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Showing posts with label Mathematical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mathematical. Show all posts

Uncommon Mathematical Excursions: Polynomia and Related Realms (Dolciani Mathematical Expositions)

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Uncommon Mathematical Excursions: Polynomia and Related Realms (Dolciani Mathematical Expositions) Overviews

This text serves as a tour guide to little known corners of the mathematical landscape, not far from the main byways of algebra, geometry, and calculus. It is for the seasoned mathematical traveller who has visited these subjects many times and, familiar with the main attractions, is ready to venture abroad off the beaten track. For the old hand and new devotee alike, this book will surprise, intrigue, and delight readers with unexpected aspects of old and familiar subjects. In the first part of the book all of the topics are related to polynomials: properties and applications of Horner form, reverse and palindromic polynomials and identities linking roots and coefficients, among others. Topics in the second part are all connected in some way with maxima and minima. In the final part calculus is the focus.

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Real Mathematical Analysis

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I wish that I had discovered Pugh in my first semester of undergraduate analysis. The assigned text was Rudin and it was a great choice. The exposition there is excellent. The exercises are incredibly well done. Pugh covers just about the same material as Rudin, and in the same rigor, but is more likely to give you paragraphs before and after important theorems/definitions that help to clarify things. I must admit I am not too familiar with the first half of Pugh's text as I didn't discover it until I was well in chapter 10 of Rudin ~~ chapter 5 of Pugh. But, if the first chapters are as good as the fourth and fifth, you can get just as much from Pugh as from Rudin, if not more.

Sometimes, you get a picture (this would have been really helpful back when I was learning what an open cover was). Other times, Pugh actually gives a better presentation. For instance, when discussion the rank theorem, Rudin's statement of it is hard to follow. The proof is about as difficult. Pugh, however, introduces C' equivalence and then gives an alternate statement of the theorem which is much more intuitive. AND some pictures after the proof. Some think having pictures in analysis books is bad--Pugh gives evidence otherwise.

It is difficult to say which text has better exercises as I have not attempted them all. But Pugh definitely has more of them. I think the best thing for any undergraduate to do is to just own both books. Rudin is the standard for a good reason. Pugh's or someone else's exposition may become the standard in the future, but Rudin will always be an excellent reference. Doing Rudin's exercises will help prepare you for your qualifying exams if you ever take them. Pugh has some UC Berkeley good prelim exam questions in his book which prepare you for future math endeavors as well. So I say just buy both. But if you can only buy one.... probably get Pugh because he's cheaper. Or you can get International Edition Rudin for cheaper still.


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Real Mathematical Analysis Overviews

In this new introduction to undergraduate real analysis the author takes a different approach from past presentations of the subject, by stressing the importance of pictures in mathematics and hard problems. The exposition is informal and relaxed, with many helpful asides, examples and occasional comments from mathematicians such as Dieudonne, Littlewood, and Osserman. This book is based on the honors version of a course which the author has taught many times over the last 35 years at Berkeley. The book contains an excellent selection of more than 500 exercises.

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Customer Review


I prefer Bartle and Sherbert - Danial Lee Sellers - Indianapolis, IN
I used this book in my first Real Analysis course and thoroughly disliked it. I seems that everyone else who reviews this book mentions Rudin. I haven't had a chance to read Rudin yet but I prefer Intro to Real Analysis by Robert G. Bartle and Donald R. Sherbert over this book. Many people like Pugh for it's conversational tone but I found it annoying. This might be a good secondary book but I wouldn't recommend this as your first book in real analysis. Pugh makes the cardinal mistake of mathematicians in introducing the most general case first. The most important thing in mathematics is not the most general case but the process of generalization itself. This is like saying the journey is as important as the destination. To generalize one must start with a specific case and then work, layer by layer, to the most general case. That's one reason I prefer Bartle and Sherbert. It starts with functions from R to R and generalizes from there. It takes up where undergraduate calculus leaves off. I also prefer the exercises in Bartle and Sherbert better. They are challenging without being infuriating. They are still general proofing exercises but are specific enough to deal with specific functions, series, sequences, and so forth. I was also annoyed by the way Pugh qualifies his proofs like Chapter 1 Theorem 2: "Proof Easy" ,or theorem 9: "Proof Tricky!", or Chapter 2 Theorem 10:"Proof, Totally natural!". I feel his language is imprecise and sloppy. I feel the section on cuts is superfluous. It seems that cuts are a lot of work and headaches just to prove that everything I learned in elementary school is correct. I was worried that x+0 didn't really equal x but now with cuts, I can rest assured that it does! Whew, what a relief! The only plus to Pugh is the thorough chapter on metric spaces helps put things into a broader context. All and all I dislike Pugh's book and highly recommend Bartle and Sherbert. as the best introduction to Real Analysis.


Excellent problems and diagrams -- great book - Jesse Taylor - North Idaho
This is an excellent introductory text on real analysis. It is very approachable, and he does a very good job at supplementing the traditional "definition-theorem-proof" style with intuitive explanations and wonderfully descriptive diagrams (the diagrams are one of the strongest points of this book -- and are something that are sadly left out of many otherwise good books on analysis).

My only (minor) complaint is with the layout/formatting of the book -- it is very jumbled together, the typesetting is poor, and it looks like it was printed on a low-resolution printer.

Other than that, it is an excellent companion to a more in-depth/advanced treatment. As far as more "advanced" books go, I would recommend -- Apostol's "Mathematical Analysis" and/or Shilov's "Real and Complex Analysis" -- both of which are incredibly well written and informative.



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Real Infinite Series (Classroom Resource Material) (Mathematical Association of America Textbooks)

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This is an excellent book. The prose is very readable and there are numerous illustrative examples to clarify the main points. Chapter 1 defines infinite series, discusses intuition and infinity, and covers the basic convergence tests. Chapter 2 covers the work of Cauchy and discusses more involved tests of convergence such as Kummer's results, the tests of Raabe and Gauss, and the tests of Abel. Chapter 3 examines the harmonic series. Chapter 4 covers a number of interesting results involving infinite series. Chapter 5 presents 101 problems involving infinite series from the Putnam Mathematical Competition. Answers to all problems are provided. Chapter 6 presents a plethora of puzzles, proofs without words, fallacious proofs, and fallacies, flaws, and flimflam. Answers to the puzzles are given. Two appendices present 101 True or False questions on infinite series with answers and a brief article on harmonic series. References, both books and journals, are also given. A brief but thorough index concludes the book. This book would serve very well as a resource for high school and college calculus teachers. Undergraduate mathematics majors with an interest in infinite series would find it appealing. Finally, readers like myself who majored in mathematics but pursued other careers would enjoy using it to refresh their knowledge of infinite series.(they may need to review a little calculus). The authors have produced a gem of a book and anyone who has a passion for mathematics will enjoy reading this volume. Chapters 1 and 6 are especially readable, informative, and enjoyable. Chapter 6 is just plain fun! Get your hands on a copy of this book as it will provide hours of fascinating reading and problem solving.


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Real Infinite Series (Classroom Resource Material) (Mathematical Association of America Textbooks) Overviews

This is a widely accessible introductory treatment of infinite series of real numbers, bringing the reader from basic definitions and tests to advanced results. An up-to-date presentation is given, making infinite series accessible, interesting, and useful to a wide audience, including students, teachers, and researchers.

"Real Infinite Series" presents the theory of real infinite series, including elementary and advanced tests for convergence or divergence, the harmonic series, the alternating harmonic series, and closely related results. One chapter offers 107 concise, crisp, surprising results about infinite series. Recognizing the interest in problem solving that abounds with students of mathematics, the authors devote a chapter to problems on infinite series, and solutions, which have appeared on the annual William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition.

The lighter side of infinite series is treated in the concluding chapter where three puzzles, eighteen visuals (what Martin Gardner calls "look-see" diagrams), and several fallacious proofs are made available.

Three appendices provide a listing of true or false statements, answers to why the harmonic series is so named, and an extensive list of published works devoted entirely or partially to infinite series.

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Customer Review



Like Father, Like Son - Michael Khoury - his hometown
I am pleased to say that I was one of the first to have this wonderful book. In all honesty - I don't understand anything in this book. I tried to just read chapter 1 - the definitions, and I fell asleep. I tried to read chapter 2 and I got a headache.

However, I'm the father of one of the author's and I'm awfully proud of him!

Please buy many copies.

Mike Sr.



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Negative Math: How Mathematical Rules Can Be Positively Bent

Negative Math: How Mathematical Rules Can Be Positively Bent Review




Consider the number line. It is very symmetrical. Zero is in the middle, with the positive numbers to the right, and the negative numbers to the left. But that symmetry rapidly breaks down under multiplication; if multiplication were symmetrical then multiplying two negative numbers should produce another negative number, but it doesn't. The symmetry breaks down even more when you take square roots. The square root of 4 is plus or minus 2. The square root of -4 isn't even a real number; it is plus or minus 2i. Here is another violation of the symmetry of the number line : 2^2 is 4, but -2^-2 is 1/4. That is weird.

Martinez develops an algebra that restores the symmetry of the number line under multiplication, while simultaneously dispensing with imaginary numbers. All you have to do is change the rule of multiplication so that a negative number times a negative number is still negative. Now the square root of -4 is -2. This also gets rid of the double roots for square numbers. It also makes -2^-2 = -4.

This algebra runs into some problems. For one thing, multiplication is not commutative. This seems odd, but we're already familiar with non commutative operations. Some examples include subtraction, division, and matrix multiplication. Martinez smoothes over this issue and a couple other potential pitfalls. He also shows that you can actually create simpler solutions to some problems in mathematics. Martinez's algebra also does a better job of corresponding to the real world. Thinking of negative numbers as "moving in the other direction" results in an arithmetic that does a better job of applying to the real world.

I would highly recommend this book because I'll never think of mathematics, or numbers, in the same way again. Martinez's experiment really forces you to think about what numbers mean, and what possible real world or geometric interpretation they may have. But having said that, I think his experiment is destined to be a failure.

Here is an example of how Martinez's algebra breaks down. 5 = (10 - 5), so 5 x 5 should be the same as (10 - 5) x (10 - 5). But according to Martinez's algebra, it is 75 (you can work this out - use the sign of the first number only for the inner terms). This experiment also provides insight into how negative numbers might work. We can think of -5 x -5 as ( 0 - 5) x (0 - 5) = 25. But according to Martinez's algebra, it is defined to be -25. [UPDATE: Martinez kindly explains in the comment that the artificial algebra uses a different distribution rule than traditional algebra, a nuance that I missed in this review)

Martinez's algebra also breaks down because you cannot use logarithms as a shorthand for division. Lets pick an easy example to demonstrate the point, dividing 4 by 8. The way you do this is to express them both to a common base and subtract the exponents. So you get log( 2^2 ) - log( 2^3 ) = log( 2^-1 ) = -1. Then you use re-exponentiate to get your answer. In traditional algebra, 2^-1 = 1/2 = 4/8. That is the correct answer. But with Martinez's algebra, 2^-1 = -2, which is the wrong answer.

I should point out at this point that Martinez successfully works out a few kinks that originally appear as though they would doom his system. So it is quite possible that someone with more mathematical maturity could figure out a way around these obstacles. But my instinct is that Martinez's system has run into a dead end. The real lesson I have taken from the experiment is that math isn't easy to bend, but I thoroughly enjoyed the attempt.





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Overviews

A student in class asks the math teacher: "Shouldn't minus times minus make minus?" Teachers soon convince most students that it does not. Yet the innocent question brings with it a germ of mathematical creativity. What happens if we encourage that thought, odd and ungrounded though it may seem? Few books in the field of mathematics encourage such creative thinking. Fewer still are engagingly written and fun to read. This book succeeds on both counts. Alberto Martinez shows us how many of the mathematical concepts that we take for granted were once considered contrived, imaginary, absurd, or just plain wrong. Even today, he writes, not all parts of math correspond to things, relations, or operations that we can actually observe or carry out in everyday life. Negative Math ponders such issues by exploring controversies in the history of numbers, especially the so-called negative and "impossible" numbers. It uses history, puzzles, and lively debates to demonstrate how it is still possible to devise new artificial systems of mathematical rules. In fact, the book contends, departures from traditional rules can even be the basis for new applications. For example, by using an algebra in which minus times minus makes minus, mathematicians can describe curves or trajectories that are not represented by traditional coordinate geometry. Clear and accessible, Negative Math expects from its readers only a passing acquaintance with basic high school algebra. It will prove pleasurable reading not only for those who enjoy popular math, but also for historians, philosophers, and educators. Key Features:

* Uses history, puzzles, and lively debates to devise new mathematical systems

* Shows how departures from rules can underlie new practical applications

* Clear and accessible

* Requires a background only in basic high school algebra

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Customer Review


not sure the book has the right conclusions - Deep Roy - Minneapolis, MN United States
the author claims that there's no device which measures an imaginary number; well, for EE's, an imaginary number (phasor) can be measured with an oscilloscope since oscilloscopes can measure amplitude and phase; this representation can then be converted to an imaginary number. the author also claims that you can't have -5 apples in a box and this seems sinister since -5, for example, would mean that there's an IOU in the box after the vender had 5 apples and bartered 10 apples for something he wanted. in this case, when the vender got a dozen more apples, 5 of them would be owed. perhaps I should read more than amazon's sample pages but the ones I read didn't seem that complete.


A wonderful and vital perspective - Eric Belcastro - Bridgeville, PA United States
I will leave out information that I feel other reviewers have already mentioned and just concentrate on a few points.

This writing really is wonderful, in my opinion. I think that, as a popular writing it is certainly accessible to the general public, but simplicity can be deceptive. The topics may not involve dense opaque notation and detailed treatment from abstract algebra, but if such approaches were resulted to, there would not have been any room to really deal with the historical, philosophical, and physical implications of new algebras. Often texts of that nature present the subject in its most compact form, which is rather out of step with any true learning process which gains an intuitive understanding first, and then builds up in layers upon the first insights, questioning and reworking as the process continues. I feel that the comment by one reviewer that the author is in error by not discussing the topic in abstract algebra form (that would, coincidentally make the book utterly incomprehensible to the common reader) is symptomatic of what happens when someone becomes very proficient at a subject and completely loses all touch with the reality of the people who don't have her/his expertise. It is not the job of this book to take that approach. That is your job. Take the ideas and fly with them, or reject them; either which way, I think you will come away from it with a deeper perspective. Even mathematicians dealing with hypercomplex algebras could deal with a short retreat to consider these basic ideas anew.

I am thankful to Mr. Martinez for writing this book. I hope it is well received.





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