and philosophy.

A lively and engaging look at logic puzzles and their role in recreation, mathematics, and philosophyLogic puzzles were first introduced to the public by Lewis Carroll in the late nineteenth century and have been popular ever since. Games like Sudoku and Mastermind are fun and engrossing recreational activities, but they also share deep foundations in mathematical logic and are worthy of serious intellectual inquiry. Games for Your Mind explores the history and future of logic puzzles while enabling you to test your skill against a variety of puzzles yourself.

In this informative and entertaining book, Jason Rosenhouse begins by introducing readers to logic and logic puzzles and goes on to reveal the rich history of these puzzles. He shows how Carroll's puzzles presented Aristotelian logic as a game for children, yet also informed his scholarly work on logic. He reveals how another pioneer of logic puzzles, Raymond Smullyan, drew on classic puzzles about liars and truthtellers to illustrate Kurt Goedel's theorems and illuminate profound questions in mathematical logic.

Rosenhouse then presents a new vision for the future of logic puzzles based on nonclassical logic, which is used today in computer science and automated reasoning to manipulate large and sometimes contradictory sets of data. Featuring a wealth of sample puzzles ranging from simple to extremely challenging, this lively and engaging book brings together many of the most ingenious puzzles ever devised, including the "Hardest Logic Puzzle Ever," metapuzzles, paradoxes, and the logic puzzles in detective stories.

Jason Rosenhouse is professor of mathematics at James Madison University. He is the author of The Monty Hall Problem: The Remarkable Story of Math's Most Contentious Brain Teaser and Among the Creationists: Dispatches from the Anti-Evolutionist Front Line. He is the coauthor (with Laura Taalman) of Taking Sudoku Seriously: The Math behind the World's Most Popular Pencil Puzzle and the coeditor (with Jennifer Beineke) of The Mathematics of Various Entertaining Subjects (Vols. 1?3) (Princeton).

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