An Accompaniment to Higher Mathematics

by George R. Exner

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For Students Congratulations! You are about to take a course in mathematical proof. If you are nervous about the whole thing, this book is for you (if not, please read the second and third paragraphs in the introduction for professors following this, so you won't feel left out). The rumors are true; a first course in proof may be very hard because you will have to do three things that are probably new to you: 1. Read mathematics independently. 2. Understand proofs on your own. :1. Discover show more and write your own proofs. This book is all about what to do if this list is threatening because you "never read your calculus book" or "can't do proofs. " Here's the good news: you must be good at mathematics or you wouldn't have gotten this far. Here's the bad news: what worked before may not work this time. Success may lie in improving or discarding many habits that were good enough once but aren't now. Let's see how we've gotten to a point at which someone could dare to imply that you have bad habits. l The typical elementary and high school mathematics education in the United States tends to teach students to have ineffective learning habits, 1 In the first paragraph, yet. xiv Introduction and we blush to admit college can be just as bad. show less

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An Accompaniment to Higher Mathematics

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Genres
Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Philosophy, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
511.3Natural sciences & mathematicsMathematicsGeneral principles of mathematicsMathematical (Symbolic) logic
LCC
QA9.54 .E96ScienceMathematicsMathematicsGeneral
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Paper, Ebook
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