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Poincare's Prize: The Hundred-Year Quest to Solve One of Math's Greatest Puzzles
Poincare's Prize: The Hundred-Year Quest to Solve One of Math's Greatest Puzzles

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Author: George G. Szpiro
Publisher: Dutton Adult
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
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New (9) Used (12) Collectible (1) from $4.50

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 142476

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.9 x 1.1

Dewey Decimal Number: 510.76
ASIN: B000YT3KAO

Publication Date: June 21, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The amazing story of one of the greatest math problems of all time and the reclusive genius who solved it

In the tradition of Fermats Enigma and Prime Obsession, George Szpiro brings to life the giants of mathematics who struggled to prove a theorem for a century and the mysterious man from St. Petersburg, Grigory Perelman, who fi nally accomplished the impossible. In 1904 Henri Poincare developed the Poincare Conjecture, an attempt to understand higher-dimensional space and possibly the shape of the universe. The problem was he couldnt prove it. A century later it was named a Millennium Prize problem, one of the seven hardest problems we can imagine. Now this holy grail of mathematics has been found.

Accessibly interweaving history and math, Szpiro captures the passion, frustration, and excitement of the hunt, and provides a fascinating portrait of a contemporary noble-genius.



Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A Moving and Engaging Story   October 15, 2008
This semester, I'm taking a course on topology, just for fun. Hence, I've grown more and more interested in stories about mathematicians who work in the field of topology, and no tale is grander than the race to prove the Poincare Conjecture!

Math enthusiasts will know that it is no longer a conjecture, but a theorem now. It was finally proven for n=3 by Grigori Perelman, an odd Russian genius who chose seclusion and anonymity over fame and glory. The book "Poincare's Prize" is full of stories about mathematicians who succeeded in proving the conjecture for certain dimensions (Smale proved n>4, and Freedman proved n=4), and others who spent the better part of their lives searching for one.

As if the writing wasn't enough, the lives of these mathematicians keep the reader engaged. The story of some of these mathematicians will bound to make the reader smile (people like Stephen Smale), some will evoke unlimited sympathy (all those who failed to find a proof), some will leave the reader angry (like Yau Shing Tung), and finally there is one person who will force the reader to imagine the unconstrained capabilities of the human mind, and that person is Grigori Perelman.

Perelman is the shining star of the book, his ultimate triumph and his withdrawal from mathematics and the media's attention not only makes for a potential Hollywood movie, but also forces the reader to think about the meaning of accolades and prizes, more importantly to ponder the underlying drive to find truth.



3 out of 5 stars Where are the Pictures?   August 6, 2008
A story that I wanted to love. Unfortunately, the complete lack of illustrations left me increasingly in the dark. I'm very surprised that an editor would not have insisted on their inclusion in a book clearly marketed to the great unwashed.


5 out of 5 stars interesting book   May 17, 2008
 36 out of 36 found this review helpful

I am a mathematician/statistician and thoroughly enjoyed the book. The author George Szpiro writes a great story that is fascinating reading. Szpiro is a very well-qualified person to write this book as he holds a masters degree from Stanford and a PhD in mathematical economics from the Hebrew University. Dr. Grigori Perelman is generally created with solving a 100 year old problem that is eligible for the Clay Prize and actually had a great deal to do with his being awarded a Field's medal. Although this is about high level theoretical mathematics it is a historical account written for the general public and very understandable to general audiences.

As he usually does Dr. Lee Carlson has given a very detailed review on amazon for this book and discuss in length issues about whther or not Perelman's work really proves the conjecture. But Perelman is an odd character. He has divorced himself from the mathematical community and refuses to publish his work which is a requirement for th 1 million dollar Clay Prize! It is hard to understand why he won't do it. But then again it is also difficult to understand why he is the first and only recipient of the Field's Medal to refuse it! I believe that Szpiro believes as do most mathematicians that the Poincare conjecture is now a theorem and the Perelman is deserving of the Clay Prize. I think Dr. Carlson is a little too harsh in his assessment.

The story also tells of the life and works of Henri Poincare a mathematical genius who lived in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Poincare's accomplishments are impressive and his conjectures about the n body problem came out of his work that won him the first and only King Oscar award for his solution of the 3 body problem. Poincare's proof had a flaw in it that only he discovered. It was missed by the referee's of the entries in the competition. In the correcting his work and arriving at an interesting and different area, Poincare actually opened the door to Chaos theory and the mathematical subdiscipline of algebraic topology.

I also found very interesting the description of Poincare's earlier work as a mining engineer, a job he apparently like. His first work in that area was to determine the cause of a mining explosion that had cost several coal miners their lives. This was a field that Poincare was soon to abandon for his greater interest in mathematical research.

This is a beautifully written book that is hard to put down once you start it!



4 out of 5 stars good biographies and imaginative analogies   April 3, 2008
This is a book about Poincare's Conjecture, the efforts to establish it as true
or demonstrate its falsity, and the mathematicians involved in those efforts.

The mathematical domain involved is called topology, previously analysis situs.
In two dimensions it is sometimes called rubber sheet geometry. It is about what
is true if the medium is bent, stretched, or compressed, but not torn or glued.
While early work in the field was concrete and easily visualized, such as walking
tours that satisfied various constraints, and relationships between the number
of surfaces, edges, and vertices of a solid, the subject quickly became very
abstract and dealt with things in more than 3 dimensions.

The book contains biographies of many mathematicians that worked on the problem.
Some are brief, and some are the size of magazine articles. Even if you are a
fan of mathematical history, you will probably meet many interesting people you
did not know about, or probably that you have not heard of. Many are noble and
many have feet of clay. Especially in recent decades there are many controversies.
I know none of the facts, but Szpiro seems to be an unbiased and accurate observer.
Many pairs of participants are linked by the PhD advisor to student relation.
This link seems to have led to some of the dubious behavior described. You can find
more such links on the web at the Mathematics Genealogy Project, a joint venture
of North Dakota State University and the American Mathematical Society.

The biographies are intertwined with a description of the problem and the techniques
used on it. This is not a math book. The mathematical descriptions are by
analogy. I did not enjoy the attempted explanations as much as the biographies,
perhaps because of my math degree. But you might disagree. In any case, I won't
blame the author for weak analogies. They are generally imaginative, and as
accurate as I can imagine. The problem is the problem domain. Most of us can not
imagine things like five dimensional bagels.

Overall, the book is good enough that I will try another of Szpiro's works,
and the chances that I'll try to learn more topology were increased by it.



4 out of 5 stars Chronicle of a Conjecture   February 16, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

In 1904, Henri Poincare published a paper in which he asked: " Is it possible that the fundamental group of a manifold be trivial and yet the manifold not be homeomorphic to a sphere ? " and added that " this question would lead us too far astray."
For the next hundred years, mathematicians from different parts of the world chased a solution , sometimes even sacrificing their own careers.

The author begins with the International Congress of Mathematicians that took place in Madrid, Spain on August 22, 2006. It is an occasion when the Fields Medal (equivalent to the Nobel Prize) is awarded to selected brilliant mathematicians. Gregori Perelman, who was one of the medalists for his solution of the Poincare Conjecture, did not show up. The king of Spain had to wait in vain.
Perelman "spent the festive day hidden away in the modest apartment that he shared with his mother in a drab neighborhood of St. Petersburg."
We learn that Perelman is concerned about the ethics in the mathematics community. He says: " Even those who are more or less honest tolerate those who are not."
In the final chapter, the author tells about the million dollar prize by the Clay Institute for anyone who solves the Poincare Conjecture. Will Perelman be awarded ? will he accept ?

The second chapter is about the perception of dimensions. An ant crawling on a basketball thinks that the surface is completely flat. The sailors of Christopher Colombus were afraid they might fall off the edge of what they believed to be a flat world. A ball is a three-dimensional object and its surface is two dimensional. A gentle introduction.

In the next two chapters we get to know more about Poincare. He was trained as a mining engineer. His analytical mind came handy when he investigated a tragic accident in a coal mine, where sixteen people had been killed. Later, Poincare became a professor of math and won an Oscar Prize ( named after king Oscar II of Sweden ) for working on the three-body problem (the stability of the solar system is at stake !).

As I learned from other sources , Poincare was also a president of the Bureau of Longitudes and helped draw the world map for the colonies of the French empire. It is a puzzle that he did not come up with relativity theory after his intensive work on space, time and electrodynamics. One explanation is that he wanted to repair tradition and believed in such things as ether. The anti-authoritarian Einstein succeeded in defeating the Newtonian empire.


The next chapter "Geometry without Euclid" tells us about the origins and the purpose of topology. How to cross all the bridges (once each) of the town Koenigsburg ; how to classify objects according to their cavities , tunnels and twists. What are the betti numbers of pretzels, bagels and balls ?

The rest of the book is about the chronicle of the conjecture. The author tries to help the reader visualize the images of the objects. Manifolds can be imagined as flying carpets in the sky. As Poincare said : " Geometry is the art of reasoning well with badly made figures."
Two objects are topologically equivalent (homeomorphic), if they can be deformed to each other by pulling and creasing and crumpling , without tearing and gluing. A carpet is equivalent to a quilt but not to a poncho.

The Poincare Conjecture can help us figure out the shape of the universe. Are we living on a ball , a bagel or a pretzel ?




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