Silvanus P. Thompson, Martin Gardner

#Calculus
#Differentiation
#Integration
#Curve
Calculus Made Easy by Silvanus P. Thompson and Martin Gardner has long been the most popular calculus primer.
This major revision of the classic math text makes the subject at hand still more comprehensible to readers of all levels. With a new introduction, three new chapters, modernized language and methods throughout, and an appendix of challenging and enjoyable practice problems, Calculus Made Easy has been thoroughly updated for the modern reader.
Table of Contents
I. To Deliver You from the Preliminary Terrors
II. On Different Degrees of Smallness
III. On Relative Growings
IV. Simplest Cases
V. Next Stage. What to Do with Constants
VI. Sums, Differences, Products, and Quotients
VII. Successive Differentiation
VIII. When Time Varies
IX. Introducing a Useful Dodge
X. Geometrical Meaning of Differentiation
XI. Maxima and Minima
XII. Curvature of Curves
XIII. Partial Fractions and Inverse Functions
XlV. On True Compound Interest and the Law of Organic Growth
Xv. How to Deal with Sines and Cosines
XVI. Partial Differentiation
XVII. Integration
XVIII. Integrating as the Reverse of Differentiating
XIX. On Finding Areas by Integrating
XX. Dodges, Pitfalls, and Triumphs
XXI. Finding Solutions
XXII. A Little More about Curvature of Curves
XXIII. How to Find the Length of an Arc on a Curve
Table of Standard Forms
Silvanus P. Thompson, born in 1851, was elected to the Royal Society in 1891. He wrote numerous technical books and manuals on electricity, magnetism, dynamos, and optics, as well as several popular biographies of prominent scientists. His works include Calculus Made Easy. Thompson died in 1916.
Martin Gardner, born in 1914, has written several reviews for The New York Review of Books and was a Scientific American columnist for over twenty-five years. His books include Calculus Made Easy and When You Were a Tadpole and I Was a Fish. He lives in Hendersonville, North Carolina.









