---
product_id: 16285807
title: "Unknown Quantity: A Real and Imaginary History of Algebra"
brand: "john derbyshire"
price: "Rp694395"
currency: IDR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 9
url: https://www.desertcart.id/products/16285807-unknown-quantity-a-real-and-imaginary-history-of-algebra
store_origin: ID
region: Indonesia
---

# Unknown Quantity: A Real and Imaginary History of Algebra

**Brand:** john derbyshire
**Price:** Rp694395
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

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- **What is this?** Unknown Quantity: A Real and Imaginary History of Algebra by john derbyshire
- **How much does it cost?** Rp694395 with free shipping
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## Description

Unknown Quantity: A Real and Imaginary History of Algebra

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## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    A pleasant, friendly guide to understanding the aesthetic and human side of Algebra.
  

*by R***Y on Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2016*

I really relate to the Derb. I'm an old-school tech-nerd (BS Engineering, 1973, learned the slide rule as a freshman; read Scientific American Magazine--especially Martin Gardner's "Mathematical Games" column in middle & high schools, etc.).Why do I enjoy reading this book (I do keep it around to read a random page now and then)? Derb successfully --Creates a sense of the humanity of the individuals who, despite a tumultuous and dangerous world, were inspired to create the Mathematics we have today (by the chance at fame and fortune, or  the joy of intellectual accomplishment).Explains the Mathematics needed to understand the history in a very simple way with the humility of a student/amateur who understands much of the subject but is still awed by the subject and respectful of the masters.Tells a good story. He is an accomplished fiction writer after all.Most of us encounter Algebra as a necessary evil, unfortunately few of tread far into the subject to appreciate Algebra for its aesthetics and revelations of aspects of human personality and intelligence. Derb is a pleasant, friendly guide for latter journey.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    An excellent general history of algebra
  

*by V***R on Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2011*

Unfortunately but inevitably John Derbyshire's "Unknown Quantity" is nowhere near as good as his previous pop math book "Prime Obsession", but in saying this I am praising the latter and not disparaging the former. "Unknown Quantity" still rates the full five stars."Prime Obsession" is laser focused on one problem (Riemann's hypothesis on an important characteristic of the zeta function) and on one man (Bernhard Riemann). Derbyshire then expands on the mathematical topic twice, first by explaining the context in which the hypothesis mattered (its relationship to prime numbers) and finally by taking a general look at the branch of mathematics called analysis. He does the same thing with the human side of his story: he presents Riemann's friends and colleagues and then he presents earlier and later analysts. This makes for a near perfect book, both topically and dramatically."Unknown Quantity" on the other hand gives us a more general history of its subject, which is algebra. Derbyshire takes us from its beginnings in ancient Babylon and describes in detail how to decipher a sample problem found on cuneiform tablet. He then goes to Alexandria where Diophantus used the first notation using something like "x" to represent unknown quantities. It didn't catch on, and Arab mathematicians developed the field during the middle ages using word problems again.Early in the Renaissance Italians then took over the search for roots and found methods to solve roots of third and fourth degree polynomials. Descartes then invented analytic geometry and standardized the usage of x-y-z as our notation for unknown quantities.Newton contributed to the field, but his invention of calculus (yes, yes along with Leibniz) diverted attention away from algebra for two centuries. It was in the nineteenth century that algebra as we know it today took off. Mathematicians were getting comfortable with the square root of minus one and the Complex field of numbers extended from the Real field. An Irishman named Hamilton worked hard at extending fields again from Complex numbers to the theory of Quaternions. Quaternions never caught on but as a by-product, Hamilton laid down ideas that directly lead to the development of vector spaces and linear algebra.Along with this, later mathematicians developed group theory, ring theory, and field theory. A group is simply a set and an operation on that set that meets certain requirements. Rings and fields are groups with more requirements. These theories form algebra as it is studied today. In a nutshell, Derbyshire presents an excellent history of the origin and development of much of algebra and of most of the important figures that have contributed to the field. But of course, to be general he's had to sacrifice focus.Perhaps instead of a single chapter, Derbyshire could have written his whole book around the story of Evariste Galois. Galois, a politically radical young Frenchman, died fatally wounded in a duel at twenty years of age. Despite his youth, he solved a problem that ultimately changed algebra from simply searching for roots of polynomials to the more abstract pursuit of studying groups and permutations. There's plenty of drama in >>that<< story! But it has also been done to death. Derbyshire made the right choice by giving us a less exciting but more informative book.Vincent Poirier, Tokyo

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    History of an Important Discipline
  

*by E***H on Reviewed in the United States on May 9, 2009*

Polymath John Derbyshire has written this history of algebra, from ancient Babylon to today.Derbyshire looks at the various stages in the increase of complexity of algebra, from the discovery of zero, the solution of cubic and quartic equations, the development of negative numbers and vectors, up through the latest developments in algebra today.  He goes into some detail about some of the mathematicians of the past who made significant discoveries and contributed to the development of this discipline.Be forewarned--you might need an undergrad degree in math to get the most out of this book.  I did well in my algebra classes in school, and was able to follow along very well for the first third of the book.  By the middle third, I was only able to get the general gist of what Derbyshire was writing about, and by the last third I was baffled when he was trying to describe advanced areas of algebra that are very abstruse.Still, it was interesting to read about how in the last several decades several branches of mathematics are blending together, and anyone who has read Derbyshire's articles for 

  
National Review









  
  
    
   magazine or listened to his "Radio Derb" audio show at the same magazine's Internet site knows that the author has the ability to interest the reader over a wide range of topics.

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*Store origin: ID*
*Last updated: 2026-04-28*