Acknowledgments
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In
the textbook business, it has become the rule to thank as many
people as at all possible—as a result, presumably, they will then have
their students buy your book. Here, though, the situation is obviously
different but, since RBA
truly owes its very existence to many people,
those who might use RBA
ought to know to whom they owe it and the latter ought to know that
they are responsible for it. So, here they are:
- First of all, there is my wife, F. Schremmer Mattei
who, over all these years, has been, inter alia,
my mathematical conscience.
Whatever is wrong in what I wrote is mine and mine only, because I
failed to
check with her.
- Then there were those who, over the years, wrote
such terrible books that they kept prodding
me into writing. Here, though, they are best ignored.
- There were the students who, at the time I was still using
these terrible books, jerked me
out of my complacency. And now there are the students, alas too
few, who react
to what I write.
- Then there are those
from whom I learned the mathematics at the root of this text and those
from whose example I learned that one need not conform. I know who they
are and am very grateful to them but mentioning their names here would
be
pretentious and I will leave it as an— easy—exercise for the reader to
find. However, I must make an exception for Peter Freyd and John Corcoran,
already mentioned in About the author
and in spite of the fact that I was not a good student of either
of them, for the very direct influence they had on my way of looking at
mathematics and thus on this work.
- There is Alfred
Brown, a colleague from Community College of
Philadelphia who, once upon a time, had been ordered to
observe and report on the
three-semester sequence based on Elements
of Abstract Mathematics. He didn't shoot it down and we
went on collaborating on Model
Theoretic Introduction to Mathematics, Geometric Differential Calculus
and the Lagrange Differential Calculus
as well as other ventures. I owe him in many ways.
- And then there are the Editors of the AMATYC Review who,
over the years and even though I never was in the "official" line,
encouraged me by accepting me for what I wrote:
- I must also thank those without whom I would have been
absolutely unable to produce the
package.
- First there were the authors of the free
software which let me get a LaTeX
installation on the Mac—after I had wasted a lot of
very painful time trying to get something working:
- Then there was Nick
Nallick, from Intaglio,
a proprietary
drawing software, whose understanding of the problems I was facing
went so far, among many other things, as adding the option to save
graphics
as svg.
- Then there was John
Peterson, the Technical Editor of the AMATYC Review,
who got me started in LaTeX by letting me rewrite
in LaTeX the chapters to be serialized. I am sure he would have spent
less time doing it himself.
- And then there are the many people on the MacOSX-TeX@email.esm.psu.edu
mailing
list who, on discovering the extent of my
ineptitude, ended up, more often than not,
writing themselves the code I should have written myself but was
utterly unable to. In particular,
there were:
- William
Robertson
who helped me
learn about tables,
ended up writing a script for setting them up and even showed me how to
customize it.
- Ross Moore
who, among other things, showed me how to let LaTeX deal with svg graphics.
- Nicola
Talbot who modified her probsoln package to
adapt it to the multiple choices at the heart of the Review-Exams
control files.
- Chris Goedde who
wrote the code that lets the control files use probsoln while
synchronizing the Reviews in their various form with the Exams.
- Claus
Gerhardt who wrote an AppleScript to generate the very
many files needed for the Question Bank as well as several extensions
of the polynom
package.
- Didier Verna
who modified his fink
package so it could be used from within probsoln.
- And the many others who, over time, bailed me out of this
or that hole I had dug
myself into and who, I hope, will forgive me for not naming them: they
were
way too many but I still know who they are.
- And, last but not least, there are those who helped with
building this site:
- The authors of KompoZer, the free
WYSIWYG web authoring system with
which I wrote these pages,
- The authors of Cyberduck,
the free
WYSIWYG FTP browser with which I
uploaded them.
- Greg Chapman
who helped me learn how to write css
style sheets.
Without all of you, the world would have been
spared FMTo.
A. Schremmer
FreeMathTexts RBA Text
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Page Updated March 16, 2008