Jamie Oglethorpe introduces himself

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Jamie Oglethorpe

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Jul 16, 2011, 10:18:57 AM7/16/11
to Calculational Mathematics
Hi,

I am a graduate of Loughborough University of Technology in the
English east midlands, between Leicester and Nottingham. I graduated
with a BSc Honours degree in Computer Studies as it was called at the
time. This was in 1976.

I was on an industrial scholarship, so I had no opportunity for
further studies. My interest in calculational methods is mainly
focused on self improvement. I have amassed a fair library of
mathematical books, from A-Level to graduate level, and a lot of
general texts on the history of the subject. I use calculational
methods to rephrase the axioms and definitions, etc. I then try to
prove the thorems from there. I find that I don't need to grok the
intuitive leaps that abound in these books!

I am slowly working my way through "Introduction to Lattices and
Order" by B.A. Davey and H.A. Priestley (CUP). It is all rather
simple. I look forward to deriving the algorithms formally when I get
that far. Their presentation is horrible!

Jamie O in Jo'burg

Max Lybbert

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Jul 18, 2011, 12:46:06 PM7/18/11
to calculationa...@googlegroups.com
Welcome.

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Jeremy Weissmann

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Jul 18, 2011, 12:50:47 PM7/18/11
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Sorry for the delayed response — I suspect most of us are on vacation... or at least our brains are!

Welcome, Jamie!

+j

Sent from my iPhone

Apurva Mehta

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Jul 23, 2011, 12:05:19 PM7/23/11
to calculationa...@googlegroups.com
Welcome! Feel free to post problems, solutions, puzzles, or anything else that might tickle the brain! 

Apurva 

Johann Drexl

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Jul 26, 2011, 6:34:19 AM7/26/11
to Calculational Mathematics
Hi Jamie, welcome aboard. I'm trying a similar "programme", althogh
i'm focused on calculus (or "analysis" like it's called in France and
Germany). My text is "Analysis I" by O. Forster, and i'm also finding
that using tools from logic greatly aids my understanding. I'm now in
chapter 5, at the Bolzano-Weierstrass theorem. It's kind of slow,
because i'm only doing maximally one theorem per week (usually on
saturday morning). Like you, for me it's for self-improvement.

Actually, the Forster book is rather good, it's a terse and honest
text. When I was studying computer science, it was the standard text
in the calculus course that I was attending back then. But it was not
until I began using logic and especially calculational methods that I
really began to understand calculus, with all it's epsilons and
deltas. In my student days, I understood only very, very little.

Johann Drexl.
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