My Five BEST Math Books Of 2023

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These are my five most used books of 2023. These books were not printed in 2023, but I used them for some reason in 2023.
I used the first book as the primary reference for the stochastic calculus video series on this channel.
I used the second book as a reference for the ADM and as well for SPDE.
I used the third book as a reference on probability, and it might be my dedicated book on the subject. I do need to make a correction, though. You can't actually skip the entirety of the second chapter. Some care must be given to the definitions.
I used the fourth book as a review and reference on real analysis.
I used the last book as a reference on analysis, the Lebesgue integral, the construction of the Riemann integral with step functions, and functional analysis.

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Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
0:23 Book 1
1:35 Book 2
3:10 Book 3
5:15 Book 4
7:26 Book 5
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Thanks for all your reviews over the year, your channel has the best math books reviews on YouTube, I hope it grows a lot in 2024!

sideral
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Like, comment, subscribe and share if you enjoyed the video!
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MathematicalToolbox
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I borrowed Binmore's book, and some others, because of your earlier video. I am impressed with his book.

TranquilSeaOfMath
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No Boyce Diprima "Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems" ? 😀

robertovolpi
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Your channel is very unique on Youtube, thanks. Also I bought a lot of good math books because of this channel.

meteor
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It brings me comfort to know I'm not the only person on here obsessed with reading and collecting math books! (I mean that in the kindest way possible :) )

Hope I inspired you to take a trip to a thrift store near you! It's where I've found some great Dover books from ~1960s-1980s. Some books definitely age worse than others, but foundational mathematics, optics, calculi, PDE methods, these are the gems I'm looking for! Sometimes modern presentations distill away deeper details that I'd rather be preserved.

Do you have a way that you like to read the books to get the most out of them? Sometimes it's easy for me to lose the forest for the trees, especially when the definitions, theorems, and concepts get more involved. With all the possibilities with scientific computing, I'd imagine that there could be a good way of "interacting" with a book by making various visualizations with matplotlib or Seaborn.

Keep up the great videos, I really like the rigor that you approach your content with and your dedication to high quality content.

becktronics
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Can u review mathematical methods for physicist and engineers by Riley Hobson?will be much appreciated

friends
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From your experience - should we study the math books from cover to cover or only what is needed ?

шляпик-им
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Please 😢 ineed book a first course in integral equation by Abdul majid wazwaz because I don't solve exercise

lulav