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Jun 22, 2010 at 14:17 comment added Max Lonysa Muller Or I could start with Pugh's/Rubin's books on analysis... (see the discussion between Andrew L, Daniel Barter and Harry Gindi in one of the Daniel Barter's answer above).
Jun 22, 2010 at 13:59 comment added Max Lonysa Muller Yes I donwnloaded Strange's Caculus from that website ;) I strongly agree with you. I think Abott's book might be a good follow-up for the Calculus book.
Jun 16, 2010 at 14:20 comment added Bman @Max: Another good resource is ocw.mit.edu MIT is a great US university, and they've placed course materials on this website. If you check out the math dept, you'll find some professors for the introductory calculus sequence have placed their entire set of lecture notes available (I believe James Munkres has done so). And I cannot recommend Eccles' book highly enough. Check out the preview from google books.
Jun 16, 2010 at 13:34 comment added Bman @Max: My apologies. I reread your statement and now understand it as "up to graduate material" not actually asking for graduate material specifically. I gotta be more careful. :-)
Jun 16, 2010 at 12:48 comment added Max Lonysa Muller But I think your books are kind of what I'm looking for... Yes, I do know (some) modular arithmetic, but I'm not sure what the 'negation' or 'contrapositive' of a statement is.
Jun 15, 2010 at 10:46 comment added Max Lonysa Muller Thanks, mister Bman. I don't think I actually asked for graduate level reading material... I'd like buy/rent books at the undergraduate level and work my way up to graduate-level books eventually.
Jun 14, 2010 at 22:46 history answered Bman CC BY-SA 2.5