Mathematician + Pianist


Dr Eugenia Cheng is a mathematician, educator, author, public speaker, columnist, concert pianist, composer and artist. She is Scientist In Residence at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She was tenured in Pure Mathematics at the University of Sheffield, UK and is now Honorary Visiting Fellow at City, University of London. She has previously taught at the Universities of Cambridge, Chicago and Nice and holds a PhD in pure mathematics from the University of Cambridge. Alongside her research in Category Theory and undergraduate teaching her aim is to rid the world of “math phobia”, and she has written 9 math books for general audiences so far. Her first popular math book, How to Bake Pi, was published by Profile (UK)/Basic Books (US) in 2015 to widespread acclaim including from the New York Times, National Geographic, Scientific American, and she was interviewed around the world including on the BBC, NPR and The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Eugenia was an early pioneer of math on YouTube and her videos have been viewed over 20 million times to date. Her next popular math book, Beyond Infinity was published in 2017 and was shortlisted for the Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize 2017, and The Art of Logic was published by Profile and Basic Books in 2018, and “x + y : A Mathematician’s Manifesto for Rethinking Gender ” in 2020. “Is Math Real” won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Science and Technology in 2024. Her latest book is “Unequal: the mathematics of when things do and don’t add up” (2025). She also wrote the Everyday Math column for the Wall Street Journal which ran for 8 years, and has completed mathematical art commissions for Hotel EMC2, 6018 North, the Lubeznik Center and the Cultural Center, Chicago. She is the founder of the Liederstube , an intimate oasis for art song based in Chicago. As a composer she has been commissioned by GRAMMY nominated soprano Laura Strickling and is one of the composers for the Lynx Amplify series, setting work by autistic poets who are primarily non-speaking.

Eugenia has also written two children’s books, “Molly and the Mathematical Mysteries” and “Bake Infinite Pie with x+y“. “The Joy of Abstraction: A Exploration of Math, Category theory, and Life” (Cambridge University Press) came out in 2022.

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Read Eugenia’s full story here .

Top left and right pictures by Paul Crisanti of PhotoGetGo.

Eugenia recommends:

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Latest books

Unequal

The Math of When Things Do and Don’t Add Up

June 2025 (UK), September 2025 (US)

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Interview on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert


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Recent Articles and Features


Latest Books


Unequal

The Maths of When Things Do and Don’t Add Up


From Uniqueness to Set Theory and beyond, climb the mathematical ladder of sameness and difference with award-winning mathematician Eugenia Cheng

‘Playful and deeply serious ... shows how exploring equality in maths may help the real world’ NEW SCIENTIST

‘Eugenia Cheng has humour, grace and a natural gift’ DANIEL LEVITIN

‘Clear, clever and friendly...even at her most whimsical, she is rigorous and insightful’ ALEX BELLOS

At first glance, the concept of equality in maths seems unambiguous. When we see the equality sign, we think of ‘solving for x’ or balancing two sides of an equation or maybe even the many famous equations that make use of this elegant, innocuous symbol.

But between those parallel lines lies a mathematical playground of choice and abstraction, leading to far greater insight than you could have dreamed. As it turns out, sameness and difference, equality and inequality, are not nearly as straightforward as they seem.

Unequal explores the rich and rewarding interplay between sameness and difference, from numbers to manifolds to category theory and beyond in a glorious celebration of mathematics that will change the way you look at maths – and the world around you – forever.

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Is Maths Real?

How Simple Questions Lead Us to Mathematics’ Deepest Truths


One of the world’s most creative mathematicians offers a new way to look at math—focusing on questions, not answers

Where do we learn math: From rules in a textbook? From logic and deduction? Not really, according to mathematician Eugenia Cheng: we learn it from human curiosity—most importantly, from asking questions. This may come as a surprise to those who think that math is about finding the one right answer, or those who were told that the "dumb" question they asked just proved they were bad at math. But Cheng shows why people who ask questions like "Why does 1 + 1 = 2?" are at the very heart of the search for mathematical truth.

Is Math Real? is a much-needed repudiation of the rigid ways we’re taught to do math, and a celebration of the true, curious spirit of the discipline. Written with intelligence and passion, Is Math Real? brings us math as we’ve never seen it before, revealing how profound insights can emerge from seemingly unlikely sources.

Profile Books (UK), Basic Books (US)

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Also by Eugenia


How to Bake Pi: An Edible Exploration of the Mathematics of Mathematics

In How to Bake Pi, math professor Eugenia Cheng provides an accessible introduction to the logic and beauty of mathematics, powered, unexpectedly, by insights from the kitchen. We learn how the béchamel in a lasagna can be a lot like the number five, and why making a good custard proves that math is easy but life is hard.

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The Art of Logic:
How to Make Sense in a World that Doesn’t

Emotions are powerful. In newspaper headlines and on social media, they have become the primary way of understanding the world. But strong feelings make it more difficult to see the reality behind the rhetoric. In The Art of Logic, Eugenia Cheng shows how mathematical logic can help us see things more clearly – and know when politicians and companies are trying to mislead us.

First Cheng explains how to use black-and-white logic to illuminate the world around us, giving us new insight into thorny political questions like public healthcare, Black Lives Matter and Brexit. Then she explains how logic and emotions, used side-by-side, can help us not only to be more rational individuals, but also to live more thoughtfully.

Clear-sighted, revelatory and filled with useful real-life examples of logic and illogic at work, The Art of Logic is an essential guide to decoding modern life.

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About Eugenia


Dr Eugenia Cheng is Scientist In Residence at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Alongside her research in Category Theory and undergraduate teaching her aim is to rid the world of "math phobia". Her first popular math book, How to Bake Pi , was published by Basic Books in 2015 to widespread acclaim. Her next book, Beyond Infinity , was published in 2017. Eugenia is also math columnist for the Wall Street Journal, a concert pianist and founder of the Liederstube .

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