Roads to Geometry

preview-18
  • Roads to Geometry Book Detail

  • Author : Edward C. Wallace
  • Release Date : 2015-10-23
  • Publisher : Waveland Press
  • Genre : Mathematics
  • Pages : 510
  • ISBN 13 : 1478632046
  • File Size : 51,51 MB

Roads to Geometry by Edward C. Wallace PDF Summary

Book Description: Now available from Waveland Press, the Third Edition of Roads to Geometry is appropriate for several kinds of students. Pre-service teachers of geometry are provided with a thorough yet accessible treatment of plane geometry in a historical context. Mathematics majors will find its axiomatic development sufficiently rigorous to provide a foundation for further study in the areas of Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry. By using the SMSG postulate set as a basis for the development of plane geometry, the authors avoid the pitfalls of many “foundations of geometry” texts that encumber the reader with such a detailed development of preliminary results that many other substantive and elegant results are inaccessible in a one-semester course. At the end of each section is an ample collection of exercises of varying difficulty that provides problems that both extend and clarify results of that section, as well as problems that apply those results. At the end of chapters 3–7, a summary list of the new definitions and theorems of each chapter is included.

Disclaimer: www.yourbookbest.com does not own Roads to Geometry books pdf, neither created or scanned. We just provide the link that is already available on the internet, public domain and in Google Drive. If any way it violates the law or has any issues, then kindly mail us via contact us page to request the removal of the link.

Roads to Geometry

Roads to Geometry

File Size : 69,69 MB
Total View : 9660 Views
DOWNLOAD

Now available from Waveland Press, the Third Edition of Roads to Geometry is appropriate for several kinds of students. Pre-service teachers of geometry are pro

Sidewalk

Sidewalk

File Size : 38,38 MB
Total View : 9204 Views
DOWNLOAD

Presents the lives of poor African-American men who make their subsistence wages by selling used goods on the streets of Greenwich Village in New York; and disc