Brushing up

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Brushing up

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1crowderb
Ago 12, 2006, 10:15 pm

First a bit of background: I took math up to calculus my senior year of high school, but since then it has gathered dust on the back shelves of my mind (I'm an English major). And I miss it.

Since it's never too late, I want to brush up on what I once knew so that I can start learning about all the cool stuff I never got to (linear algebra, multivariable calculus, etc.). I'm not quite sure what the best way is to go about it, though -- work through textbooks? I'm not averse to doing that, of course; if that's the best way, any recommended textbooks? If it's not, any ideas on what to use instead?
(I just ordered Jan Gullberg's Mathematics: From the Birth of Numbers on Amazon, based on Stevey's mention of it, for what that's worth)

Thanks! :)

2ccc3579 Primeira Mensagem
Ago 13, 2006, 9:02 pm

Try Clifford A Pickover's Calculus and Pizza for a refresher on Calculus.

3oroboros
Ago 31, 2006, 3:15 pm

I highly recommend Berlinski's A tour of the Calculus as well as The Advent of the Algorithm by the same author. Moreover, his remarkable erudition, facility with language and a unique writing style are a bonus for an english major! Check it out!! Cheerio...

4StephanieKim
Set 20, 2006, 11:30 am

Esta mensagem foi removida pelo seu autor.

5StephanieKim
Set 20, 2006, 11:33 am

Hmm interesting. What do you like about Calculus and Pizza, ccc3579?

6alu042
Dez 14, 2006, 4:57 pm

It is not exactly what you asked for (it is not exactly a textbook) but I highly recommend the book What is Mathematics? by Richard Courant. As Albert Einstein has written, it is "a lucid representation of the fundamental concepts and methods of the whole field of mathematics....Easily understandable".

As a more textbook-like work, I would recommend Apostol's Calculus, volume 1 and 2. In them you will find both one- and multi-variable calculus, and also linear algebra. I like these books much better than the more modern calculus books.

7MrKris
Dez 14, 2006, 6:06 pm

Mensagem removida.

8rljacobson
Dez 24, 2006, 1:44 am

I really encourage you to try to take a course if you can. You could do calculus, or for a different flavor, you could take an intro to proof-writing course. The intro to proofs course is often a course on set theory or linear algebra, though the actual content varies from school to school and isn't as important as the fact that it teaches proof writing. And some schools don't have a single course for such a thing.

9openset
Dez 24, 2006, 6:00 pm

Just to add to 8: An Accompaniment to Higher Mathematics is a nice book to keep on hand while you're studying mathematics. It teaches proof writing and reading, and also how to spot clues in theorems and problems to help relate seemingly different mathematical concepts. If you patiently work through it as it suggests, it will teach you how to think like a mathematician.

10szarka
Jan 12, 2007, 11:28 pm

Re: Berlinski's A Tour of the Calculus... Ugh! I got about halfway through it during a vacation before putting it down in disgust. About a third of what he writes is *really* good, so I understand why some folks rave about it, but not worth reading the other two thirds... He's too in love with his own literary voice to be a good writer; doubly-so when it comes to writing about math...

rljacobson's advice about taking a proof-writing course of some kind is probably quite good. I recently started on a second bachelor's degree in math, and at my school the first course majors in math and comp sci take is called "Discrete Structures". It covers logic, set theory, proofs, relations & functions, and counting--a smorgasboard of tools you'd use in advanced courses. Most schools seem to have a similar course. I linked the MIT versions of this course at http://seaofnoise.com/blosxom/it/mit6042j.html

11jmricker Primeira Mensagem
Editado: Jan 13, 2007, 9:48 am

Calculus Made Easy was the book I found that really opened the doors for me and helped me understand Calculus. I struggled through my first class until I read that book and had this fantastic ah-ha moment and understood what my calculus book and professor was trying to tell me. If only they explained it as clearly as Silvanus P. Thompson does in the book.

12szarka
Editado: Jan 18, 2007, 11:41 pm

I read Calculus Made Easy back when I first took calc and I remember liking it, too. IIRC, it emphasized the "how to do it" part rather than the "why it works" part, though.