| [Note:
Dr. Figueiredo's
review appeared in "Read This!", which is the FOCUS online book review
column. The print FOCUS does not run book reviews.] By
Luiz Henrique de Figueiredo
Derbyshire's previous book,
Prime Obsession, was a tour de force whose goal was to explain the
Riemann Hypothesis to non-mathematicians. The book was widely acclaimed as a
success, an opinion that I share: I read the book with pleasure and learned
some mathematics along the way. I thought Derbyshire succeeded in telling
the interesting history behind the mathematics in pleasant and engaging
prose, and in explaining (at least some of) the mathematics to
non-specialists, a feat not to be sneered at given that the mathematics of
the Riemann Hypothesis is certainly non-trivial.
So, having read Prime Obsession, I was curious and motivated to read
Derbyshire's newest book, Unknown Quantity, which he describes as "a
history of algebra, written for the curious nonmathematician". In this
sense, Unknown Quantity has the same goal as Prime Obsession.
However, the scope of Unknown Quantity is much larger, because
algebra is a vast subject with a long history, dating back to the
Babylonians, whose coherence is hard to see, especially for
nonmathematicians.
Like Prime Obsession, Unknown Quantity contains large sections
that describe the mathematics. In Prime Obsession this was done in
the odd-numbered chapters, with the even-numbered chapters focusing on the
history. In Unknown Quantity, Derbyshire chose to sprinkle "Math
Primers" along the way (there are six primers among 15 chapters). There is a
fair amount of mathematics in the main text as well. I have a feeling that a
nonmathematician will need a lot of motivation to go through all this
material. But such a reader will be rewarded with a reasonable sense of how
algebra evolved from concrete (and theoretical!) problems handled by the
Babylonians to the solution of polynomial equations, and then will get at
least an overview of how algebra become abstract and pervaded all areas of
mathematics.
Some high points in the book are: an engaging account the romantic story of
the solution of cubic and quartic equations by Tartaglia, Cardano, and
Ferrari; the use of complex numbers by Bombelli; the early attempts at a
theory of equations via invariants and symmetric functions; the role of
Lagrange (or should we say Vandermonde?) resolvents for solving the quintic.
The book even contains a convincing "proof" of the Fundamental Theorem of
Algebra.
On other topics, Derbyshire has not been as successful. Galois theory,
despite the romantic aura around the short life of Galois (which Derbyshire
argues is not totally warranted), is not a light topic, despite (or perhaps
because of) its great beauty. It is hard to get the point across to
nonmathematicians. The same can be said, even more strongly, of Kummer's
ideals and Noether's ring theory. In particular, I think Derbyshire has
failed to give a good account of Emmy Noether's work on invariants.
The book goes as near as possible to contemporary mathematics, discussing
Klein's Erlangen Program, algebraic topology, algebraic geometry, algebraic
number theory, category theory, and even Grothendieck's work on the modern
foundations of algebraic geometry (Derbyshire concentrates mostly on
Grothendieck's "colorful" life rather than on his mathematics, which is just
as well, given how hard it is, even for mathematicians).
The prose itself is quite pleasant, as we have come to expect from
Derbyshire. The book contains over 170 informative and sometimes
entertaining endnotes, a good index, and 32 pictures of the main characters
in the history of algebra.
In summary, I think Derbyshire has done at good job at portraying algebra
and its journey toward abstraction from its roots in early civilizations.
All interested readers will learn something about mathematics and its
history. Readers with the right background will then be able to enjoy more
mathematical accounts such as The Beginnings and Evolution of Algebra
by Bashmakova and Smirnova and van der Waerden's classic A History of
Algebra.
Luiz Henrique de
Figueiredo is a researcher at IMPA in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. His main
interests are numerical methods in computer graphics, but he remains an
algebraist at heart. He is also one of the designers of the Lua language.
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