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Konrad Knopp (1882–1957)

Author of Theory of functions

29 Works 670 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Konrad Knopp

Theory of functions (1996) 101 copies, 1 review
Infinite Sequences and Series (1956) 92 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Knopp, Konrad
Birthdate
1882-07-22
Date of death
1957-04-20
Gender
male
Occupations
Mathematiker
Nationality
Germany
Birthplace
Berlin, Deutschland
Place of death
Annecy, Rhône-Alpes, Frankreich
Associated Place (for map)
Germany

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
The book Theory and Application of Infinite Series by Konrad Knopp is an excellent teaching guide and a thorough exploration of the subject. Well, although I say that, the book touches on a great many things but does not go into depth with some other parts. For instance, the book does not go too deeply into Continued Fractions. Originally published in the German language in 1921, this book is a classic of mathematical clarity.

As with most books on higher mathematics that I possess, the book show more contains theorems, proofs, definitions, workable problems, detailed examples, and so on. While most of the book is text, it does contain plenty of formulas and some graphs. The book is pretty long, but it is not the longest mathematical treatise that I have.

The pros of the book are that it is an in-depth approach to the subject, it has the aforementioned positives, it has plenty of footnotes, and the work states the mathematics quite clearly throughout. Sometimes when people get really far into higher mathematics, they forget that not everyone knows what they are talking about. However, since the book is generally written for people studying that subject, it is a forgivable error.

The cons of the book are more difficult to list. I can’t say the subject is outdated or somewhat useless since Infinite Series come up a lot in mathematics and the subject hasn’t changed all that much. Also, since the book is quite thorough and has practice problems it makes it even more useful.

The book has a detailed Bibliography with such luminaries as Isaac Newton, Leonhard Euler, Karl Gauss, John Wallis, Augustin-Louis Cauchy and so on. If you are looking for a specific portion of the book, there is an index organized by subject name.

All in all, this book was really well done. If you are a fan of reading old mathematical texts, this book might be worth your time.
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Statistics

Works
29
Members
670
Popularity
#37,679
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
49
Languages
2

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