Discover the plain‑spoken guide to how math helps explain the world.
This edition presents The Common Sense of the Exact Sciences, a concise, idea‑driven book that makes complex topics feel approachable, starting from sense perception and ending in the logic of physical laws.
The author frames the material as a practical bridge between everyday observation and rigorous science. You’ll follow clear explanations that connect measurements, space, motion, and quantity to real problems in science, with an emphasis on making mathematics a helpful tool rather than a daunting puzzle.
- Accessible introduction to the four mathematical ideas that structure measurement: space, time, quantity, and motion.
- Simple geometric and physical examples that illustrate how curves, coordinates, and figures arise from real questions.
- Foundational discussion of what coordinates mean, how to describe position, and how to read the language of physics.
- Guidance on thinking clearly about problems, using diagrams and concrete reasoning to illuminate abstract ideas.
Ideal for readers who want a compact, thoughtful entry into the logic behind scientific thinking and the language of the exact sciences.
The mathematician William Kingdon Clifford (1845-79) intended this work to be intelligible to non-specialists. Unfinished at his death, the book was completed by Karl Pearson and published in 1885. It explores five fundamental areas of mathematics - number, space, quantity, position and motion - delivering several original results along the way.