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unprompted/Notes/spivak-calculus.md
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[notes] happy idiots
2026-04-20 03:56:36 +00:00

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Rough Notes

n = 2^x a \implies b

x \leq 10

\infty

\nabla f \cdot F

\alpha \beta \gamma \delta \Alpha \Beta \Gamma \Delta

\mathbf{\nabla F} \vec{\nabla}F

\nabla\times\mathbf{F}

Quotes

Reading List

  • Terry Tao's blog and notes — search "Stirling" on terrytao.wordpress.com. He has at least two posts deriving it different ways, with characteristic clarity.
  • Tim Gowers' blog (gowers.wordpress.com) — Fields medalist who writes a lot about how mathematicians actually think. His posts on "how to discover proofs" capture the guess-and-check spirit we discussed.
  • Bender & Orszag, Advanced Mathematical Methods for Scientists and Engineers — the canonical reference for Laplace's method, saddle points, and the full asymptotic series for n!. Hard but rewarding. Chapter 6 is where the √(2πn) gets properly explained.

de Bruijn, Asymptotic Methods in Analysis — slim, elegant, and entirely about the "why" of asymptotic approximations. Stirling appears early and is revisited from multiple angles.

Concrete Mathematics (Graham, Knuth, Patashnik) — Chapter 9 ("Asymptotics") derives Stirling combinatorially and discusses its uses in analysis of algorithms. Very readable, lots of margin notes and dry humor.

Apostol, Calculus (Vol. 1) — older, more formal than Spivak, but unusually careful about why each technique exists. Starts with integration before differentiation, which itself is illuminating.

Tristan Needham, Visual Complex Analysis — not about Stirling specifically, but the gold standard for "geometric intuition for things usually taught algebraically." If the rectangle-sandwich picture appealed to you, this book is a feast.

Tristan Needham, Visual Differential Geometry and Forms — same author, same spirit, applied to calculus on curves and surfaces. Shows what dx, integration, and differentiation look like.

Questions

Definitions

  • Benjamin Disraeli - British PM, novelist.
    • "To be conscious that you are ignorant is a great step to knowledge."