Ask HN: Math books that fundamentally changed the way to view or learn new math?
While self studying mathematics have you worked through any book that made a fundamental shift in your mind about how you viewed math in general and learn new math topics?
Can you write a few lines about those books?
8 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 37.0 ms ] threadJust be warned that classics like the Mathematical Experience and Men of Mathematics by E.T. Bell tend to give a romanticized view of mathematical research, with anecdotes mostly by high profile mathematicians doing high profile mathematics, and with up-to-20th Century perspectives that don't always hold up.
Another thing that chanced my view on math (somewhat depressing I admit) is how important programming and systems knowledge is for using math in the real world. We had a math 'expert'/professor write an important routine at work for a year, and we ended up deleting all his code and rewriting it.
I am also biased in this regard. For me maths is just another tool, but math is not about writing algorithms it is about writing proofs.
https://www.cambridge.org/highereducation/books/conceptual-m...
Needless to say, these books are focussed on High School math but should be sufficient preparation for courses on a more rigorous level.
My email is in my profile if you are looking for somebody to study with.
[0]https://math.berkeley.edu/~wu/
The Moore Method is a well known pedagogical method of teaching math courses.
A text for humanities students on higher-math (it is on the lower-higher fringe I suppose) that emphasizes this perspective but is not as spartan is Mathematics A Creative Art by Julia Wells Bower.
See "The Moore Method", The Journal of Inquiry-Based Learning in Mathematics (JIBLM) has course notes http://www.jiblm.org/
Authors I have enjoyed are Spivak & Knuth but that is more about elegance and pedagogical style.
It shows that exp is periodic, the first time I read it kind of blew my mind.