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Simon SinghSimon Singh
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Critical perspective  
BiographySimon Singh is an author, journalist and television producer, specialising in science and mathematics. He grew up in Somerset and studied physics at Imperial College, London, studying as a postgraduate at Cambridge University and at CERN in Geneva. He joined the BBC's Science Department in 1990, working as a producer and director. He directed the BAFTA award-winning documentary 'Fermat's Last Theorem' in 1996, exploring one of the most challenging problems in mathematics. His own book, also called Fermat's Last Theorem, was published in 1997.
His second book, The Code Book (1999), explores the history of codes, codebreaking and cryptography. He presented 'The Science of Secrecy', a five-part series for Channel 4 television in 2001, and published a book of the same name (an adaptation of The Code Book), to accompany the series. He also presented theatrical science lectures in London and Edinburgh as part of 'Theatre of Science' with Richard Wiseman.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Non-fiction     BibliographyFermat's Last Theorem Fourth Estate, 1997 The Code Book Fourth Estate, 1999 The Science of Secrecy Fourth Estate, 2000 The Big Bang Fourth Estate, 2005 Trick or Treatment?: Alternative Medicine on Trial (with Edzard Ernst) Bantam Press, 2008  
  Critical PerspectiveSimon Singh is one of a new generation of popular science writers and the first to have a best-selling book with mathematics as its subject. Fermat's Last Theorem (1997) is a book that, on paper, might never have succeeded with a general audience. The proof of the theorem cannot be demonstrated in a general book, only the twists and turns of events as Andrew Wiles first demonstrated his proof of the theorem at a 1993 Cambridge seminar, then was forced to spend months revising it because a flaw had been found.
Although the proof itself is beyond paraphrase, the theorem itself and its background in Pythagorean geometry is easy to understand. Singh brilliantly uses this universally understood starting point to tell some of the history of mathematics and its great characters - Newton and Euler as well as Pythagoras, Fermat and Andrew Wiles, and he also flatters the reader by including many hands-on mathematical puzzles which are both intriguing and within the competence of the average crossword-puzzler. The book act as a bracing refresher course whilst keeping the reader's attention with the thrill of the chase and the excitement of high intellectual endeavor.
The world of mathematicians is something of a brotherhood, like the Pythagorean one that began the whole business: mathematicians belong to a community and they play by different rules from most people, including scientists. They don't patent their work and are far more open than scientists. Most of the time, that is. Andrew Wiles worked on the problem alone and in secrecy for ten years.
Pierre de Fermat (1601-65) was one of the great mathematicians of all time. His most famous theorem involves mathematics' cardinal principle: rigorous proof. Mathematical proof is different from and more rigorous than legal or scientific proof. It is absolute, binding for all time and in all possible cases. Pythagoras's Theorem, as everyone knows, states that in a right-angled triangle the square on the hypotenuses (the long sloping side) is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides. It is called a theorem because it can be proved for all possible right-angled triangles.
Singh has mastery of technical material, especially mathematics, and a deft manner with popular exposition. Reading his books, people tend to be surprised to find that they understand concepts which previously seemed beyond them. Both Fermat's Last Theorem and The Code Book have many puzzles for the reader to try. He is also good on the humanistic side of these stories - the history and personalities involved. In his review of early codes in The Code Book, he includes an account from Herodotus of one Hitaiaeus who shaved the head of a messenger, tatooed a message on the skull, allowed the hair to regrow and dispatched the man on his missions. Singh comments: 'This was clearly a period of history that tolerated a certain lack of urgency'.
Peter Forbes, 2002  
  Author statementI have always had a passion for science and mathematics and my books are an effort to spread this passion to others. Because of my background in television, I try to include a narrative in my books. However, explaining the mathematical and scientific ideas is paramount and the narrative is merely a way of encouraging readers to engage with the ideas. In general my books describe the development of a topic (maths, cryptography, cosmology) over the course of centuries or millennia. This means that I can start with relatively simple concepts and show how our understanding has evolved. There is also the advantage of being able to introduce some of the rich characters from the history of science.  
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