John Allen Paulos cleverly scrutinizes the mathematical structures of jokes, puns, paradoxes, spoonerisms, riddles, and other forms of humor, drawing examples from such sources as Rabelais, Shakespeare, James Beattie, René Thom, Lewis Carroll, Arthur Koestler, W. C. Fields, and Woody Allen."Jokes, paradoxes, riddles, and the art of non-sequitur are revealed with great perception and insight in this illuminating account of the relationship between humor and mathematics."—Joseph Williams, New York Times"'Leave your mind alone,' said a Thurber cartoon, and a really complete and convincing analysis of what humour is might spoil all jokes forever. This book avoids that danger. What it does. . .is describe broadly several kinds of mathematical theory and apply them to throw sidelights on how many kinds of jokes work."—New Scientist"Many scholars nowadays write seriously about the ludicrous. Some merely manage to be dull. A few—like Paulos—are brilliant in an odd endeavor."—Los Angeles Times Book Review
Author(s): John Allen Paulos
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 1980
Language: English
Pages: 126
Tags: Математика;Популярная математика;
Contents......Page 8
1. Mathematics and Humor......Page 10
2. Axioms, Levels and Iteration......Page 28
3. Self-Reference and Paradox......Page 50
4. Humor, Grammar, and Philosophy......Page 66
5. A Catastrophe Theory Model of Jokes and Humor......Page 84
6. Odds and the End......Page 110
References......Page 118
Index......Page 122