<span>This is a self-contained book that covers the standard topics in introductory analysis and that in addition constructs the natural, rational, real and complex numbers, and also handles complex-valued functions, sequences, and series.<br></span><p><span> The book teaches how to write proofs. Fu
An introduction to complex numbers
β Scribed by The Open University
- Publisher
- The Open University
- Year
- 2016
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Introduction: Pronouns in syntax -- Ch. 1. On the complex structure of pronouns -- 1. Idiosyncrasies of pronouns -- 2. Intransitive determiners as functional heads -- 3. Pronouns and [phi]-features -- 4. Nouns as pronouns -- 5. A noun inside every pronoun -- 6. App.: Delineating the data -- Ch. 2. Pronominal nouns beyond pronouns -- 1. Preamble -- 2. Adjectives and pronominal nouns -- 3. Pronominal clitics and null nouns -- 4. Radical ellipsis: Empty arguments -- 5. A Grand Unification? -- 6. App.: Nominalisation versus noun ellipsis -- Ch. 3. On the nature of empty nouns -- 1. Open issues -- 2. Empty nouns are not phrases -- 3. Empty nouns and pro -- 4. A theory of empty nouns -- Ch. 4. Pro and empty pronouns -- 1. The situation so far -- 2. Why pro is not composed out of (at least) a null noun -- 3. EPP and head movement -- 4. On verbal D (D[subscript v]) and verbal Num -- 5. Summary -- Ch. 5. Licensing and the categorial features of functional categories -- 1. A propos of e[subscript N] -- 2. Semantic licensing of e[subscript N] -- 3. The functional-lexical distinction -- 4. Selection and licensing -- 5. Notational variants and conclusion -- 1. The bigger picture -- 2. Open questions and loose ends.
β¦ Table of Contents
Introduction: Pronouns in syntax --
Ch. 1. On the complex structure of pronouns --
1. Idiosyncrasies of pronouns --
2. Intransitive determiners as functional heads --
3. Pronouns and [phi]-features --
4. Nouns as pronouns --
5. A noun inside every pronoun --
6. App.: Delineating the data --
Ch. 2. Pronominal nouns beyond pronouns --
1. Preamble --
2. Adjectives and pronominal nouns --
3. Pronominal clitics and null nouns --
4. Radical ellipsis: Empty arguments --
5. A Grand Unification? --
6. App.: Nominalisation versus noun ellipsis --
Ch. 3. On the nature of empty nouns --
1. Open issues --
2. Empty nouns are not phrases --
3. Empty nouns and pro --
4. A theory of empty nouns --
Ch. 4. Pro and empty pronouns --
1. The situation so far --
2. Why pro is not composed out of (at least) a null noun --
3. EPP and head movement --
4. On verbal D (D[subscript v]) and verbal Num --
5. Summary --
Ch. 5. Licensing and the categorial features of functional categories --
1. A propos of e[subscript N] --
2. Semantic licensing of e[subscript N] --
3. The functional-lexical distinction --
4. Selection and licensing --
5. Notational variants and conclusion --
1. The bigger picture --
2. Open questions and loose ends.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
"These notes were written expressly for Mathematics 112 at Reed College, with first use in the spring of 2013. The title of the course is βIntroduction to Analysisβ. The prerequisite is calculus. I maintain two versions of these notes, one in which the natural, rational and real numbers are constru
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<P>The book aims to take readers to a deeper understanding of the patterns of thought that have shaped the modern understanding of number theory. It begins with the fundamental theorem of arithmetic and shows how it echoes through much of number theory over the last two hundred years. </P> <P></P> <