Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2011
Summary
When I was putting together this collection of problems, I always asked myself whether the two giants of mathematics I had the good fortune to know well, Paul Erdős and J.E. Littlewood, would have found the question interesting. Would they have felt enticed to think about it? Could they have not thought about it, whether they wanted to or not? I think that many of the problems that ended up in this volume are indeed of the kind Erdős and Littlewood would have found difficult not to think about; since this collection contains many problems they considered or even posed, this assertion may not be as preposterous as it seems.
I was not yet ten when I fell in love with mathematical problems. Growing up in Hungary, this love got plenty of encouragement, and when at fourteen I got to know Paul Erdős, the greatest problem poser the world has ever seen, my fate was sealed. He treated me and other young people to a variety of beautiful and fascinating problems, solved and unsolved; many of the solved ones I heard from him in my teens appear in this volume.
The impetus for putting together this collection of problems came much later, in Memphis, where, for a few years now, some of the local and visiting mathematicians have had the habit of having lunch together, followed by coffee and a mathematical problem or two in my office.
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- Information
- The Art of MathematicsCoffee Time in Memphis, pp. xiii - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006