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Real Mathematical Analysis (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics) 1st Edition

4.2 out of 5 stars 25 customer reviews
ISBN-13: 978-0387952970
ISBN-10: 0387952977
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Product Details

  • Series: Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
  • Hardcover: 440 pages
  • Publisher: Springer; 1 edition (November 14, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0387952977
  • ISBN-13: 978-0387952970
  • Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 1 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #766,506 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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By C. Dolan on May 27, 2006
Format: Hardcover
As a previous reviewer has noted, Walter Rudin's Principles of Mathematical Analysis is the standard textbook for a rigorous analysis course. Rudin's book is very good because of the level of rigour and abstraction, the bredth of material covered, the way it forces the reader to fill in the blanks, and because of the challenging exercises throughout. In my opinion, Pugh has managed to improve on the classic in every aspect.

First of all, he does not develop all the concepts in same order as Rudin - first he develops the real number system, a few basic things about Cauchy sequences, and then moves onto continuity. Then he goes into a lengthy chapter on topology, which, in my humble opinion, is where the book first outshines Rudin. He defines compactness in terms of the convergence of subsequences, which is much more natural than the covering definition. He later proves that the two conditions are equivalent. In the third chapter, he develops differentiation and integration, much in the way Rudin does. In the fourth chapter, develops series and sequences (of functions). In the fifth chapter, he develops multivariable calculus, and the in the sixth chapter, he develops measure theory and the Lebesgue integral. Since there are fewer chapters than there are in Rudin's book, I think he develops the subject matter in a more natural, cohesive manner.

Rudin's book is excellent through the series and sequences of function. It is generally agreed that the book tails off after the seventh chapter, that is, he does not do as good a job with multivariable calculus and Lebesgue Theory. Pugh manages to do a good job throughout, so in addition to having a better chapter in topology, he is better than Rudin in those areas.
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Format: Hardcover
Real analysis is a genre with an established classic (Rudin) and a plethora of available books and resources. Unfortunately, most analysis books cost a great deal of money so the average reader will only purchase one or two texts. In evaluating which book(s) to purchase two questions should be asked:
1.) Why purchase this book rather than the classic of the genre?
2.) Is this book appropriate for me?
So why buy this book rather than Rudin? It has great exposition (as does Rudin), very well chosen problems (as does Rudin), but Pugh manages to improve on the standard by supplementing his written explanations with diagrams and pictures that Rudin mostly lacks. Additonally, the price stands at something less than half the cost of Rudin's book.
Who is this book appropriate for? This text delves into the topological underpinnings of analysis. It is not an "analysis-lite" textbook a la Ken Ross's Elementary Analysis. It is a rigorous treatment of the subject, and it has a comprehensive feel to it, covering topics like Lebesgue measure and integration, and multivariable analysis in addition to the normal topics one would expect. In short, it is appropriate for somebody who is seeking the challenges and rewards of a full treatment of what for many is a difficult subject.
It is a very good book that does not shy away from difficult material that no amount of explanation or good writing will make easy to learn, but of all the analysis books I've seen, this comes the closest.
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Format: Hardcover
This is one of the best books on introductory real analysis that I have looked at. Before I found this book, I have been reading another work on real analysis which was also very good, but was far less comprehensive. Not only does this book present a precise exposition of concepts and theorems, it also gives illustrations to better explain the ideas and plenty of excercises at the end of each chapter. For example, the author does not only say what a "covering" means, but he gives an illustration of it. The style of exposition is fine and relaxed, but the rigor of presentation of theorems and proofs is not in the least compromised. I would think that this book will be of enormous help to anyone trying to make a transition from concrete to more abstract mathematical reasoning.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
First, beware: Amazon offers this book as a "print on demand" (POD) product, so the print quality of the text is not going to look as nice as that copy of the book your university library has. The library's copy would have been printed in a more civilized time -- around 12 years ago -- before the POD scourge ravaged the planet. In particular about half of the 133 illustrations in the book are going to look like complete crap. This is why I'm returning my copy to the crap factory from whence it came, because I've had enough of POD scum. I take some measure of pride in the books that I have on my shelf, and am always willing to pay extra for a hardcover textbook; but what's the use if what's between the covers looks like it was printed with an eighty-dollar inkjet set on economy mode?

Amazon's villainous POD offering is not why I knocked two stars off Pugh's shoulder, however. Here's what cost one star: in the middle of the proof of the Implicit Function Theorem it says, "In general, the idea is that the remainder R depends so weakly on y that we can switch it to the left hand side of (8), absorbing it in the y term." Okay, that sort of hand-waving "argument" might pass muster in a freshman calculus book, but it really has no place in a book titled "Real Mathematical Analysis." I had to wonder why, at first glance, Pugh's proof of the theorem seemed so short, with more prose than symbols. Now I know why. Then Pugh goes on to prove the Inverse Function Theorem using the Implicit Function Theorem, and it's even shorter, with the statement "Except for a little fussy set theory, this completes the proof" being the cherry on top.
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