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A Tour of the Calculus
A Tour of the Calculus
Author: David Berlinski
In its largest aspect, the calculus functions as a celestial measuring tape, able to order the infinite expanse of the universe. Time and space are given names, points, and limits; seemingly intractable problems of motion, growth, and form are reduced to answerable questions. Calculus was humanity's first attempt to represent the world and perha...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781439505731
ISBN-10: 143950573X
Publication Date: 6/26/2008
Pages: 331
Edition: Reprint
Rating:
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Book Type: Library Binding
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
Members Wishing: 1
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tubegeek avatar reviewed A Tour of the Calculus on
In this book, many broad topics which constitute the cornerstones of a basic calculus curriculum are discussed less formally but in engaging depth. Ideas such as the Fundamental Theorem of the calculus and epsilon-delta formalism are given a context and an overview that - for me - really enhanced my understanding of the development of calculus and how it has evolved, been applied and expanded over time.

I would recommend this book as a helpful supplement to a standard calculus class for its contribution to motivation of the subject and for its lucidity. This is a very valuable book for enrichment purposes and could really help in making a class many students find very tough, much more enjoyable and rewarding.
reviewed A Tour of the Calculus on + 254 more book reviews
This book started out with borderline purple prose but an entertaining way of describing and illustrating calculus. It was a nice connection between theory and real world, with forays back to the personalities that shaped it. It was slow reading and sometimes a slog, but clear. I do like formulas as "Form of words"

Unfortunately, as his prose grew less purple and he entered into the more difficult areas of calculus, he also focused too much on the formulas while also trying to simplify them, sometimes successfully--sometimes not. I had to go look one theorem up online to confirm why his proof wasn't making sense--he'd either dropped a line of the theorem or simplified it invalidly (mean value theorem says nothing about being 0--just about being a value between a and b). That was the point where the book took a nose dive--I have learned calculus and his dropping steps made it more confusing, and I am unconvinced it would make it easier for anyone except those who skipped those sections (at which point doing it correctly wouldn't change anything).

He did a lot of good things in the book. I enjoyed his class, I enjoyed the biographical snippets (unclear how much is real and how much is artistic license, but it brought it alive). I just wish he'd maintained his ability to connect calculus to the real world throughout the book, rather than every now and then remembering that's what he was trying to do.

I am not sad to have read it, but it took a very long time to get through and I do not think I'd read it again. He is entertaining -- adding in the anti-math listeners' complaints during a proof was fun. Still, hard book and I'm not sure the second half really illustrated anything useful; the first half did a nice job connecting things.