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.
prof wrote this book. offered 5 dollars for each mathematical mistake, 1 dollar for a typo. i found a 2 dollar mistake: a minor mathematical mistake. hard class; honor's version of analysis. half of the class died of headache, half of the rest died of heartache, half of the rest died of loss of self-esteem...eventually we'll all die.
The book starts studying Numbers, Actually real numbers and constructs them from rational numbers with Dedekind Cuts, Which we expect to see these parts in a Set theory book or something about Math bases. This chapter is well written, But not what we think of the word "Analysis".
Second chapter is about Metric Spaces, I think it's the best chapter of this book,Very clear and educational, not theorem_Lemma style, it seriously tries to "teach" you the concepts, This chapter_As the name tells you : A taste of topology_ doesn't have very analytic taste again. But it's a very good start to understanding Topology even though Maybe it does not teach you topology directly.
Rest of the book has more Analytic Topics, Like Derivative, Integral, Function Spaces. These chapters are more familiar and somehow you can see them as applications of chapter 2. The book is not Rich enough on multivariable part. Maybe it's better to look at 'Calculus on Manifolds' by Spivak for this topic. I repeat again, the book really cares about how you will learn concepts, it is full of figures, examples, questions. Very good book to read in two semesters for an undergraduate student.
yes, this is a literary review of a math textbook. i would argue that actually such reviews are as necessary as reviews of already-shortlisted novels and essays, given the vast amounts of mind-numbingly jargon-filled passive voice crowding today's market of anything even slightly "academic" blocking non-phd students from fully appreciating the beauty of often esoterically written concepts.
reading this felt like having a very strange, philosophical yet somehow technical conversation with a witty close friend. for anyone who is dipping their toes into real analysis for the first time, i highly recommend pugh! his writing style is simply so down-to-earth and endlessly entertaining, despite the abstract nature of the topic discussed. look out for the pictorial descriptions of seemingly dense concepts, and the breaths of fresh air that he provides every so often in the form of mathematical poetry! not to mention, he accomplishes all of this while maintaining a level of mathematical rigor expected of university-level textbook writers. truly a rare gift.
One of the very enjoyable books on mathematics I have read. The topics are simplified and detailed for an undergraduate level study. The reader is given plenty of visualisations and exercises to understand the concepts ranging from lagrangian multipliers to measure theory. It may serve as a great primer for anybody who is interested in real analysis but has shied away from a heavier algebraic treatment.
Good content, useful for almost any undergrad analysis course sans measure theory. The style is similar to listening to a lecture's transcription and for some can be difficult to follow at times. Interesting problems.
an intuitionistic approach to mathematical analysis. The construction of real numbers via Dedekind cut is fun to read. Suitable as a supplement to Baby Rudin.
This is a terrific book. Its explanations are crystal clear and concise, and its exercises are really interesting. Unlike many other math books, this is definitely a book that is written to be read, and the book is written in a wonderful conversational style.
The chapter on metric space theory is absolutely incredible, and the construction of the real numbers in chapter one is really compelling. While the book can be light on examples, the author always provides enough of them to motivate the more rigorous definitions and proofs.
This books greatest strength is does more than just teaches real analysis--it teaches how to think and solve problems in analysis. The author peppers the text with his advice for solving problems or conceptualizing certain concepts, and it really helps the book.
Undoubtedly, this is a heavy book. I'm lucky to have a wonderful professor who carefully guides us through the material and often explains things from a great, different point of view.
If you're one of those students who try to do all problems in the section, good luck! There are over 100 problems in each chapter, not including the UC Berkeley qualifying exam problems (which I think is really cool). Many problems are challenging, but then again, don't you love it when you figure one of those out?
Nevertheless, the book is a great studying source, whether you want to apply the theorems to your problems, or learn the proofs in great length.