Math 223: Introduction to Mathematical Reasoning
Winter '04

ANNOUNCEMENT (4/28/04): There will be a review session for the final exam for this class Friday from 3-5 PM. It'll be in 229 Hayes-Healy (our usual room)--this is official now.

I'll also hold some office hours Monday from 1-3 PM.

ANNOUNCEMENT (4/26/04): The final exam will be in our usual classroom (HH 229).

Old announcements
Assignments

Instructor: Jeff Diller (click for contact info, office hours, etc.)

Time and place: MWF 9:35-10:25, Hayes-Healy 229.

Textbook: Mathematical Thinking (Problem Solving and Proofs) 2nd Edition, by John D'Angelo and Douglas West.

Why this course: Up til now, most of your mathematics courses have likely emphasized examples, computation, and intuitive understanding of mathematics. This course will emphasize careful mathematical arguments. By addressing questions about familiar things like numbers (Are there finite or infinitely many prime numbers? Do all rational numbers have rational square roots?) and sets (What does it mean for a set to have ``infinitely many'' elements? Do all sets with infinitely many elements have the same size?), we will see how it is that one justifies statements in mathematics. In a nutshell, the subject of this course is numbers, and its goal is to help you understand, invent, and present proofs.

What we'll cover: The material covered falls into roughly three categories (with a fair amount of overlap).

As the course unfolds, we might deviate a bit from this plan, but I expect we'll mostly hold to it.

How you will be evaluated: