Difference between revisions of "MAT3013"

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(Removed Smith-Eggen-StAndre textbook and Topics List A.)
(Removed Topics List C (leaving only List D).)
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* Ethan D. Bloch, ''Proofs and Fundamentals: A First Course in Abstract Mathematics'', 2nd ed, Springer (2011). https://link-springer-com.libweb.lib.utsa.edu/book/10.1007%2F978-1-4419-7127-2
 
* Ethan D. Bloch, ''Proofs and Fundamentals: A First Course in Abstract Mathematics'', 2nd ed, Springer (2011). https://link-springer-com.libweb.lib.utsa.edu/book/10.1007%2F978-1-4419-7127-2
  
==Topics List C (Proofs and Fundamentals) ==
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
! Week !! Session !! Topics !! Section !! Prerequisite skills !! Learning outcomes !! Examples
 
 
|-
 
|1
 
 
|| Introduction
 
||
 
* Historical remarks
 
* Overview of the course and its goals
 
* Ideas of proofs and logic
 
* Logical statements
 
|| 1.1-1.2
 
||
 
||
 
* Motivation for rigorous
 
mathematics from a
 
historical perspective
 
* An understanding of where
 
and why this course is
 
going
 
 
|-
 
|2
 
|| Informal logic
 
||
 
* Statements
 
* Relation between statements
 
* Valid Arguments
 
* Quantifiers
 
|| 1.1-1.5
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|3
 
|| Strategies for proofs
 
||
 
* Why we need proofs
 
* Direct proofs
 
* Proofs by contrapositive and contradiction
 
* Cases and If and Only If
 
|| 2.2-2.4
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|4
 
|| Writing Mathematics/Set theory I
 
||
 
* Basic concepts
 
* Operations and constructions with sets
 
|| 2.6, 3.1-3.3
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|5
 
|| Set theory II
 
||
 
* Family of sets
 
* Axioms of set theory
 
||3.4-3.5
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|6
 
||
 
* Catch up and review
 
* Midterm 1
 
 
|-
 
|7
 
||Functions I
 
||
 
* Definition of functions
 
* Image and inverse image
 
* Composition and inverse functions
 
||4.1-4.3
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|8
 
||Functions II
 
||
 
* Injectivity, surjectivity and bijectivity
 
* Sets of functions
 
|| 4.4-4.5
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|9
 
||Relations I
 
||
 
* Relations
 
* Congruence
 
||5.1-5.2
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|10
 
||Relations II
 
||
 
* Equivalence relations
 
||4.3-4
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|11
 
||Finite and infinite sets II
 
||
 
* Introduction
 
* Properties of natural numbers
 
||6.1-6.2
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
 
|-
 
|12
 
||
 
* Catch up and review
 
* Midterm 2
 
 
 
|-
 
|13
 
|| Finite and infinite sets II
 
||
 
* Mathematical induction
 
* Recursion
 
||6.2-6.3
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|14
 
|| Finite and infinite sets III
 
||
 
*Cardinality of sets
 
* Finite sets and countable sets
 
*Cardinality of number systems
 
|| 6.4 - 6.7
 
|| Prerequisites
 
|| Outcomes
 
|| Examples
 
 
|-
 
|15
 
||
 
*Catch up and review for final
 
* Study days
 
|}
 
 
==Topics List D (Proofs and Fundamentals) Wiki Format ==
 
==Topics List D (Proofs and Fundamentals) Wiki Format ==
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"

Revision as of 11:51, 6 August 2020

Foundations of Mathematics (3-0) 3 Credit Hours

Course Catalog

MAT 3013. Foundations of Mathematics. (3-0) 3 Credit Hours.

Prerequisite: MAT1214. Development of theoretical tools for rigorous mathematics. Topics may include mathematical logic, propositional and predicate calculus, set theory, functions and relations, cardinal and ordinal numbers, Boolean algebras, and construction of the natural numbers, integers, and rational numbers. Emphasis on theorem proving. (Formerly MAT2243. Credit cannot be earned for MAT3013 and MAT2243.) Generally offered: Fall, Spring, Summer. Differential Tuition: $150.

Description

Foundations of Mathematics is a pivotal course for mathematics majors. It serves as the first major step towards modern mathematics of rigorous proofs and a true pre-requisite to real analysis and abstract algebra. Up to this point students are asked to do few proofs (notably geometry and perhaps some epsilon-delta in calculus). The course particularly emphasizes set-theoretical constructions, such as functions, composition, inversion, forward and inverse images, relations, equivalence relations, partial orders, quotient sets and products and unions of sets, vital to further work in mathematics.

Evaluation

  • No makeup exams are offered.
  • An absence may be excused if sufficient evidence of extenuating circumstances is provided. In this case, the final exam grade

could be used as the grade for the missed exam.

  • Students will have access to several past exams for practice.

Text

Topics List D (Proofs and Fundamentals) Wiki Format

Date Sections Topics Prerequisite Skills Student Learning Outcomes
1.
  • 1.1-1.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Motivation for rigorous mathematics from a historical perspective
  • An understanding of where and why this course is going
1.
  • 1.1-1.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Motivation for rigorous mathematics from a historical perspective
  • An understanding of where and why this course is going
1.
  • 1.1-1.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Motivation for rigorous mathematics from a historical perspective
  • An understanding of where and why this course is going
1.
  • 1.1-1.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Motivation for rigorous mathematics from a historical perspective
  • An understanding of where and why this course is going
2.
  • 1.1-1.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
2.
  • 1.1-1.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
2.
  • 1.1-1.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
2.
  • 1.1-1.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
3.
  • 2.2-2.4
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
3.
  • 2.2-2.4
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
3.
  • 2.2-2.4
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
3.
  • 2.2-2.4
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
4.
  • 2.6, 3.1-3.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
4.
  • 2.6, 3.1-3.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
5.
  • 3.4-3.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
5.
  • 3.4-3.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
6.
7.
  • 4.1-4.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
7.
  • 4.1-4.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
7.
  • 4.1-4.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
8.
  • 4.4-4.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
8.
  • 4.4-4.5
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
9.
  • 5.1-5.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
9.
  • 5.1-5.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
10.
  • 4.3-4
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
11.
  • 6.1-6.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
11.
  • 6.1-6.2
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
12.
13.
  • 6.2-6.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
13.
  • 6.2-6.3
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
14.
  • 6.4 - 6.7
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
14.
  • 6.4 - 6.7
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
14.
  • 6.4 - 6.7
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes
15.0
  • Prerequisites
  • Outcomes

See also