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I wish to learn nonstandard analysis. Are there any good book recommendations? I'm familiar with the ZFC system, and learnt analysis the classical way. I've found some undergraduate texts, but they are too verbose.

If there are applications to complex or functional analysis, that would be great.

Thanks in advance.

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    $\begingroup$ One of the original tags was changed to "tag-removed" when the tags were reorganized. I deleted the tag-removed tag. $\endgroup$ Mar 2, 2011 at 11:49

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This one sounds like what you want:

Arkeryd, Cutland and Henson: Nonstandard Analysis, Theory and Applications.

I took a course as undergraduate which followed (parts of) this book - I first accompanied it with the more friendly written Goldblatt to get some feeling for the subject, then switched to this one, when I also started finding Goldblatt too "verbose". It found it very well readable.

Cutland has produced other enjoyable writings and there also is Loeb, Wolff: Nonstandard analysis for the working mathematician, which I haven't read but which follows a very similar agenda at a very similar pace, according to the table of contents.

Enjoy!

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Nelson's Radically Elementary Probability Theory.

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  • $\begingroup$ Looks like you have a choice of French or Russian for this one :) $\endgroup$ Mar 20, 2010 at 15:51
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I learned the material first from Robinson's own book, simply titled Non-Standard Analysis, which I quite liked. A few years later, I read Goldblatt's Lectures on the Hyperreals (link to table of contents of the book), which I would heartily recommend. Having read that, I would very much recommend Non-Archimedean fields and asymptotic expansions by Robinson and Lightstone, which seems to be seriously under-appreciated [only a few model theorists seem to have recently dug it up]; not the best introduction to non-standard analysis, but to me the best introduction to its connections with the rest of analysis.

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  • $\begingroup$ Hum, the link for the hyperreals book only gives me the TOC. $\endgroup$ Mar 20, 2010 at 15:48
  • $\begingroup$ @Willie: good point, I have fixed my post. $\endgroup$ Mar 20, 2010 at 15:54
  • $\begingroup$ For those outside America: Goldblatt's book is part of this years yellow sale at Springer, so youn get it at about half the price. $\endgroup$ Mar 2, 2011 at 6:33
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Hey, I just peeked at your MathOverflow page and saw that you are interested in "spatial and visual arguments". So I tell you something else (which you didn't ask for):

There also is another version of analysis with nilpotent infinitesimals, i.e. elements which are not zero, but some power of which is zero. In classical logic this contradicts the field axioms, but in intuitionistic logic it can be done. J.L. Bell's Primer of Infinitesimal Anlysis develops basic analysis on these grounds, by assuming (axiomatically) that you have something like the real numbers with nilpotents. Proofs become much easier even than in Nonstandard Analysis. Only in an appendix he addresses the existence of models for his axioms - they live in toposes.

As is very nicely laid out in the preface of Moerdijk/Reyes' "Models for Smooth Infinitesimal Analysis", it is these infinitesimals which were (implicitly) used by classical geometers like Cartan, and are (implicitly) used by physicists until today. They illustrate their point with a visual proof of Stokes' theorem using nilpotents.

In the settings of Moerdijk/Reyes (which are certain toposes) there also exist real numbers which combine the two kinds of infinitesimals, nilpotents and invertibles.

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Robert's book Nonstandard Analysis (Dover Publications) is where I learned nsa - it presents (slightly informally) Nelson's IST set theory, covers a selection of basic real analysis in a n-s way, then looks at some applications. You have to watch out for a few typos in the second half of the book, but it is short and easy to read. It won't teach you any model theory though.

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  • $\begingroup$ I was really disappointed to see how thin Robert's book is.... $\endgroup$ Mar 3, 2011 at 4:46
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    $\begingroup$ There's a place in the world for thin books. $\endgroup$
    – M T
    Mar 3, 2011 at 13:56
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Lectures on the Hyperreals by Goldblatt.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks Jacques for the link to the full PDF. I didn't know it was available online. I updated my link accordingly. $\endgroup$
    – Tony Huynh
    Mar 20, 2010 at 15:28
  • $\begingroup$ Sorry, that was not the full PDF, just the TOC, as pointed out by Willie Wong. $\endgroup$ Mar 20, 2010 at 15:54
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I loved Goldblatt's book, "Lectures on the Hyperreals".

For a more sophisticated treatment, don't overlook "Nonstandard Analysis: Theory and Applications", edited by Henson (first chapter available there) and others. It seems at first blush like a collection of articles, and it is, but they are introductions to various uses of NSA and came across quite well to me. That is, the article on topology assumes that you know some standard topology, and the article on probability assumes that you know some measure theory and probability, and so on.

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I learned the basics from the introductory chapters of the book

  • S. Albeverio, R. Høegh-Krohn, J. E. Fenstad, T. Lindstrøm, Nonstandard methods in stochastic analysis and mathematical physics. Pure and Applied Mathematics 122. Academic Press 1986. xii+514 pp.

The rest of the book is toward mathematical physics but the introduction is mathematically clean (using ultrafilters language), precise and useful. When I go back I always return to that book though I read parts of many others on the topic. There is a Russian translation as well (a translation is often a sign of an importance of the book).

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I should add to those Martin Davis's "Applied Nonstandard Analysis", available from Dover Publications.It's exposition is clear and logical and begins with ultrafilers by using Zarmello-Frankel set theory.

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I have learned some internal set theory (IST) from Lutz and Goze's Nonstandard analysis: a practical guide with applications. It is jam-packed with lots of interesting material, and has a nifty proof of the inverse function theorem. However, since it is a bunch of lecture notes, it is not as coherent as some other books, such as Robert's Nonstandard analysis or Nelson's own papers, his own unfinished book at http://www.math.princeton.edu/~nelson/books/1.pdf, or the probability book mentioned above.

So if you want to get excited about IST and get fun ideas for using it, read Lutz and Goze. To understand it, read Nelson or Robert.

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In the study of non-standard analysis, I found the published works of Prof. Robert A. Herrmann very instructive.

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    $\begingroup$ Herrmann was a student of Robinson and defended his dissertation under him. He mainly pursues the ultrapower approach to Robinson's framework which is certainly a fine approach. $\endgroup$ Jul 4, 2017 at 7:28
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If you can read French, the book Analyse Non Standard by Diener and Reeb is very beautifully written, and has some material that I don't believe has appeared anywhere else. It's out of print but one can find a copy on Amazon or a pdf online easily enough.

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  • $\begingroup$ This is indeed a very nice book. The language used is simple enough that it's easy to read even if one isn't 100% fluent in French. $\endgroup$ Dec 7, 2021 at 15:24

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