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How We Got from There to Here A Story of Real Analysis Robert Rogers

By: Rogers, Robert [author]Contributor(s): Boman, Eugene [author] | Open Textbook Library [distributor]Material type: TextTextSeries: Open textbook libraryDistributor: Open Textbook Library Publisher: Open SUNY Description: 1 online resourceISBN: 9781312348691Subject(s): Mathematics -- TextbooksLOC classification: QA1Online resources: Access online version
Contents:
1 Numbers, Real (R) and Rational (Q) -- 2 Calculus in the 17th and 18th Centuries -- 3 Questions Concerning Power Series -- 4 Convergence of Sequences and Series -- 5 Convergence of the Taylor Series: A "Tayl" of Three Remainders -- 6 Continuity: What It Isn't and What It Is -- 7 Intermediate and Extreme Values -- 8 Back to Power Series -- 9 Back to the Real Numbers
Subject: The typical introductory real analysis text starts with an analysis of the real number system and uses this to develop the definition of a limit, which is then used as a foundation for the definitions encountered thereafter. While this is certainly a reasonable approach from a logical point of view, it is not how the subject evolved, nor is it necessarily the best way to introduce students to the rigorous but highly non-intuitive definitions and proofs found in analysis. This book proposes that an effective way to motivate these definitions is to tell one of the stories (there are many) of the historical development of the subject, from its intuitive beginnings to modern rigor. The definitions and techniques are motivated by the actual difficulties encountered by the intuitive approach and are presented in their historical context. However, this is not a history of analysis book. It is an introductory analysis textbook, presented through the lens of history. As such, it does not simply insert historical snippets to supplement the material. The history is an integral part of the topic, and students are asked to solve problems that occur as they arise in their historical context. This book covers the major topics typically addressed in an introductory undergraduate course in real analysis in their historical order. Written with the student in mind, the book provides guidance for transforming an intuitive understanding into rigorous mathematical arguments. For example, in addition to more traditional problems, major theorems are often stated and a proof is outlined. The student is then asked to fill in the missing details as a homework problem.
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1 Numbers, Real (R) and Rational (Q) -- 2 Calculus in the 17th and 18th Centuries -- 3 Questions Concerning Power Series -- 4 Convergence of Sequences and Series -- 5 Convergence of the Taylor Series: A "Tayl" of Three Remainders -- 6 Continuity: What It Isn't and What It Is -- 7 Intermediate and Extreme Values -- 8 Back to Power Series -- 9 Back to the Real Numbers

The typical introductory real analysis text starts with an analysis of the real number system and uses this to develop the definition of a limit, which is then used as a foundation for the definitions encountered thereafter. While this is certainly a reasonable approach from a logical point of view, it is not how the subject evolved, nor is it necessarily the best way to introduce students to the rigorous but highly non-intuitive definitions and proofs found in analysis. This book proposes that an effective way to motivate these definitions is to tell one of the stories (there are many) of the historical development of the subject, from its intuitive beginnings to modern rigor. The definitions and techniques are motivated by the actual difficulties encountered by the intuitive approach and are presented in their historical context. However, this is not a history of analysis book. It is an introductory analysis textbook, presented through the lens of history. As such, it does not simply insert historical snippets to supplement the material. The history is an integral part of the topic, and students are asked to solve problems that occur as they arise in their historical context. This book covers the major topics typically addressed in an introductory undergraduate course in real analysis in their historical order. Written with the student in mind, the book provides guidance for transforming an intuitive understanding into rigorous mathematical arguments. For example, in addition to more traditional problems, major theorems are often stated and a proof is outlined. The student is then asked to fill in the missing details as a homework problem.

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