I read the intro and was amazed at how easy it was to follow. Then I decided to google "Calculus Made Easy" and found your link to this great book. I was contemplating purchasing a course on dvd called "Calculus Made Clear" selling for $60.00 US. If every mathematics topic could be introduced the way this has, then i sure no one will think of maths as the hardest of courses. The link to the PDF is in the article above! Do you mean that you want a hard copy? You would need to print it yourself. The way you have started culculus is very interesting but how could one get the whole PDF paper? Do the same with other topics such as trigonometry and complex numbers Thanks for sharing this book! It will be a great tool for my independent study students! You could print it out from the PDF if you would rather hard copy. The link is in the article above, in the first line. This is an e-book in PDF form (not a physical book). Good DAY SIR,i want to know how i can get this text book,calculus made easy.i am mailing from Lagos Nigeria.thank u sir. He's currently taking Physics and some of the math problems were made to be so confusing so this will help him so much. My 9 year old read it and was very excited that it made so much sense. I'm so glad I clicked on your link while viewing my friend Dana's blog. I'm so interested in re-learning calculus that I watched many different video tutorials, but I found this book summarizing Integral Calculus in its first 2 pages! Thanks so much for sharing this excellent book! Grab the PDF: Calculus Made Easy.Ĥ4 Comments on “Calculus Made Easy (Free book)” The word "integral" simply means "the whole". Now any fool can see that if x is considered as made up of a lot of little bits, each of which is called dx, if you add them all up together you get the sum of all the dx's, (which is the same thing as the whole of x). Ordinary mathematicians call this symbol "the integral of". ∫ which is merely a long S, and may be called (if you like) "the sum of." Thus ∫ dx means the sum of all the little bits of x or ∫ dt means the sum of all the little bits of t. To give you an idea of how the book is written, in Chapter 1, "To Deliver You From the Preliminary Terrors", we read: He quotes from an "ancient Simian proverb": He humbly calls himself a "fool", but doesn't treat the reader as one. Thompson puts great effort into explaining what is going on, rather than jumping straight into the calculations. In other words, this was one of the first ever "Calculus for Dummies" books.
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