Trigonometry, a work in the collection of the Gelfand School Program, is the result of a collaboration between two experienced pre-college teachers, one of whom, I.M. Gelfand, is considered to be among our most distinguished living mathematicians. His impact on generations of young people, some now mathematicians of renown, continues to be remarkable. Trigonometry covers all the basics of the subject through beautiful illustrations and examples. The definitions of the trigonometric functions are geometrically motivated. Geometric relationships are rewritten in trigonometric form and extended. The text then makes a transition to the study of algebraic and analytic properties of trigonometric functions, in a way that provides a solid foundation for more advanced mathematical discussions. Throughout, the treatment stimulates the reader to think of mathematics as a unified subject. Like other I.M. Gelfand treasures in the program�Algebra, Functions and Graphs, and The Method of Coordinates�Trigonometry is written in an engaging style, and approaches the material in a unique fashion that will motivate students and teachers alike. From a review of Algebra, I.M. Gelfand and A. Shen, ISBN 0-8176-3677-3: "The idea behind teaching is to expect students to learn why things are true, rather than have them memorize ways of solving a few problems, as most of our books have done. [This] same philosophy lies behind the current text by Gel'fand and Shen. There are specific 'practical' problems but there is much more development of the ideas.... [The authors] have shown how to write a serious yet lively book on algebra." �R. Askey, The American Mathematics Monthly
Israel Moiseevich Gelfand, also written Israïl Moyseyovich Gel'fand, or Izrail M. Gelfand (Yiddish: ישראל געלפֿאַנד, Russian: Израиль Моисеевич Гельфанд; 2 September [O.S. 20 August] 1913 – 5 October 2009) was a prominent Soviet mathematician. He made significant contributions to many branches of mathematics, including group theory, representation theory and functional analysis. The recipient of many awards, including the Order of Lenin and the Wolf Prize, he was a Fellow of the Royal Society and professor at Moscow State University and, after immigrating to the United States shortly before his 76th birthday, at Rutgers University.
Terse, beautiful, and rigorous treatment of trigonometry written by a prominent soviet mathematician (three times winner of the Order of Lenin).
Despite hating trig in school, I loved working through this book. There is more math in its ~200 small pages than in 700 pages of any modern, glossy book written by some no-name pedagogue.
The book includes no solutions to its problems. I initially thought this would be an issue, but it turned out to be a blessing in disguise: It prompted me to figure out how to verify solutions on my own (and with help from https://www.wolframalpha.com/ )
AMAZING BOOK. Possibly my favorite math textbook I have ever encountered.
Pros: 1) No glossy, irrelevant pictures, no bloated CD advertisements, etc. Not hopelessly daunting due to sheer size. 2) Gelfand & Saul give a logical flow to the text, clear and mathematically motivated explanations, as well as artful foreshadowing of future topics. Very readable book 3) Examples well-chosen and worked out 4) Good quantity of rote and thought-provoking exercises, and a good amount such that it feels feasible to work through all of them if you want, but not too few to get the ideas down either. 5) The authors' love for trig's elegance comes through clearly
Cons: 1) No solutions to exercises, which is a bit unideal for someone new/tentative with trig. (Also a pro, because you have to convince yourself your answers are correct, which is great.) 2) Could be nice to have a few appendices going a little more into applications such as sound waves or navigation, but its focus on straight-up math-exposition is a perfectly nice approach too.
I was struggling to get a true understanding of the trigonometric functions in Calculus so I just devoured this book and it's pretty awesome. I got some really great insights on what trig functions really are and connected the geometric concepts with the algebraic counterparts.
The book isn't overly difficult, and I found it easy to study and complete the exercises concurrently with my advanced Calculus course. It significantly eased my workload in Calculus and clarified a lot of concepts.