About this book
Introduction
The Art of Proof is designed for a one-semester or two-quarter course. A typical student will have studied calculus (perhaps also linear algebra) with reasonable success. With an artful mixture of chatty style and interesting examples, the student's previous intuitive knowledge is placed on solid intellectual ground. The topics covered include: integers, induction, algorithms, real numbers, rational numbers, modular arithmetic, limits, and uncountable sets. Methods, such as axiom, theorem and proof, are taught while discussing the mathematics rather than in abstract isolation. Some of the proofs are presented in detail, while others (some with hints) may be assigned to the student or presented by the instructor. The authors recommend that the two parts of the book -- Discrete and Continuous -- be given equal attention.
The book ends with short essays on further topics suitable for seminar-style presentation by small teams of students, either in class or in a mathematics club setting. These include: continuity, cryptography, groups, complex numbers, ordinal number, and generating functions.
Keywords
Cardinal number Countable set algebra cardinality completeness of R high-order recursions integers modulo n noncomputable numbers set theory strong induction universal quantifiers well ordering principle
Authors and affiliations
- Matthias Beck
- Ross Geoghegan
- 1., Department of MathematicsSan Francisco State UniversitySan FranciscoUSA
- 2.State University of New York, Department of Mathematical SciencesBinghamton UniversityBinghamtonUSA
Bibliographic information