Advanced Calculus A Geometric View

“Advanced Calculus A Geometric View” by James J. Callahan is a comprehensive exploration of advanced calculus, published by Springer New York on August 23, 2016. This softcover reprint of the original 1st edition from 2010 spans 526 pages and is presented in English. The book addresses the evolution of advanced calculus within the undergraduate mathematics curriculum, highlighting its historical significance and the shifts that led to the introduction of real analysis as a core subject.
Readers will find a detailed examination of the bifurcation in calculus education, where advanced calculus has been overshadowed by courses focusing on multivariable calculus. The text delves into the complexities of calculus in multiple dimensions, discussing the challenges of adequately covering topics such as Green’s theorem, Stokes’ theorem, and Gauss’ theorem within the constraints of a semester. This edition serves as a valuable resource for those interested in mathematical analysis and differential equations, providing insights into the foundational aspects of calculus that remain relevant in contemporary studies.
Official synopsis Publisher
A half-century ago, advanced calculus was a well-de?ned subject at the core of the undergraduate mathematics curriulum. The classic texts of Taylor [19], Buck [1], Widder [21], and Kaplan [9], for example, show some of the ways it was approached. Over time, certain aspects of the course came to be seen as more signi?cant—those seen as giving a rigorous foundation to calculus—and they – came the basis for a new course, an introduction to real analysis, that eventually supplanted advanced calculus in the core. Advanced calculus did not, in the process, become less important, but its role in the curriculum changed. In fact, a bifurcation occurred. In one direction we got c- culus on n-manifolds, a course beyond the practical reach of many undergraduates; in the other, we got calculus in two and three dimensions but still with the theorems of Stokes and Gauss as the goal. The latter course is intended for everyone who has had a year-long introduction to calculus; it often has a name like Calculus III. In my experience, though, it does not manage to accomplish what the old advancedcalculus course did. Multivariable calculusnaturallysplits intothreeparts:(1)severalfunctionsofonevariable,(2)one function of several variables, and (3) several functions of several variables. The ?rst two are well-developed in Calculus III, but the third is really too large and varied to be treated satisfactorily in the time remaining at the end of a semester. To put it another way: Green’s theorem ?ts comfortably; Stokes’ and Gauss’ do not.
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