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1994 | Buch

A First Course in Analysis

verfasst von: George Pedrick

Verlag: Springer New York

Buchreihe : Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics

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Über dieses Buch

The first course in Analysis, which follows calculus, along with other courses, such as differential equations and elementary linear algebra, in the curricu­ lum, presents special pedagogical challenges. There is a change of stress from computational manipulation to "proof. " Indeed, the course can become more a course in Logic than one in Analysis. Many students, caught short by a weak command of the means of mathematical discourse and unsure of what is expected of them, what "the game" is, suffer bouts of a kind of mental paralysis. This text attempts to address these problems in several ways: First, we have attempted to define "the game" as that of "inquiry," by using a form of exposition that begins with a question and proceeds to analyze, ultimately to answer it, bringing in definitions, arguments, conjectures, exam­ ples, etc. , as they arise naturally in the course of a narrative discussion of the question. (The true, historical narrative is too convoluted to serve for first explanations, so no attempt at historical accuracy has been made; our narra­ tives are completely contrived. ) Second, we have kept the logic informal, especially in the course of preliminary speculative discussions, where common sense and plausibility­ tempered by mild skepticism-serve to energize the inquiry.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Background: Number Systems

Background: Number Systems
George Pedrick

Analysis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Approximation: The Real Numbers
Abstract
The fixing of a reference point or origin, and a unit point on a line constitutes the establishment of a coordinate system on that line. For each choice of a coordinate system on a line there is determined the set of rational points; those measurable using ℚ, and the set of irrational points such as \(\sqrt {2.} 2\). We have mentioned the idea of using the fact that ℚ is dense, to “approximate” irrationals by rationals, a notion that we must make more precise.
George Pedrick
Chapter 2. The Extreme-Value Problem
Abstract
We present an informal discussion, to illustrate how certain concepts might naturally arise in the pursuit of an answer to a fundamental question: the question of the existence of minimum and maximum values of real-valued functions.
George Pedrick
Chapter 3. Continuous Functions
Abstract
By pursuing the theme of building new classes of functions, we are led to some general considerations about continuity in this chapter. One outcome of this approach is a sketch of one way (there are several) of providing rigorous definitions of the so-called elementary functions and establishing their familiar properties. Perhaps the more important outcome is the appearance of certain fundamental concepts and theorems of Analysis and some clarification of exactly what variety of functions possess the property of continuity.
George Pedrick

Foundations of Calculus

Frontmatter
Chapter 4. Differentiation
Abstract
Science begins with observation. At first the observations may be only crude and tentative: more of one thing seems always to be accompanied by more of another (direct variation), or, perhaps, by less of the other (inverse variation). Once a science has established ways of measuring its central attributes (measuring temperature was a major achievement of early physical science) the primary observations become expressible as formulas, relating quantities. That is, attributes become quantities via measurement, and the science, or part of it, emerges from the qualitative stage to a quantitative stage, amenable to mathematical descriptions. The fundamental laws of the science are expressed by formulas.
George Pedrick
Chapter 5. Integration
Abstract
The process of integration has ancient origins. Archimedes derived formulas for the areas of several kinds of figures by ingenious arguments based on the “method of exhaustion,” whereby a figure is approximated by finite unions of simpler figures whose areas are known. Such methods ultimately evolved into a form of heuristic reasoning, which is still used in each of the sciences to establish mathematical expressions for various quantities; not only length, area, and volume in geometry, but also mass, moments, electrical charge, power, yield from an investment, population, and many others.
George Pedrick
Chapter 6. Infinite Series
Abstract
The Calculus, from its very beginnings, has featured the idea of “adding” infinitely many numbers. Formal expressions indicating such “additions” i.e., infinite series, were found to offer symbolic solutions to various problems. One such problem: to describe the motions of a stretched elastic string, such as a violin string, was the focus of a major dispute, which proved to be a watershed event in the history of Mathematics. The dispute was about a series solution to the problem and its effect was, ultimately, the clarification of some very basic concepts of Mathematics and its applications. [See González-Velasco [13] or Kline [18], for the history.)
George Pedrick
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
A First Course in Analysis
verfasst von
George Pedrick
Copyright-Jahr
1994
Verlag
Springer New York
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4419-8554-5
Print ISBN
978-1-4612-6435-4
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-8554-5