General Topology (Graduate Texts in Mathematics) | 
enlarge | Author: John L. Kelley Publisher: Springer Category: Book
List Price: $74.95 Buy New: $45.00 You Save: $29.95 (40%)
New (22) Used (18) from $24.50
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 452697
Media: Hardcover Pages: 316 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.5 x 0.6
ISBN: 0387901256 Dewey Decimal Number: 514.3 EAN: 9780387901251
Publication Date: June 27, 1975 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This classic book is a systematic exposition of general topology. It is especially intended as background for modern analysis. Based on lectures given at the University of Chicago, the University of California and Tulane University, this book is intended to be a reference and a text. As a reference work, it offers a reasonably complete coverage of the area, and this has resulted in a more extended treatment than would normally be given in a course. As a text, however, the exposition in the eariler chapters proceeds at a more pedestrian pace. A preliminary chapter covers those topics requisite to the main body of work.
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The great classic of point set topology May 24, 2000 henrique fleming (Sao Paulo, SP Brazil) 24 out of 25 found this review helpful
John Kelley wanted the title to be "What every young analyst should know", but was convinced (by Halmos, among others) not to use it. Still, it is a very good description of the book. Barry Simon calls it "superb" and recommends that you read it by trying to do the exercises, recurring to the text as needed. But then you would perhaps not pay attention to how wonderful the text is. I believe this is the best-written modern mathematical text. The proofs are clean and extremely elegant. The prose itself is beautiful and frequently witty. Treats topological and uniform spaces at depth and in detail, so as to be both a textbook and a reference. Excels in both capacities. This is mathematics close to poetry.
a splendid technical book November 6, 2005 a reader (USA) 11 out of 12 found this review helpful
I was motivated to read this book while in grad school, becasue I needed to understand the French literature in my field (probability). One particular concern is the metrizability of a general topological space. I would say Kelley's book has a spendid presentation on this subject. Other things in this book are also practically useful. Convergence in the general sense (net or filter) is useful in mathematical finance. The part on locally compactness and paracompactness is a must for anyone working in differential geometry. And if you work in analysis, then the chapter on space of continuous functions is a good reference to look up. The exercise problems are also good resources when you need some help. I still remember one cute problem on the neighbourhood systems. It helped me understand how a family of seminorms would yield a topology on a linear space. Evetually, I read this book from cover to cover. And I would say this is one of the best education I've ever received. If there has to be a complain, the proofs are somewhat hard to read. But this is more or less determined by the nature of the subjects. And when you are well-motivated and equipped with certain mathematical maturity, this problem will gradually go off. In summary, this book is comprehensive, useful and beautifully written. It is a treasure that every mathematician's library should have.
Topology with the analyst in mind! April 23, 2003 7 out of 12 found this review helpful
I don't hesitate to give this book 5 stars. It is solid! Many reviewers allow too much personal judgement to cloud their appraisal of a certain book. To me I believe it is important to be as dispassionate as possible so that a prospective buyer can make an unbiased decision. Rather than label a book as "bad" or "good" one should focus on some factors such as: (1) Content: a summary of the main point covered by the book (this is optional). In the case of this book, this is obvious from the title. (2) the author's approach: Kelly took what I call the "analyst's approach" to topology. This is fine for those who love analysis but don't really care for topology for it's own sake (like me!) By using this approach, those like me are much more inclined to find topology motivating because ones sees it as abstractions of what one is familiar with (3) the presentation: Kelly gave a simple but "sophisticated" presentation. You will not describe him as very expository but the presentation is excellent. Some people seem to prefer this style and some don't. No, this has nothing to do with the so-called "mathematical maturity" (how do you define that by the way?) What the author expects you to know to understand the book - that is, the intended audience - is usually stated clearly in the preface
a splendid book March 26, 2000 9 out of 21 found this review helpful
If you study metric spaces, you can analyze the notion of convergence with the help of sequences. But if you study in arbitrary topological spaces, sequences are not enough. You have to study a net, a generalaization of a sequence. So if you want to learn topology deeply, I do recommend this book. Of course, after you master some text books in topology.
Generally great; a few annoyances January 3, 2005 D. Feuer (Maryland, USA) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is a great book. The proofs are clearly presented, and generally it is easy to understand the motivation behind definitions and theorems. Exercises are relevant, interesting, and well designed, often allowing the reader to discover things that other texts describe in dull detail. Unfortunately, a few exercises (such as "Integration Theory: Junior Grade") seem to pop out of nowhere. I consider this a minor defect. A much larger annoyance is that Kelley defines partial and linear orders in an utterly non-standard and somewhat clumsy way, which ends up affecting a large number of exercises. If you already know something about orderings, you will encounter many surprises; if you know nothing about them, you may get the wrong idea.
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