The internets most empathetic math teacher offers fresh insights for the mathematically challenged and mathematical masters alike and along the way, shares relatable stories of his own mathematical misunderstandings and epiphanies, as well as the trials and tribulations of his students. Illustrations.
In this trailblazing work from the internets most empathetic math teacher, Ben Orlin unravels the secrets behind the worlds most confounding language.
Math, it is said, is the "universal language. But if a language brings people together, why does math make so many of us feel so alone? In
Math for English Majors, bestselling author Ben Orlin (
Math with Bad Drawings) offers fresh insights for the mathematically perplexed and mathematical masters alike.
As Orlin reveals, the universal language is precisely that: a language. It has nouns (numbers), verbs (calculations), and grammar (algebra). It has funny idioms (exponential), quirky etymologies (squaring), and peculiar ambiguities (PEMDAS). It even has its own form of literature, with equations ranging from the simple wisdom of A2 + B2 = C2 to the startling profundity of epi + 1 = 0.
Along the way, he shares relatable stories of his own mathematical misunderstandings and epiphanies, as well as the trials and triumphs of his students. And, as always, he sheds further light and levity on the subject with his ineptyet strangely effectivedrawings.
If Mathematics had a Rosetta Stone
In this trailblazing work from the internets most empathetic math teacher, Ben Orlin unravels the secrets behind the worlds most confounding language.
Math, it is said, is the "universal language. But if a language brings people together, why does math make so many of us feel so alone? In
Math for English Majors, bestselling author Ben Orlin (
Math with Bad Drawings) offers fresh insights for the mathematically perplexed and mathematical masters alike.
As Orlin reveals, the universal language is precisely that: a language. It has nouns (numbers), verbs (calculations), and grammar (algebra). It has funny idioms (exponential), quirky etymologies (squaring), and peculiar ambiguities (PEMDAS). It even has its own form of literature, with equations ranging from the simple wisdom of A2 + B2 = C2 to the startling profundity of epi + 1 = 0.
Along the way, he shares relatable stories of his own mathematical misunderstandings and epiphanies, as well as the trials and triumphs of his students. And, as always, he sheds further light and levity on the subject with his ineptyet strangely effectivedrawings.