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Hi,
First of all, sorry if this kind of thread has been posted before. If so, then a reference to that thread would be appreciated :)
So here we go.
I always found maths to be boring in school, I did ok, but I didn't like it. But lately I've started to become fascinated by it. String- or M-theory is particularly fascinating to me.
So I decided to learn maths again. But I'm struggling, even with the most basic of basics.
I got the book 'Calculus' by Michael Spivak (1994 edition) but, I'm already having problems with the first few exercises on the basic properties of numbers (proving certain things). The answers to the questions all seem logical to me, but I don't know how to come up with the right ways to prove something without cheating and looking at the answer.
Is this book too advanced for someone as inexperienced in maths as me? And if so, what else would you suggest?
- Enclose
First of all, sorry if this kind of thread has been posted before. If so, then a reference to that thread would be appreciated :)
So here we go.
I always found maths to be boring in school, I did ok, but I didn't like it. But lately I've started to become fascinated by it. String- or M-theory is particularly fascinating to me.
So I decided to learn maths again. But I'm struggling, even with the most basic of basics.
I got the book 'Calculus' by Michael Spivak (1994 edition) but, I'm already having problems with the first few exercises on the basic properties of numbers (proving certain things). The answers to the questions all seem logical to me, but I don't know how to come up with the right ways to prove something without cheating and looking at the answer.
Is this book too advanced for someone as inexperienced in maths as me? And if so, what else would you suggest?
- Enclose