Magic is No Magic
"...This is an interesting, well-written, well-illustrated and particularly well-translated book (I think that translators often don’t get the credit they deserve) about a fascinating and important person who made a spectacular contribution to mathematics, decimal arithmetic...It really is a good book.”
MAA REVIEWS Mar 2009
"This superficial renumeration shows the incredibly versatile mind of Stevin. However, even more important is that the book illustrates, through detailed considerations and examples, that he reached great depth using logical deduction based on mathematics (not customary in his time!)."
"The work reads easily and yet it is not just a popularizing reader: if offers the opportunity to go deeply in Stevin's accomplishments through the reproductions and quotations. This is worth the effort. Moreover the bibliography is excellent if one want to go even deeper."
"This book will largely contribute to make Stevin better known and to give him his right place in the hierarchy of the very great that preceded Newton."
STUDIUM
This book gives a comprehensive picture of the activities and the creative heritage of Simon Stevin, who made outstanding contributions to various fields of science, in particular physics and mathematics, as well as many more. Among the striking spectrum of his ingenious achievements, it is worth emphasizing that Simon Stevin is rightly considered the father of the decimal fraction system as it is today. Stevin also urged the universal use of decimal fractions along with standardization in coinage, measures and weights. This was a most visionary proposal. Stevin was the first scientist since Archimedes to make a significant new contribution to the fields of statics and hydrostatics. He was a true homo universalis.
