PREFACE
PARTI
PART IT
PART I
CONTENTS
Prologue
1 Basic Properties of Numbers 3
2 Numbers of Various Sorts 21
Foundations
3. Functions 39
Appendix. Ordered Pairs 54
4 Graphs 36
Appendix. Polar Coordinates 73
5 Limits 78
6 Continuous Functions 101
‘Three Hard Theorems 108
Least Upper Bounds 119
Appendix. Uniform Continuity 130
Derivatives and Integrals
9 Derivatives 135
10 Differentiation 154
11 Significance of the Derivative 173
Appendix. Canvexity and Concavity 204
12 Inverse Functions 215
Appendix. Parametric Representation of Curves 229
43. Integrals 233
Appendix 1. Riemann Sums 262
Appendix 2, The Cosmopolitan Integral 265
14° The Fundamental Theorem of Caleulus 268
15. The Trigonometric Functions 286
“16 wis Irvational 307
17 ‘The Logarithm and Exponential Functions 313
18 Integration in Elementary Terms 336xii Contents
PARTIV
PARTY
Infinite Sequences and Infinite Series
19. Approximation by Polynomial Functions 379
*20 eis Transcendental 409
21 Sequences 419
22 Infinite Series 438
23 Uniform Convergence and Power Series 465
24 Comples Numbers 491
25 Complex Functions 506
26 Complex Power Series 520
Epilogue
27 Fields 547
28 Construction of the Real Numbers 554
29 Uniqueness of the Real Numbers 567
Suggested Reading 575
Answers (to selected problems) 585
Glossary of Symbols 633
Index 637CHAPTER
BASIC PROPERTIES OF NUMBERS
‘The title of this chapter expresses in a few words the mathematical knowledge
required to read this book. In fact, this short chapter is simply an explanation
of what is meant by the “basic properties of numbers,” all of which—addition
and multiplication, subtraction and division, solutions of equations and
inequalities, factoring and other algebraic manipulations—are already
familiar to us, Nevertheless, this chapter is not a review. Despite the famniliarity
Of the subject, the survey we are about to undertake will probably seem quite
novel; it does not aim to present an extended review of old material, but to
condense this knowledge into a few simple and obvious properties of numbers.
Some may even seem too obvious to mention, but a surprising number of
diverse and important facts turn out to be consequences of the ones we shall
emphasize,
(Of the twelve properties which we shall study in this chapter, the first nine
are concerned with the fundamental operations of addition and multiplica-
addition: this operation is performed
tion. For the moment we consider on
on a pair of numbers—the sum a + b exists for any two given numbers aand 5
(which may possibly be the same number, of course). It might seem reason-
able to regard addition as an operation which can be performed on several
numbers at once, and consider the sum ait + * + +ay of n numbers
a1, - « - 4 9 28 a basic concept. It is more convenient, however, t0 cor
addition of pairs of numbers only, and to define other sums in terms of sums
of this type. For the sum of three numbers a, 6, and c, this may be done in two
different ways. One can first add 6 and ¢, obtaining 4 + ¢, and then add a to
this number, obtaining a + (6 + 0); or one can first add a and 4, and then
add the sum a + 5 to ¢, obtaining (a + 5) + ¢, OF course, the two compound
sums obtained are equal, and this fact is the very first property we shall list:
(P1) Ifa, 4, and care any numbers, then
+t) =@+s) te
‘The statement of this property clearly renders a separate concept of the sum
of three numbers superfluous; we simply agree that a + b + c denotes the
number @-+ (6+ = (a+ #)-+e Addition of four numbers requires
similar, though slightly more involved, considerations, The symbol a ++ 6 +
¢+ dis defined to mean
() (at) +046
or (2) @t@+Q+d
or (3) at (+0 +4),
or 4) at @+e+H),
or (5) (a@+8)+ (+d).