We're pleased to have you join us
30-day trial with Audible is available.
New Releases
-
Mathematical Biology
- A Very Short Introduction
- By: Philip K. Maini
- Narrated by: Ray Greenley
- Length: 3 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
In this Very Short Introduction Philip K. Maini describes the art of modeling, what it is, why we do it, and illustrates how the abstract way of thinking that is the essence of mathematics enables us to transfer knowledge from one area of research to another.
By: Philip K. Maini
-
The Philosophy of Mathematics
- Exploring the Limits of Mathematical Thought (Science and Cosmos)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Michael Costantino
- Length: 16 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
Mathematics has long been regarded as the purest expression of truth — a language through which the universe reveals itself. Yet behind every equation stands the human mind that created it. In this book, Boris Krieger follows the path of mathematics from its simplest intuitions to its highest abstractions, asking what it truly reveals — about reality, and about ourselves. Through lucid reflection and critical insight, he shows that geometry, algebra, topology, and probability are not independent worlds but translations of human perception into structure.
By: Boris Kriger
-
Why Mathematics Works
- Science and Cosmos
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 3 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
Why does mathematics—a creation of the human mind—describe the physical world with such extraordinary precision? Why do equations invented for one purpose turn out, decades or centuries later, to be the perfect language for a completely different realm of nature? In 1960, the Nobel laureate Eugene Wigner called this correspondence a 'gift we neither understand nor deserve.' The question has haunted science ever since. In this book, Boris Kriger proposes an answer that is at once simple and profound: mathematics describes the world because only the mathematically structured survives.
By: Boris Kriger
-
Il matematico impertinente
- By: Piergiorgio Odifreddi
- Narrated by: Giorgio Ginex
- Length: 13 hrs and 20 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
I saggi di questo volume, che toccano la politica, la religione, la letteratura, la filosofia, la matematica e la scienza, sono raccolti in sezioni che si aprono con interviste immaginarie a personaggi del passato (Hitler, Gesù, Dante, Aristotele, Archimede, Newton) e si chiudono con interviste reali a quelli del presente (Chomsky, il Dalai Lama, Saramago, Kripke, Nash e Watson). Nel mezzo, il matematico impertinente dispiega l'arsenale della ragione per argomentare che non è affatto vero che non possiamo non dirci cristiani, o che siamo tutti americani.
-
Calculus 101
- A History of Change (How We Figured It Out)
- By: James Johnson
- Narrated by: Jerome Ferguson
- Length: 59 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
Calculus isn’t just math. It’s how we figured out motion, change, curves, and reality itself. In Calculus 101, JJ takes you on a high-speed ride through the history, drama, and logic behind the most powerful tool humans ever invented. From ancient geometry and Zeno’s paradoxes to Newton’s plague-year breakthrough and the equations running Wall Street, this book breaks it all down in plain English with clarity, humor, and momentum.
By: James Johnson
-
Using Probability Wisely
- The Principle of Optimal Applicability (Philosophical Questions)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Mark Cyr
- Length: 5 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
What if the numbers guiding your biggest decisions were never meant for you? From weather forecasts to medical risks, investment advice to AI predictions, probability surrounds modern life—offering the appearance of certainty in an uncertain world. Yet most people don’t realize: probability is a powerful tool, but only under the right conditions. Misapplied, it doesn’t just fail—it misleads. This book reveals the hidden structure behind when probability works, when it doesn’t, and why it so often feels precise but proves personally wrong.
By: Boris Kriger
-
Mathematical Biology
- A Very Short Introduction
- By: Philip K. Maini
- Narrated by: Ray Greenley
- Length: 3 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
In this Very Short Introduction Philip K. Maini describes the art of modeling, what it is, why we do it, and illustrates how the abstract way of thinking that is the essence of mathematics enables us to transfer knowledge from one area of research to another.
By: Philip K. Maini
-
The Philosophy of Mathematics
- Exploring the Limits of Mathematical Thought (Science and Cosmos)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Michael Costantino
- Length: 16 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
Mathematics has long been regarded as the purest expression of truth — a language through which the universe reveals itself. Yet behind every equation stands the human mind that created it. In this book, Boris Krieger follows the path of mathematics from its simplest intuitions to its highest abstractions, asking what it truly reveals — about reality, and about ourselves. Through lucid reflection and critical insight, he shows that geometry, algebra, topology, and probability are not independent worlds but translations of human perception into structure.
By: Boris Kriger
-
Why Mathematics Works
- Science and Cosmos
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
- Length: 3 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
Why does mathematics—a creation of the human mind—describe the physical world with such extraordinary precision? Why do equations invented for one purpose turn out, decades or centuries later, to be the perfect language for a completely different realm of nature? In 1960, the Nobel laureate Eugene Wigner called this correspondence a 'gift we neither understand nor deserve.' The question has haunted science ever since. In this book, Boris Kriger proposes an answer that is at once simple and profound: mathematics describes the world because only the mathematically structured survives.
By: Boris Kriger
-
Il matematico impertinente
- By: Piergiorgio Odifreddi
- Narrated by: Giorgio Ginex
- Length: 13 hrs and 20 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
I saggi di questo volume, che toccano la politica, la religione, la letteratura, la filosofia, la matematica e la scienza, sono raccolti in sezioni che si aprono con interviste immaginarie a personaggi del passato (Hitler, Gesù, Dante, Aristotele, Archimede, Newton) e si chiudono con interviste reali a quelli del presente (Chomsky, il Dalai Lama, Saramago, Kripke, Nash e Watson). Nel mezzo, il matematico impertinente dispiega l'arsenale della ragione per argomentare che non è affatto vero che non possiamo non dirci cristiani, o che siamo tutti americani.
-
Calculus 101
- A History of Change (How We Figured It Out)
- By: James Johnson
- Narrated by: Jerome Ferguson
- Length: 59 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
Calculus isn’t just math. It’s how we figured out motion, change, curves, and reality itself. In Calculus 101, JJ takes you on a high-speed ride through the history, drama, and logic behind the most powerful tool humans ever invented. From ancient geometry and Zeno’s paradoxes to Newton’s plague-year breakthrough and the equations running Wall Street, this book breaks it all down in plain English with clarity, humor, and momentum.
By: James Johnson
-
Using Probability Wisely
- The Principle of Optimal Applicability (Philosophical Questions)
- By: Boris Kriger
- Narrated by: Mark Cyr
- Length: 5 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall0
-
Performance0
-
Story0
What if the numbers guiding your biggest decisions were never meant for you? From weather forecasts to medical risks, investment advice to AI predictions, probability surrounds modern life—offering the appearance of certainty in an uncertain world. Yet most people don’t realize: probability is a powerful tool, but only under the right conditions. Misapplied, it doesn’t just fail—it misleads. This book reveals the hidden structure behind when probability works, when it doesn’t, and why it so often feels precise but proves personally wrong.
By: Boris Kriger