Now, right out of the gate, Prof. Simon tells us:
"Analysis is the infinitesimal calculus writ large. Calculus as taught to most high school students and college freshmen is the subject as it existed about 1750—I’ve no doubt that Euler could have gotten a perfect score on the Calculus BC advanced placement exam. Even “rigorous” calculus courses that talk about ε-δ proofs and the intermediate value theorem only bring the subject up to about 1890 after the impact of Cauchy and Weierstrass on real variable calculus was felt.
"This volume [vol 1] can be thought of as the infinitesimal calculus of the twentieth century. From that point of view, the key chapters are Chapter 4,
which covers measure theory—the consummate integral calculus—and the
first part of Chapter 6 on distribution theory—the ultimate differential calculus.
"But from another point of view, this volume is about the triumph of abstraction. Abstraction is such a central part of modern mathematics that one forgets that it wasn’t until Frechet’s 1906 thesis that sets of points with no a priori underlying structure (not assumed points in or functions on Rn) are considered and given a structure a posteriori (Frechet first defined abstract metric spaces). And after its success in analysis, abstraction took over significant parts of algebra, geometry, topology, and logic."
"But from another point of view, this volume is about the triumph of abstraction. Abstraction is such a central part of modern mathematics that one forgets that it wasn’t until Frechet’s 1906 thesis that sets of points with no a priori underlying structure (not assumed points in or functions on Rn) are considered and given a structure a posteriori (Frechet first defined abstract metric spaces). And after its success in analysis, abstraction took over significant parts of algebra, geometry, topology, and logic."
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