Rating: ****
Tags: Mathematics, General, Lang:en
Publisher: MIT Press
Added: March 6, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
An antidote to mathematical rigor mortis, teaching how to
guess answers without needing a proof or an exact
calculation.In problem solving, as in street fighting, rules
are for fools: do whatever works—don't just stand
there! Yet we often fear an unjustified leap even though it
may land us on a correct result. Traditional mathematics
teaching is largely about solving exactly stated problems
exactly, yet life often hands us partly defined problems
needing only moderately accurate solutions. This engaging
book is an antidote to the rigor mortis brought on by too
much mathematical rigor, teaching us how to guess answers
without needing a proof or an exact calculation.In
Street-Fighting Mathematics, Sanjoy Mahajan builds, sharpens,
and demonstrates tools for educated guessing and
down-and-dirty, opportunistic problem solving across diverse
fields of knowledge—from mathematics to management.
Mahajan describes six tools: dimensional analysis, easy
cases, lumping, picture proofs, successive approximation, and
reasoning by analogy. Illustrating each tool with numerous
examples, he carefully separates the tool—the general
principle—from the particular application so that the
reader can most easily grasp the tool itself to use on
problems of particular interest. Street-Fighting Mathematics
grew out of a short course taught by the author at MIT for
students ranging from first-year undergraduates to graduate
students ready for careers in physics, mathematics,
management, electrical engineering, computer science, and
biology. They benefited from an approach that avoided rigor
and taught them how to use mathematics to solve real
problems.Street-Fighting Mathematics will appear in print and
online under a Creative Commons Noncommercial Share Alike
license.