Description

Book Synopsis
This text makes a great supplement and provides a systematic approach for teaching undergraduate and graduate students how to read, understand, think about, and do proofs. The approach is to categorize, identify, and explain (at the student''s level) the various techniques that are used repeatedly in all proofs, regardless of the subject in which the proofs arise. How to Read and Do Proofsalso explains when each technique is likely to be used, based on certain key words that appear in the problem under consideration. Doing so enables students to choose a technique consciously, based on the form of the problem.

Trade Review
"The instructional material is to the point, with well-considered examples and asides on common mistakes. Good examples of the author's thoughtfulness appear in the discourses on pp. 5-6 of identifying the hypothesis and conclusion when they are not obvious, on pp. 28-29 regarding overlapping notation, and on pp. 190-191 of the advantages and disadvantages of generalization." (Zentralblatt MATH 2016)

Table of Contents

Foreword xi

Preface to the Student xiii

Preface to the Instructor xv

Acknowledgments xviii

Part I Proofs

1 Chapter 1: The Truth of It All 1

2 The Forward-Backward Method 9

3 On Definitions and Mathematical Terminology 25

4 Quantifiers I: The Construction Method 41

5 Quantifiers II: The Choose Method 53

6 Quantifiers III: Specialization 69

7 Quantifiers IV: Nested Quantifiers 81

8 Nots of Nots Lead to Knots 93

9 The Contradiction Method 101

10 The Contrapositive Method 115

11 The Uniqueness Methods 125

12 Induction 133

13 The Either/Or Methods 145

14 The Max/Min Methods 155

15 Summary 163

Part II Other Mathematical Thinking Processes

16 Generalization 179

17 Creating Mathematical Definitions 197

18 Axiomatic Systems 219

Appendix A Examples of Proofs from Discrete Mathematics 237

Appendix B Examples of Proofs from Linear Algebra 251

Appendix C Examples of Proofs from Modern Algebra 269

Appendix D Examples of Proofs from Real Analysis 287

Solutions to Selected Exercises 305

Glossary 357

References 367

Index 369

How to Read and Do Proofs

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    A Paperback / softback by Daniel Solow

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      View other formats and editions of How to Read and Do Proofs by Daniel Solow

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 03/09/2013
      ISBN13: 9781118164020, 978-1118164020
      ISBN10: 1118164024
      Also in:
      Mathematics

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This text makes a great supplement and provides a systematic approach for teaching undergraduate and graduate students how to read, understand, think about, and do proofs. The approach is to categorize, identify, and explain (at the student''s level) the various techniques that are used repeatedly in all proofs, regardless of the subject in which the proofs arise. How to Read and Do Proofsalso explains when each technique is likely to be used, based on certain key words that appear in the problem under consideration. Doing so enables students to choose a technique consciously, based on the form of the problem.

      Trade Review
      "The instructional material is to the point, with well-considered examples and asides on common mistakes. Good examples of the author's thoughtfulness appear in the discourses on pp. 5-6 of identifying the hypothesis and conclusion when they are not obvious, on pp. 28-29 regarding overlapping notation, and on pp. 190-191 of the advantages and disadvantages of generalization." (Zentralblatt MATH 2016)

      Table of Contents

      Foreword xi

      Preface to the Student xiii

      Preface to the Instructor xv

      Acknowledgments xviii

      Part I Proofs

      1 Chapter 1: The Truth of It All 1

      2 The Forward-Backward Method 9

      3 On Definitions and Mathematical Terminology 25

      4 Quantifiers I: The Construction Method 41

      5 Quantifiers II: The Choose Method 53

      6 Quantifiers III: Specialization 69

      7 Quantifiers IV: Nested Quantifiers 81

      8 Nots of Nots Lead to Knots 93

      9 The Contradiction Method 101

      10 The Contrapositive Method 115

      11 The Uniqueness Methods 125

      12 Induction 133

      13 The Either/Or Methods 145

      14 The Max/Min Methods 155

      15 Summary 163

      Part II Other Mathematical Thinking Processes

      16 Generalization 179

      17 Creating Mathematical Definitions 197

      18 Axiomatic Systems 219

      Appendix A Examples of Proofs from Discrete Mathematics 237

      Appendix B Examples of Proofs from Linear Algebra 251

      Appendix C Examples of Proofs from Modern Algebra 269

      Appendix D Examples of Proofs from Real Analysis 287

      Solutions to Selected Exercises 305

      Glossary 357

      References 367

      Index 369

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