Ask HN: Classic Math Books?

3 points by ekm2 1 year ago | 3 comments
What math textbooks used in the late 19th or early 20th century are still great right now?Something like G.H Hardy's A Course of Pure Mathematics
  • pasttense01 1 year ago
    • turtleyacht 1 year ago
      After following a reference to an older book, College Algebra (1901) by Henry Burchard Fine, I discovered the problem in the new book was presented as a solution in the latter.

      That discouraged me a lot, being stuck on something that would have been handheld in an older work. From then on, I thought it would be better to seek out the aged books, so concepts would (possibly) be simplified, if only by the lack of a larger sphere of implicit prerequisites.

      It's not always true, of course. Maybe it was just that one time or the teaching style. Math does not age, but explanations can always be modernized.

      I would like to regularly peruse Math Overflow for exactly that.

      • ekm2 1 year ago
        There is a very slick proof for the irrationality of the number 2 that is found in Baby Rudin.I thought it was his invention.Turns out it appears verbatim in Hardy's A course of Pure Mathematics.