caveman1917
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2015
- Messages
- 8,143
Spivak's text (as well as his Calculus on Manifolds) is often considered the single best calculus textbook there is, and also provides extensive guidance in how to actually do real math, define things, prove theorems, etc. Whenever I do assignments, usually in my physics courses, I've noticed that I find it extremely easy to chunk out a precise definition of whatever vague object the assignment wants me to treat, a skill I think I picked up from that book.
We (the math students) did Calculus in year-1 semester-1 together with science students, so I think that's why a more practical-oriented textbook was chosen. In the next semester we "split off" to Analysis, and did a fully rigorous and more general treatment from there. I do remember being a bit annoyed at the relative lack of rigour in our Calculus course though, it seemed sometimes like it was just floating in mid-air.