mxbob468 said:
you're missing the point of rudin and maybe books in general. they shouldn't give you "intuition" but should force you to develop it on your own and that's exactly what rudin does.
Certainly not. You should develop intuition on your own, that's right, but Rudin is really bad for that. He never motivates any result and places them in historical context, and for me that's essential. I like reading why and how people came up with things and I think that's what people need to develop their intuition.
Don't get me wrong, I like rigourous books. Books may be very technical and terse for me. But they should at least give some kind of motivation for the results! Professional math papers do that, so math books should do that too.
Never, in his entire book does Rudin even mention that Lebesgue measure is just a formalization for "length" or "area". As a result, I understood nothing of Rudin's treatise. If he at least mentioned something like that, then I would be fine. (OK, maybe I was stupid for not seeing that, but still).
The chapter on multivariate calculus is bad too. Basically, he says that Stokes' theorem is true by definition. I don't find that very satisfactory...
besides who's to say what kind of intuition you should have for whatever concept eg you might intuitively understand something geometrically while i intuitively understand something analytically.
True, and that is why there are so many math books out there. Every author presents his own intuition, and you should choose the intuition that's most comfortable with you.
EDIT: If I read Rudin right now, it's a wonderful book and I like to read it. But that's only because I know the material already and I know what Rudin is trying to do. So I feel that Rudin should be used to refresh some results and to prepare you for later courses. But certainly not as a first course...