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Introduction to Analysis

Introduction to Analysis

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Author: Maxwell Rosenlicht
Publisher: Dover Publications
Category: Book

List Price: $12.95
Buy Used: $4.00
You Save: $8.95 (69%)



New (25) Used (22) from $4.00

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
Sales Rank: 257132

Media: Paperback
Pages: 254
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 0486650383
Dewey Decimal Number: 515
EAN: 9780486650388

Publication Date: February 1, 1985
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Unusually clear, accessible coverage of set theory, the real number system, metric spaces, continuous functions, Riemann integration, multiple integrals and more. Written for junior and senior undergraduates. Problems at end of each chapter cover a wide range of difficulty. Assumes a year of calculus.



Customer Reviews:   Read 6 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars a bargain   May 31, 2001
42 out of 45 found this review helpful

Buying this book is a no-brainer. It's only [price]. Unlike many dover books, it's not a reprint of a hundred year old text or dominated by 19th century style formal manipulations with indices running everywhere and no actual analysis or rigorous proofs. It covers the key topics of elementary real analysis (ie advanced calculus, or calculus with real proofs), which is basic to almost all fields of mathematics. In order to focus on the main ideas and definitions, it leaves out many topics and definitions (like functions of bounded variation, absolute continuity, lebesgue integration, differential forms, lebesgue covering lemma, f.i.c. etc.), so you should definitely have a more complete and comprehensive text like Apostol or Rudin (I prefer Apostol, although Rudin has complementary strengths). But for those omissions, Rosenlicht is quite a bit more readable than Apostol, which is best worked through methodically (since it contains a lot of results explicitly presented, its primary strength). Because it's both short and readable and focused, you can get through it reasonably quickly. Modern secondary school education teaches students to skip over the cursory material on elementary set theory, number systems, and strangely named but apparently obvious concepts like associativity and other field axioms, and to jump straight to the various sections with formulas in outlined boxes and procedure recipes for performing calculations. These rote recipes typically lack any conceptual unity and students are not often worse for wear forgetting or only superficially grasping previous ideas. This is a good way to never actually learn any legimate mathematics. Real math works on the principle of A->B->C->.... A proof (or your understanding of a mathematical concept) is only as strong as the weakest link in a chain. Learn and forget is not an adequate way to study math, and that's why introductory analysis is usually the course which weeds out those who will be able to explore the wider ocean of mathematical knowledge, and those for whom mathematics will be forever a giant forbidding question mark. The reality is, any above average person with the will, patience and time can learn this material and find themselves looking back thinking "Why was that so hard?" Blame it on the shabby state of secondary education. Do not skip over or gloss over the material on the real numbers if you aren't already fully conversant with the notion of l.u.b. and facile with its application (in which case why are you reading this book?). The l.u.b. property of the reals is your first real weapon to actually prove elementary theorem's of Calculus. Anyway this book isn't perfect, it's only good as an intro. and not a reference, but it serves the purpose of being accessible while still covering the key ideas and packing enough wallop to the requisite math whupping required by students numbed by years of inadequate secondary school education and the typical mechanical treatment of calculus and differential equations at the lower division level. And it's dirt cheap.


5 out of 5 stars Gets right to the point with no waste of time!   April 27, 1998
17 out of 17 found this review helpful

In the beginning the faint of heart should beware. This book takes no time in getting to the deeper underpinnings of analysis. This makes the reader learn and become comfortable far quicker then the average book, although it can be frustrating for the first month. However, past the introduction, Rosenlicht gives an unmatched exposition of difficult material and is far more readable than most. Definately the best book in analyis for the money! Great as a stand alone text or as a supplement to a beginners course in analysis such as Russell Gordon, "Real Analysis: An Introduction." Every student should own a copy (is $8 all that much?)


5 out of 5 stars An excellent introduction to real analysis   January 23, 1998
callen@bc.cc.ca.us (Bakersfield, California)
14 out of 14 found this review helpful

A very readable book. Any student with two years of calculus should be able to read this with understanding. Starts with metric spaces, and proceeds through differentiation, integration, interchange of limits, implicit functions. A kinder and gentler introduction, yet rigorous.


5 out of 5 stars still one of the best   September 23, 2003
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

The book was written in 1960s, and is still one of the best. The presentation is exceptionally clear; treatment of metric spaces and elementary topology is superb. Plenty of counterexamples and good (doable) exercises (some with useful hints). The print is a bit small, but you'll get used to it. Worth every penny. More math texts should be as short, inexpensive and good as this one. Highly recommended.


5 out of 5 stars A lovely introduction   August 26, 2007
Palle E T Jorgensen (Iowa City, Iowa United States)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Introduction to Analysis by Rosenlicht is a lovely introduction to advanced undergraduate, and beginning graduate mathematical analysis.
*Topics covered*: The fundamentals of analysis, including measure theory, Fourier series, Fourier integrals, function spaces, including Hilbert spaces.
Book Comparison:
Walter Rudin's "Real and Complex Analysis is a classic graduate level text book. The level is somewhere between two popular books by W. Rudin: Principles of Math Analysis ("Baby-Rudin") and "Real and Complex."
Here is a brief comparison: Rosenlicht vs Rudin: Rudin's 'Real and Complex' has become an institution, but conventional wisdom will have it that Rosenlicht is a lot gentler on students, and easier to get started with; more warm-up exercises: Rosenlicht stresses motivation a bit more, the exercises are easier, and finally Rosenlicht gets to touch upon a few applications; fashionable these days. Rudin's book is more advanced, goes more in depth, and it has stood the test of time.
The material in Rosenlicht is somewhat flexible, and it can be tailored to a variety of introductory analysis courses, from function theory to integration, to functional analysis. Review by Palle Jorgensen, August 2007.



 
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