qspeechc said:
Well, brocks, Sorgen will already be using Lay, so what is wrong with having a book that is a bit more difficult to supplement it?
It's not a question of right or wrong; it's a question of helpful. If a student understands everything in the assigned text, then he may want to look at a more advanced text. But if he is having trouble with the assigned text, he may want to look at one that is less terse and has a gentler approach.
Also, if you are a mathematics student you will eventually have to take rigorous and difficult courses, there's just no way of getting around that.
But that was exactly my point. Getting to rigor eventually, as opposed to right off the bat, is the best path for most students. Even at MIT or CalTech, the only freshmen who take the honors courses that stress theory and proofs are those who have already taken an easier version in high school.
Linear algebra is, in my opinion, one of the best subjects to be introduced to rigorous maths because many of it's proofs are in fact relatively simple, compared to say calculus where the proofs can be quite difficult to grasp.
That opinion is almost universal, including among the authors of the texts I recommended. They *introduce* rigor at a pace that has proven to work with the majority of students, rather than only the most gifted.
To make a general comment, not necessarily focusing on the OP of this thread, there is no question about Shilov, or Spivak, or Landau being excellent texts, but I doubt there are very many people, even among their biggest fans, who can honestly say that those texts were their first exposure to LA or calculus or mechanics. Either they are extremely gifted, or they forget that they discovered how great Spivak or Landau were AFTER they had already been introduced to calculus or physics with a less rigorous text.
My opinion, for what it's worth, is that less harm can come from a learning curve that it too easy than one that is too difficult. The worst that can happen if someone takes the gentler path is that he might take an extra year to thoroughly master the subject, but he may get discouraged and abandon the subject altogether if forced along too fast. I readily acknowledge that opposing opinions exist, and are at least as valid and informed as my own.