---
product_id: 10893761
title: "God Created The Integers: The Mathematical Breakthroughs that Changed History"
price: "£43.56"
currency: GBP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/10893761-god-created-the-integers-the-mathematical-breakthroughs-that-changed-history
store_origin: GB
region: United Kingdom
---

# God Created The Integers: The Mathematical Breakthroughs that Changed History

**Price:** £43.56
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- **What is this?** God Created The Integers: The Mathematical Breakthroughs that Changed History
- **How much does it cost?** £43.56 with free shipping
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## Description

Bestselling author and physicist Stephen Hawking explores the "masterpieces" of mathematics, 25 landmarks spanning 2,500 years and representing the work of 15 mathematicians, including Augustin Cauchy, Bernard Riemann, and Alan Turing. This extensive anthology allows readers to peer into the mind of genius by providing them with excerpts from the original mathematical proofs and results. It also helps them understand the progression of mathematical thought, and the very foundations of our present-day technologies. Each chapter begins with a biography of the featured mathematician, clearly explaining the significance of the result, followed by the full proof of the work, reproduced from the original publication.

Review: Forget the flaws. Enjoy it. - I just couldn't put this book down. I was so absorbed that I even missed my station and had to catch a train back. The biographies mixed with mathematical explanations and an outline of the significance of each work is brilliant. It gives one an insight into how context-dependent genius really is. I knew that the book had flaws because I read these reviews a while ago. But so what! You wouldn't use this book for reference or as a text book. It's meant to be entertainment and entertaining it is. If you can understand the maths and the significance of the selected papers you can enjoy it without worrying too much about everything being crossed and dotted. I knew the biographies of many, but not all, of these men. Of the ones I didn't know, my favorite is George Boole. The description of his unusual career and the amazingly clear and readable paper on symbolic logic are worth buying the book for. I almost choked up when I read how he died. Anyway, in our age or irrationality and ignorance we need more books like this to show us that we can rise above it all.
Review: Book Length - It is a big book.

## Features

- Used Book in Good Condition

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,425,319 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #217 in Mathematics History #2,058 in Algebra |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 381 Reviews |

## Images

![God Created The Integers: The Mathematical Breakthroughs that Changed History - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/41wRRl1bkCL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Forget the flaws. Enjoy it.
*by J***N on August 30, 2007*

I just couldn't put this book down. I was so absorbed that I even missed my station and had to catch a train back. The biographies mixed with mathematical explanations and an outline of the significance of each work is brilliant. It gives one an insight into how context-dependent genius really is. I knew that the book had flaws because I read these reviews a while ago. But so what! You wouldn't use this book for reference or as a text book. It's meant to be entertainment and entertaining it is. If you can understand the maths and the significance of the selected papers you can enjoy it without worrying too much about everything being crossed and dotted. I knew the biographies of many, but not all, of these men. Of the ones I didn't know, my favorite is George Boole. The description of his unusual career and the amazingly clear and readable paper on symbolic logic are worth buying the book for. I almost choked up when I read how he died. Anyway, in our age or irrationality and ignorance we need more books like this to show us that we can rise above it all.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Book Length
*by C***E on May 2, 2026*

It is a big book.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 17 people discover 17 new continents
*by D***N on October 16, 2005*

513 years ago this week, a group of sailors found another continent, new to them and the European world, and full of surprises. The group of mathematicians in this book also found other continents of a different nature, new to them and full of surprises. One can only imagine the excitement when both groups found these new frontiers. One can no longer be a sailor and discover a new continent of land, but one can choose to be a mathematician and discover new continents of knowledge. The good thing about mathematics is that it is limitless: there are always problems that need resolution, and there are always new frontiers to open up. How far one goes in one's travels depends on the degree of creativity and ingenuity one chooses to exhibit. And in this way, mathematics is very akin to art: the path chosen depends on the taste of the mathematician, on the particular hedonic function that he/she chooses. The mathematicians in this book exhibited a lot of ingenuity and creativity, and the author has given the reader a look at their contributions as they themselves wrote them down, thanks to the efforts of the translators. Assuming the accuracy of the translations, the reader gets a view of mathematics through a representative time-window of the thoughts and personalities of some of the major players throughout the history of mathematics. The reader learns of the arrogance of Isaac Newton and Pierre Laplace, the shyness of George Boole, the extreme creativity of Georg Riemann, the computational prowess of Carl Gauss, the politics of Jean Fourier, the self-absorption of Archimedes, the encyclopedic mind of Euclid, the arithmetic of Diophantus, the polymathic nature of the mind of Rene Descartes, and the prolific mind of Augustin-Louis Cauchy. When reading the brief life histories of these individuals with all of their variability and disparate life histories, one is tempted to believe solely in a genetic origin of mathematical talent. Their personalities were very different but their aptitude in mathematics was profound. A great deal of their personal conduct could be viewed as reprehensible from a moral or ethical point of view, and the infighting that occurred among some of them was extremely juvenile. If the biographies of these individuals were rewritten to purposely omit their contributions to mathematics, a neutral reader would probably characterize them as being highly unintelligent. This again raises the debate over the concept of `general intelligence' versus that of `specialized' or `modularized' intelligence. These individuals certainly had a talent for mathematics, but does this talent, indeed the talent possessed by all mathematicians, find its origin in specialized regions in the human brain? If so, is there a correlation between mathematical skills and other types of specialized skills? One is also struck by the difficulty that some of these individuals had in finding suitable employment. The difficulties they faced in finding employment did not discourage them from performing research in mathematics. Too often these days many aspiring and talented young mathematicians complain of not being able to find suitable employment, and even feel they have a right to a tenured position at a major research institution. A reading of this book should put their beliefs in proper perspective and dissuade them from blaming the academic establishment for their failures to obtain employment. When reading the book, one can see the growing tension between applied and pure mathematics in the nineteenth century. Most, if not all of the mathematicians in this book were also very practical people: they could build bridges and design military hardware for example Contemporary (pure) mathematicians rarely have these abilities, and frequently pride themselves on not having them. In addition, some of the mathematicians of this book did not hesitate in indulging themselves in "experimental mathematics". When reading their papers in the book, one is struck by how much they used natural language, in how "wordy" their articles are. The proofs they gave explained the mathematics and did not just expound on them. They did not hesitate to use diagrams or pictures. This is to be contrasted with the manner in which contemporary mathematics is reported in the literature: it considers pictures an anathema, and strict, formalist "Bourbaki" language is to be used (although natural language of course still appears to a large degree). One can only speculate on what would have happened if some of these mathematicians had access to modern technology. What would have happened if Gauss had a calculator? What if Fourier had a music synthesizer? One can only admire their willingness to indulge themselves in difficult and time-consuming calculations, especially in the field of celestial mechanics. The list of the mathematicians in this book does not include any female mathematicians. One cannot blame adversity for this, but one could perhaps blame the unwillingness of the academic community to accept their contributions. This rejection though should not be thought of as directed only to female mathematicians. The individuals in this book had their own subjective preferences on what constituted interesting mathematics. They rejected the ideas they did not prefer and accepted the ones that they did, and they did so independent of the sex of the individual mathematician. The mathematicians of this book definitely set the tone for most of the mathematics that was done in the twentieth century and is being done in the twenty-first. But there is also a huge body of mathematics that was not influenced by them, and these contributions are just as interesting and important. The seventeen mathematicians in this book would no doubt be astounded by some of these developments, for they are very exotic if compared with the content of their mathematical constructions. One of the most fascinating of these developments (influenced to a small degree by George Boole) is automated mathematical discovery. If a book like this is rewritten at the end of the twenty-first century, the list of seventeen mathematicians will probably include some that are not human.

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*Product available on Desertcart United Kingdom*
*Store origin: GB*
*Last updated: 2026-06-10*