The Higher Arithmetic: An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers
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Average customer review:Product Description
Updated in a seventh edition, The Higher Arithmetic introduces concepts and theorems in a way that does not require the reader to have an in-depth knowledge of the theory of numbers, but still touches upon matters of deep mathematical significance.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #538476 in Books
- Published on: 1999-12-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 241 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
‘Although this book is not written as a textbook but rather as a work for the general reader, it could certainly be used as a textbook for an undergraduate course in number theory and, in the reviewer’s opinion, is far superior for this purpose to any other book in English.’ From a review of the first edition in Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society
‘… much enjoyable and profitable reading …’ L’Enseignement Mathématique
‘… the seventh edition of the well-known and charming introduction to number theory … it can be recommended both for independent study and as a reference text for a general mathematical audience.’ European Maths Society Journal
Customer Reviews
Awesome book
This was the first book I read on the theory of numbers. It is a fascinating subject, and this book is the perfect introduction. It is written by Harold Davenport, a famous number theorist of the 20th century. It gives an introduction to several areas of the subject (primitive roots and quadratic residues, sums of squares, continued fractions, quadratic forms, Diophantine equations) which are accessible without much prior mathematical knowledge, and sticks to elementary methods whilst providing hints and pointers to the use of analytic methods (Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions, Diophantine Approximation) and elliptic curves in the subject.
Also from quite an early point in the book (the first chapter) the author mentions various unsolved problems, some of which are more famous (Goldbach's conjecture) than others (Erdos' covering problem). The reader might get the impression that it is easy to come up with propositions which one can neither readily prove nor dispose of, and this is true on a global and historic scale.
The book is not written in a lemma-theorem-proof style at all. Of course for a more advanced book, the more structured approach is useful. But for a book of this kind, the more continuous approach works brilliantly.

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