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Mathematics for Beginners

Sarah Hull Tom Mumbray Paul Boston

$19.99

Hardback

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English
Usborne
07 November 2022
Series: For Beginners
Explore the many ways maths can help make sense out of life.

This book WON'T test your mental maths or teach you countless ways to find x. It WILL show you just how fascinating maths can be.

Can maths make people rich? Can formulas predict which sports teams will win more games? Can equations explain the mysteries of the universe? The short answer to all these is YES. This book explores and explains the ways that the tools of mathematics help people make sense of the world around them, predict the future and, just maybe, how to make life itself better.

By:   ,
Illustrated by:   Paul Boston
Imprint:   Usborne
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 242mm,  Width: 176mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   540g
ISBN:   9781474998543
ISBN 10:   1474998542
Series:   For Beginners
Pages:   128
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 10 to 16 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  English as a second language
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
What is maths? What is maths for? How do you do maths? Chapter 1: The beginning of maths What did the first numbers look like, and what did people use them for? Chapter 2: Numbers Number shapes, number patterns, prime numbers and numbers that go on and on and on...to infinity. Chapter 3: Shapes and measuring How and why people use the tools of mathematics to describe the shapes of everything, from everyday objects to the entire universe. Chapter 4: How maths is shown Making graphs, drawing diagrams and using pictures to explain the world better, and to help solve problems. Chapter 5: Prove it In mathematics, you can find an answer to a problem and know for certain that it is correct. But how? With a PROOF. Chapter 6: Probability and statistics Maths can tell you the truth and predict the future - up to a point. How does it do this, and how can you spot when people are (mis)using maths to lie? Chapter 7: Maths, computers and the future No mathematics, no computers. But what kind of maths do people use to make computers works? Chapter 8: Mathematical models Describing real-world problems with maths to give insights into future weather, profits, and even human behavior. What's next? Jobs in maths Glossary Index Acknowledgements

Sarah grew up in London, then studied German and Fine Art in Oxford and Hamburg. She joined Usborne after working at Profile Books and Thames & Hudson, and now spends her time writing about art, investigating germs and devising ways to stave off boredom - all the important things, basically

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