Martin Gardner RIP
May. 23rd, 2010 10:30 amHis Scientific American columns, which I read in collected form (Mathematical Carnival etc) in my mid-teens, really enthused me with the joy and fascination of maths and associated concepts, games and delightful trivialities, in a way that school had never managed. He wrote beautifully, clearly and rationally -- as a non-expert himself, he took the job of communication of meaning seriously, and handled it with immense skill. His tireless work contra pseudoscience is also deserving of great praise.
It was through Gardner that I learnt about hyperdimensions, Cantor's investigation of infinities, Conway's Game of Life, the art of MC Escher, the Fibonacci sequence, the tricks of lightning calculators, how to build a learning AI... and countless other topics that each expanded my mind in a new and exciting direction. In his memory, I'm going to dig those books out and read through them all again. And I really ought to get hold of The Annotated Alice.
Did you ever read Gardner, and do you have any favourite subjects he wrote about that made a particular impression on you?
It was through Gardner that I learnt about hyperdimensions, Cantor's investigation of infinities, Conway's Game of Life, the art of MC Escher, the Fibonacci sequence, the tricks of lightning calculators, how to build a learning AI... and countless other topics that each expanded my mind in a new and exciting direction. In his memory, I'm going to dig those books out and read through them all again. And I really ought to get hold of The Annotated Alice.
Did you ever read Gardner, and do you have any favourite subjects he wrote about that made a particular impression on you?