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dc.contributor.author Matthew Boelkins, David Austin, Steven Schicker en
dc.date.accessioned 2016-11-07T15:34:49Z en
dc.date.available 2016-11-07T15:34:49Z en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/180364 en
dc.description.abstract c'Several fundamental ideas in calculus are more than 2000 years old. As a formal subdiscipline of mathematics, calculus was first introduced and developed in the late 1600s, with key independent contributions from Sir Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Mathematicians agree that the subject has been understood rigorously since the work of Augustin Louis Cauchy and Karl Weierstrass in the mid 1800s when the field of modern analysis was developed, in part to make sense of the infinitely small quantities on which calculus rests. Hence, as a body of knowledge calculus has been completely understood by experts for at least 150 years. The discipline is one of our great human intellectual achievements: among many spectacular ideas, calculus models how objects fall under the forces of gravity and wind resistance, explains how to compute areas and volumes of interesting shapes, enables us to work rigorously with infinitely small and infinitely large quantities, and connects the varying rates at which quantities change to the total change in the quantities themselves. While each author of a calculus textbook certainly offers her own creative perspective on the subject, it is hardly the case that many of the ideas she presents are new. Indeed, the mathematics community broadly agrees on what the main ideas of calculus are, as well as their justification and their importance; the core parts of nearly all calculus textbooks are very similar. As such, it is our opinion that in the 21st century _ an age where the internet permits seamless and immediate transmission of information _ no one should be required to purchase a calculus text to read, to use for a class, or to find a coherent collection of problems to solve. Calculus belongs to humankind, not any individual author or publishing company. Thus, a main purpose of this work is to present a new calculus text that is free. In addition, instructors who are looking for a calculus text should have the opportunity to download the source files and make modifications that they see fit; thus this text is opensource. Since August 2013, Active Calculus has been endorsed by the American Institute of Mathematics and its Open Textbook Initiative: http://aimath.org/textbooks/.' en
dc.title Active Calculus en
dc.type Online Textbook en
dc.date.updated 2016-11-07T15:34:49Z en
dc.description.discipline Mathematics en
dc.rights.license CC-BY-NC-SA en
dc.subject.category Calculus I en
dc.course.number MATH 210 en
dc.course.uri http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/books/10/ en


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