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K**H
One of the best golden resources available!
What an amazing resource! Not only is it a beautiful coffee table piece, it is an amazing reference for iconic works both old and new. It even has a study on Salvator Mundi, a recent discovery within the Da Vinci world. If you are a digital designer, I recommend checking out the authors Phi Matrix software. It is an incredible tool for those who wish to design within the underlying principles outlined within this book!
T**T
There are no decimal points in Geometry.
Euclid's Elements Book XIII Proposition 18. In my previous attempts to draw out Euclid’s proposition 18, I had used the two decimal points, √2 and (1+√5 )÷2. After reading through the book "The Golden Ratio: The Divine Beauty of Mathematics" by Gary Meisner, I was able to remove the decimal points from my drawing. Euclid’s geometry for proposition 18 is to square the square to locate the side lengths of the Platonic Solids. However, my current drawing of proposition 18 shows, how you can develop the extreme and mean ratio (Golden Ratio) in the drawing without developing the extreme and mean ratio in an external drawing doubling the square, as Euclid did in proposition 17. As, well as developing the √2 line without using decimal points.I recommend the book The Divine Beauty of Mathematics by Gary Meisner to everyone. Even if it just ends up being a coffee table book. Excellent quality graphics and over 200 high-quality pictures. Everything from the Great Pyramids, Fibonacci logarithmic spiral, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa and John the Baptist. And at $17, in a 9x11 hardcover format, it’s one book you won't regret buying. It belongs in the Great Book program for developing critical thinking.
T**N
Science, design, soul.
Ordered this as a gift for my boyfriend’s 18 year old son’s birthday who is going off to engineering school. He’s fascinated with nature and design and I know he’ll love this. I spent a little time with this, but not enough. As a graphic designer with a scientific mind and a spiritual soul, I’m thinking of ordering a copy for myself.
S**E
Beautiful Book!
This is a lovely book which explains and examines the Golden Ratio/Divine Proportion using clear and engaging text accompanied by a kaleidoscopic array of beautiful imagery from the worlds of art, architecture, and nature. This book is sure to be appreciated by anyone who loves math, design, or classical art, as well as by those who are merely curious about the title topic.I am one who was merely curious. I haven't studied any math since high school (eons past), but I was able to grasp (with a bit of concentration) the very basic of the mathematical concepts presented in this book. I was actually quite pleased with myself when I encountered and even remembered the Pythagorean Theorem on page 27! While most of the mathematics in the book was over my head, I nevertheless found much to like in its pages.For example, nearly 100 pages are devoted to a presentation of the appearance of the Divine Proportion in art and architecture. I thoroughly enjoyed looking at the masterworks of DaVinci, Michelango, Botticelli, and more, and seeing evidence of the Golden Ratio in these famous art pieces. I was especially drawn to a section of the book which focuses on the design and construction of the great cathedrals of Europe. Photographs (with PhiMatrix overlays) of the rose windows at Notre Dame and Chartes are impressive and, of course, very beautiful.The last part of the book takes a look at the appearance of the Divine Proportion in the natural world. Again, I am not a mathematician, but I had fun counting the plant spirals on photographs of pine cone bases, and looking for the "beauty of fives" in pictures of flowers and fruits.Overall, I enjoyed spending time in the pages of this book. It has something for everyone. And, it looks pretty impressive on my coffee table; if I were hunting a mate, I might impress a super successful STEM dude—or perhaps an artsy guy--with this book!
A**
This gots me.
Not new. But now on number of sights here. Activity feeders help readings, or elect uppers specifically way. Thousand years ago today. AKA mad scientists an other fields.
P**R
AMAZING COFFEE TABLE BOOK!
It's perfect, the quotes, the images, the descriptions (in depth). Absolutely wonderful. Fascinating topic!
R**N
Extreme and Means
In a sentence: "a straight line is said to have been cut in extreme and mean ratio when, as the whole line is to the greater segment, so is the greater to the less"Who should read it: Anyone who makes art and enjoyed geometry class.It's a well made and beautiful book. Prints and diagrams are lovely to look through and the history of this great ratio are intriguing. As someone who has never discovered anything in math I love that for thousands of years great minds were sitting around, probably drunk on wine and cheese, just bisecting triangles in their heads to see what would happen and they kept reusing the same ones. This book should help you tie nature, science and spirit together some if you let it.
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