Macro/micro economics Textbook for a mathematian

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A high school junior with a strong interest in mathematics seeks a rigorous mathematical approach to macro and microeconomics, expressing dissatisfaction with the typical social studies-style teaching. The discussion highlights several recommended texts for a mathematical treatment of economics, starting with "Principles of Microeconomics" by Greg Mankiw for foundational knowledge, followed by "Microeconomic Theory" by Walter Nicholson for intermediate study. Additional resources include free online materials such as R. Preston McAfee's and Deirdre McCloskey's works. The importance of calculus as a prerequisite is emphasized, along with the suggestion to gain exposure to real analysis to enhance mathematical maturity. While nonlinear dynamics is noted as less applicable in economics, the discussion encourages further exploration into game theory for those interested in advancing their economics education.
vadiraja
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Hello. I am a Junior in Highschool who is very interested in mathematics. Most ap macro/microeconomics teach the subject like social studies or english. But I am aware there are more mathematical treatements.

I have done
Thomas calculus and analytic geometry(4th edition. not the watered down later editions)
Mary Boas Mathematical Methods of the Physical Sciences
Strogatz Nonlinear Dynamics and chaos(-nonlinear differential equations focus on bifurcations etc)
Applied Nonlinear Dynamics Nayfeh and Balachandran
Courant and Hilbert methods in mathematical physics

I want a mathematical treatement on macro/microeconomics(it should be very mathematical)
 
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I would recommend that you start with microeconomics and then move on to macro stuff.

Starting with the most basic and increasing in sophistication:

Principles of Microeconomics by Greg Mankiw (any edition will do; no need to buy the newest editions) - Standard first year ‘principles’ textbook in micro;

Microeconomic Theory by Walter Nicholson - Typically used in intermediate micro.


Other books I would recommend:

http://www.introecon.com/" by R. Preston McAfee - Haven’t used before but heard it’s the most rigorous ‘principles’ tb around. Has micro+macro and it’s kindly provided by the author free online.

http://www.deirdremccloskey.com/docs/price.pdf" by Deirdre/Donald McCloskey - Out of print but again kindly provided by author for free online. At intermediate level.


A note on mathematics. Calculus is prerequisite for the intermediate books and recommended for the ‘principles’ level books. Real analysis isn’t needed for the books listed above but I would highly recommend having exposure to real analysis at Apostol/Spivak's Calculus level (to begin with and eventually moving on to Rudin’s Principles of Mathematical Analysis) because the mathematical maturity developed at that level will help in a lot areas of mathematics and any discipline that uses mathematics. Nonlinear dynamics isn’t really used in economics except at advanced levels and in esoteric fields i.e. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complexity_economics" .

If you find once you start that you want to continue your education in economics I recommend learning a bit of game theory.
 
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I've gone through the Standard turbulence textbooks such as Pope's Turbulent Flows and Wilcox' Turbulent modelling for CFD which mostly Covers RANS and the closure models. I want to jump more into DNS but most of the work i've been able to come across is too "practical" and not much explanation of the theory behind it. I wonder if there is a book that takes a theoretical approach to Turbulence starting from the full Navier Stokes Equations and developing from there, instead of jumping from...

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