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   Book Info

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Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You  
Author: Deborah J. Bennett
ISBN: 0393057488
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
In this compact, fluently written survey leavened with humor, New Jersey mathematics professor Bennett (Randomness) entertains as she instructs, focusing on?"the barriers we face in trying to communicate logically with each other." The author covers the ancient Greeks (the Greek word logos means "knowledge"), then such giants as Leibniz and Newton, who helped rescue the study of logic from classical languages, finally modern mathematicians and philosophers like Whitehead and Russell. In discussing topics like syllogisms, she uses tables and diagrams that shouldn't daunt anyone with a firm foundation in high school algebra and geometry. The book's most interesting chapter explains why if is perhaps the most problematical word in any verbal proposition. Everyone, including the hopelessly innumerate, will find Bennett's lessons in the tricks of speech invaluable, particularly in this election year. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Martin Gardner
The best introduction to logic you will find.


Book Description
"The best introduction to logic you will find."—Martin Gardner Penetrating and practical, Logic Made Easy is filled with anecdotal histories detailing the often muddy relationship between language and logic. Complete with puzzles you can try yourself and questions you can use to raise your test scores, Logic Made Easy invites readers to identify and ultimately remedy logical slips in everyday life. Even experienced logicians will be surprised by Deborah Bennett's ability to identify the illogical in everything from maddening street signs to tax forms that make April the cruelest month. Designed with dozens of visual examples, the book guides readers through those hair-raising times when logic is at odds with common sense. Logic Made Easy is indeed one of those rare books that will actually make you a more logical human being.


About the Author
Deborah J. Bennett is the author of Randomness and teaches mathematics at New Jersey City University in Jersey City.




Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You

FROM THE PUBLISHER

From truth tables to syllogisms, fallacies to fuzzy logic, Bennett describes logical concepts and their points of intersection and departure, presenting a distilled survey of the entire field of logic in under three hundred pages. She explores each topic in depth, sprinkling line drawings, tables, and sample questions taken from the common standardized tests throughout her narrative. For students who don't have a lot of time on their hands, Logic Made Easy is a way to get ready for exams .

SYNOPSIS

Bennett (mathematics, New Jersey City U.) introduces formal logic to a general readership, incorporating the history of its development alongside theory in her discussion of syllogisms, conditionals, symbolic logic, truth tables, fuzzy logic and paradoxes, and common logic and language. Along the way she incorporates numerous logic puzzles as illustrative material. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

In this compact, fluently written survey leavened with humor, New Jersey mathematics professor Bennett (Randomness) entertains as she instructs, focusing on "the barriers we face in trying to communicate logically with each other." The author covers the ancient Greeks (the Greek word logos means "knowledge"), then such giants as Leibniz and Newton, who helped rescue the study of logic from classical languages, finally modern mathematicians and philosophers like Whitehead and Russell. In discussing topics like syllogisms, she uses tables and diagrams that shouldn't daunt anyone with a firm foundation in high school algebra and geometry. The book's most interesting chapter explains why if is perhaps the most problematical word in any verbal proposition. Everyone, including the hopelessly innumerate, will find Bennett's lessons in the tricks of speech invaluable, particularly in this election year. Agent, Ed Knappman at New England Publishing Associates. (Apr. 12) Forecast: A blurb from Martin Gardner will alert his fans that Logic Made Easy is of the same quality as his popular books on logic, math and philosophy. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

     



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