A guide to the practical art of plausible reasoning, this book has
relevance in every field of intellectual activity. Professor Polya, a
world-famous mathematician from Stanford University, uses mathematics to
show how hunches and guesses play an important part in even the most
rigorously deductive science. He explains how solutions to problems can
be guessed at; good guessing is often more important than rigorous
deduction in finding correct solutions. Vol. I, on Induction and
Analogy in Mathematics, covers a wide variety of mathematical problems,
revealing the trains of thought that lead to solutions, pointing out
false bypaths, discussing techniques of searching for proofs. Problems
and examples challenge curiosity, judgment, and power of invention.