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Topic: Ian Stewart (mathematician)


  
  Ian Stewart (mathematician) information - Search.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Ian Stewart was born in 1945 in England.
This teacher arranged for Stewart to be admitted to Cambridge on a scholarship to Churchill College, where he obtained a BA in Mathematics.
Stewart then went to the University of Warwick for his PhD, on completion of which he was offered an academic position.
c10-ss-1-lb.cnet.com /reference/Ian_Stewart_(mathematician)   (860 words)

  
 A Conversation with Three Scientists:  Philip Ball, Brian Goodwin and Ian Stewart
Ian Stewart FRS is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick, and Director of the Mathematics Awareness Centre there.
Stewart: I do think that there is a tendency among some people of an artistic bent to try to understand science in the terms that are familiar with them, especially metaphor and verbal arguments.
Stewart: There seems to be a tendency for science and mathematics to be taking on a more human face in certain respects – focusing on questions about humanity’s place in the universe and on human-level experience.
www.katarxis3.com /Three_Scientists.htm   (7375 words)

  
 Amazon.de: Letters to a Young Mathematician (Art of Mentoring): English Books: Ian Stewart   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The letters span a period of 20 years, from the time the niece is thinking about studying mathematics in high school through the early years of her academic career.
He also discusses the beauty mathematicians can find in the natural world, demonstrating that a focus on numbers and patterns can enhance rather than detract from an aesthetic appreciation of the environment.
Stewart also does a superb job of examining the nature and value of both applied research and pure research, which, he shows, are not nearly as disparate as many think.
www.amazon.de /Letters-Young-Mathematician-Ian-Stewart/dp/0465082319   (418 words)

  
 The Daily Cougar--News Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Stewart began the lecture by explaining the changes in probability of a problem and how answers differ depending on the question asked and what options or clues are given.
Stewart then showed a transparency with the four possible answers: "BB (Boy, Boy), BG (Boy, Girl), GB (Girl, Boy) or GG (Girl, Girl)." Stewart quickly eliminated the first choice of BB, because the family had at least one girl.
Mathematician Ian Stewart explained factors that affect probability in his lecture "Probability and Chance: Lotteries and Game Shows" Thursday at the Hines College of Architecture Theater.
www.stp.uh.edu /vol66/65/news/news1.html   (515 words)

  
 IAN STEWART   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Ian Stewart is a distinguished British mathematician and writer.
As I understand Stewart’s notions, in his view the distinction between “order” and “disorder” has no rigorous definition but only an intuitive understanding which is one of the reasons that the definition of entropy as a measure of disorder is not well-substantiated.
Stewart suggests that a Fourth law of thermodynamics may indeed exist, but in his view it is not the putative law of conservation of information (which, I believe, belongs in crank science) but rather a more plausible “2
members.cox.net /perakm/stewart.htm   (2736 words)

  
 'Letters to a young mathematician'
With this collection of letters Ian Stewart, accomplished mathematician, science writer, and even science fiction writer, accompanies a young and imaginary student on her path to becoming a professional mathematician.
Stewart does a great job at differentiating the tedious and seemingly irrelevant equations and formulae we encounter at school from the beautiful and fascinating world of ideas that constitutes "real" maths and motivates mathematicians.
His descriptions of what inspires mathematicians show that their aim is not to drown all the world's beauty in this ocean (as you might think when you first encounter a maths book full of symbols and numbers) but to take a greater share in it.
plus.maths.org /issue41/reviews/book2/index.html   (649 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Ian Stewart
Ian Stewart (athlete) (born 1949), Scottish Olympic athlete
Ian Stewart (Labour politician) (born 1950), Scottish politician
Ian Stewart (journalist), shot in the head while reporting on the Sierra Leone Civil War, he survived to tell his story
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Ian_Stewart   (227 words)

  
 Amazon.fr : Letters to a Young Mathematician: Livres en anglais: Ian Stewart   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Stewart also does a superb job of examining the nature and value of both applied research and pure research, which, he shows, are not nearly as disparate as many think.
Mathematician Ian Stewart tells readers what he wishes he had known when he was a student.
He takes up subjects ranging from the philosophical to the practical--what mathematics is and why it's worth doing, the relationship between logic and proof, the role of beauty in mathematical thinking, the future of mathematics, how to deal with the peculiarities of the mathematical community, and many others.
www.amazon.fr /Letters-Young-Mathematician-Ian-Stewart/dp/0465082327   (409 words)

  
 Alwyn Scott's Review of "Figments of Reality by Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen"
Happily, mathematician Ian Stewart and biologist Jack Cohen live up to the claims of their promoters.
The course of evolution, Stewart and Cohen suggest, is of the second sort, where the rules of the game change over time and the aim is to stay in play.
One (Stewart) is a respected mathematician with a deep knowledge of current physical science, and the other (Cohen) is a biologist with wide appreciation for the varieties of living creatures.
psyche.cs.monash.edu.au /v5/psyche-5-33-scott.html   (1874 words)

  
 Amazon.com: What Shape is a Snowflake?: Books: Ian Stewart   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Stewart starts by hinting at the depth and implications of his seemingly simple question about snowflakes, presenting a little history of mathematicians' efforts to understand patterns, and explaining the significance of symmetry.
Stewart says, he sees mathematics and beauty as attached ideas and this book is an effort to show the beauty of mathematics.
It is clear that Stewart sees connections everywhere, and is only using the snowflake as an excuse to look at the foundations of physical laws, the nature of time, space, and matter, and why patterns in one field give clues to patterns in something entirely different.
www.amazon.com /What-Shape-Snowflake-Ian-Stewart/dp/0716747944   (2072 words)

  
 Read This: Letters to a Young Mathematician
Mathematicians are the first category of academic professionals to be featured.
Stewart names his young mathematician "Meg," and then follows her career from the end of high school all the way to her being awarded tenure, trying to answer the natural questions that arise at each stage.
Overall, Stewart has written a useful and friendly introduction to life as a mathematician, one that many of our students (if we can get them to read it) will find helpful and motivating.
www.maa.org /reviews/StewartLetters.html   (616 words)

  
 Powell's Books - Letters to a Young Mathematician by Ian Stewart
The first scientific entry in the acclaimed Art of Mentoring series from Basic Books, Letters to a Young Mathematician tells readers what Ian Stewart wishes he had known when he was a student and young faculty member.
Ian Stewart is professor of mathematics at the University of Warwick, where he is director of Mathematics Awareness Center.
Stewart was awarded the Royal Society's Michael Faraday Medal for furthering the public understanding of science and he delivered the prestigious Royal Institution Christmas Lectures in 1997.
www.powells.com /biblio?isbn=0465082319   (570 words)

  
 Cosmic Pro-Lifers - UFO Evidence
Cohen and Stewart castigate scientists for a lack of imagination about the possible forms and habitats of extraterrestrial life.
Here, Cohen and Stewart are harshly critical of "astrobiology," the interdisciplinary scientific field that examines the possibility of extraterrestrial life.
They note that such habitability could also occur in far-flung planets or moons that have their own heat sources, or in bodies that orbit close to a star but do not rotate (there would be a warm region between the hot hemisphere facing the star and the cold one facing away).
www.ufoevidence.org /documents/doc1002.htm   (1018 words)

  
 MathsNet Resources: Ian Stewart books
In this book, Ian Stewart shows how life on Earth develops not simply from the outworkings of genetic processes, but also from the principles of mathematics.
Mathematicians and scientists have now discovered that systems obeying precise laws can behave in a random fashion.
This book is intended for fans of Ian Stewart; maths buffs and puzzle solvers; students (and teachers) of mathematics from 6th Form upwards.
www.mathsnet.net /resource/ianstewart.html   (362 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Does God Play Dice: The New Mathematics of Chaos: Books: Ian Stewart   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Mathematician Ian Stewart--who is also a very talented writer--shares his insights into the history and nature of the highly complex in Does God Play Dice: The New Mathematics of Chaos.
Ian Stewart is that source of reliable information, and if you want to know what chaos is about, read this book first.
Stewart describes how chaotic behavior was discovered in the late 1800s but was forgotten for nearly a century.
www.amazon.com /Does-God-Play-Dice-Mathematics/dp/0631232516   (1609 words)

  
 Magical numbers in nature - for printer
Mathematician Ian Stewart talks to Nature Science Update about snowflakes, sticklebacks and a new kind of science.
Ian Stewart was turned on to mathematics at the age of seven.
A broken collarbone freed him from an uninspiring teacher allowing his mother to ignite his interest in numbers while he was laid up at home.
www.fractal.org /Life-Science-Technology/Publications/Magical-numbers.htm   (1736 words)

  
 Ian Stewart - Penguin Books Authors - Penguin Books
Ian Stewart was born in Folkestone in 1945.
He is an active research mathematician with over a hundred published papers, and he takes a particular interest in problems that lie in the gaps between pure and applied mathematics.
Ian Stewart has written or co-authored over sixty books, including Nature's Numbers, shortlisted for the 1996 Rhone-Poulenc Prize for Science Books; The Collapse of Chaos; Fearful Symmetry; From Here to Infinity; Game, Set and Math; Another Fine Math You've Got Me Into; The Problems of Mathematics; the bestselling Does God Play Dice?
www.penguin.ca /nf/Author/AuthorPage/0,,1000030835,00.html   (273 words)

  
 THE COLLAPSE OF CHAOS - Jack Cohen - Penguin Group (New Zealand)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
In this exhilarating account, biologist Jack Cohen and mathematician Ian Stewart begin by presenting the traditional scientific view of these questions, which explains intelligence and human culture in terms of evolution and biological development.
These, in turn, are explained by the chemistry of DNA, which is itself a consequence of atomic structure, reducing the whole of nature to simple laws of physics.
In the second half Cohen and Stewart argue that something fundamental is missing in this traditional reductionist view of science and explore what they consider a far more important question, why simple structures exist at all.
www.penguin.co.nz /nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9780140291254,00.html   (187 words)

  
 Poet: Ian Stewart - All poems of Ian Stewart   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Ian Stewart has published in many journals including Scientific American,...
Ian Stewart (racing driver) (born 1929), Scottish Formula One driver; Ian Stewart (Conservative politician) (born 1935), former MP for Hitchin, England...
Ian Stewart was the second Rolling Stone after Brian Jones and before all others.
www.poemhunter.com /ian-stewart   (209 words)

  
 Science Fiction Book Reviews
Professional mathematician Ian Stewart and professional biologist Jack Cohen have collaborated on a previous SF novel,
Good as that one was, it seems, in retrospect, plainly just a practice run for the new book, which manages to achieve a level of clarity, excitement, impact and innovation that is very rare among SF novels.
Stewart and Cohen are relentless in their inventiveness.
www.scifi.com /sfw/issue369/books.html   (816 words)

  
 Ian Stewart
Ian Stewart (Conservative politician) - formely MP for Hitchin
Ian Stewart (football coach) - Northern Ireland women's football coach
BOMB disposal experts will explore the Northstowe site for unexploded Second World War bombs in January, despite calls for the investigations to be put on hold.
www.transporteon.com /Racing-I/Ian_Stewart.php   (362 words)

  
 Computational Biology
To meet these challenges, biologists are co-opting mathematical techniques, developed to address seemingly unconnected problems in disparate fields such as economics, engineering and sociology to attach meaning to the output of their experiments.
In turn, mathematicians versed in applying these techniques bring novel ways at examining the processes of life.
Mathematician Ian Stewart talks to Nature Science Update about snowflakes, sticklebacks and a new kind of science.
www.nature.com /nature/computationalbiology   (372 words)

  
 Magical numbers in nature
Stewart is now professor of mathematics and director of the Mathematics Awareness Centre at the UK’s University of Warwick.
It’s not a bit of maths and a bit of biology, it’s what happens when you let maths and biology talk to one another for 25 years, and see what comes out of that interaction.
Stewart, I. What shape is a snowflake?, published by Weidenfeld & nicholson, £20.
www.innovations-report.com /html/reports/interdisciplinary_research/report-5409.html   (1737 words)

  
 Oxford University Press: From Here to Infinity: Ian Stewart
In this retitled and revised edition of The Problems of Mathematics, renowned mathematician Ian Stewart gives math buffs and non-technical readers--as well as students of the subject--the perfect guide to today's mathematics.
This challenging and fascinating book includes three new chapters that cover the most recent developments in the mathematics field, including one on Kepler's sphere-packing problem, to which a solution has been at last announced after a wait of 380 years.
Stewart, a particularly gifted mathematician and writer, shows us not only that math can be explained in everyday language, but that it can be downright fun as well.
www.oup.com /us/catalog/general/subject/Mathematics/?view=usa&ci=9780192832023   (343 words)

  
 Letters to a Young Mathematician; The Secret Life of Numbers
All these topics and many more are covered in this series of twenty-one letters from an established mathematician to his niece, "Meg." Initially, Meg is a high-school student who is curious about career prospects for mathematics graduates, but as the letters progress she develops into a Ph.D. candidate and finally becomes a tenured academic.
The avuncular letter-writer of Letters to a Young Mathematician is Ian Stewart, a mathematics professor at the University of Warwick in England and author of numerous popular mathematics books.
Letters to a Young Mathematician is essential reading for all those who are somewhere on the path from high-school fascination with mathematics to Ph.D. student.
www.fredbortz.com /review/YoungMath_LifeofNumbers.htm   (869 words)

  
 Wheelers.htm, SF book review of the Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen SF novel Wheelers, SF, sci fi, science fiction, SF ...
The authors, mathematician Ian Stewart and reproductive biologist Jack Cohen, both life long science fiction fans, have hit the ground running with their first SF novel.
Without giving anything away, Cohen and Stewart manage to convey their alienness in a variety of ways.
One can only wonder why Stewart and Cohen felt it necessary to cram some much in with such a large page count in their first SF outing.
www.concatenation.org /frev/wheelers.html   (652 words)

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