Analysis Of 'The Number Devil A Mathematical Adventure'

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The Number Devil - A Mathematical Adventure, by Hans Magnus Enzensberger, initiates with an adolescent child named Robert who experiences and suffers from recurring nightmares. Whether he’s getting gulped up by a huge fish, falling down an endless slide into a black hole, or falling into a raging river, his extremely detailed nightmares continually appear to have an undesirable effect on him. Robert’s nightmares either alarm him, make him irritated, or thwart him. His single request is to never dream again; instead of his nightmares coming to a stop, his dreams yield a shot for the bizarre. Instead of tumbling down holes, he encounters the Number Devil. Exercising oversized fuzzy calculators, heaps of coconuts, electronic glass boxes, and a …show more content…

Whether he’s getting gulped up by a huge fish, falling down an endless slide into a black hole, or falling into a raging river, his extremely detailed nightmares continually appear to have an undesirable effect on him. Robert’s nightmares either alarm him, make him irritated, or thwart him. His single request is to never dream again; instead of his nightmares coming to a stop, his dreams yield a shot for the bizarre. Instead of tumbling down holes, he encounters the Number Devil. Exercising oversized fuzzy calculators, heaps of coconuts, electronic glass boxes, and a never-ending amount of scrolling paper, the Number Devil presents Robert to numerous unalike concepts of arithmetic which the Number Devil does through many famous mathematicians such as Carl Friedrich Gauss. Carl contributed many concepts and theories to the field of math and science. He was used in the book to explain the sum of numbers, which he invented. Over the sequence of twelve nightmares, Robert is occupied further into mathematical notions where he results in admiring at just what numbers can

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