
by B. Booss
Rating: 4.0 ⭐
• 2 recommendations ❤️
The Motivation. With intensified use of mathematical ideas, the methods and techniques of the various sciences and those for the solution of practical problems demand of the mathematician not only greater readi ness for extra-mathematical applications but also more comprehensive orientations within mathematics. In applications, it is frequently less important to draw the most far-reaching conclusions from a single mathe matical idea than to cover a subject or problem area tentatively by a proper "variety" of mathematical theories. To do this the mathematician must be familiar with the shared as weIl as specific features of differ ent mathematical approaches, and must have experience with their inter connections. The Atiyah-Singer Index Formula, "one of the deepest and hardest results in mathematics", "probably has wider ramifications in topology and analysis than any other single result" (F. Hirzebruch) and offers perhaps a particularly fitting example for such an introduction to "Mathematics": In spi te of i ts difficulty and immensely rich interrela tions, the realm of the Index Formula can be delimited, and thus its ideas and methods can be made accessible to students in their middle * semesters. In fact, the Atiyah-Singer Index Formula has become progressively "easier" and "more transparent" over the years. The discovery of deeper and more comprehensive applications (see Chapter 111. 4) brought with it, not only a vigorous exploration of its methods particularly in the many facetted and always new presentations of the material by M. F.
by B. Booss
Rating: 3.5 ⭐
"V. i. e. Ell6a. h1w. ng deA p. ltll. tU. ehe. n Le. be. M £. e. M. t Mnge. ge. n je. de. n, de. ll au6 I. l. i. eh a. eh;thabe. n w. U. R., von unell Sede. d. i. e. Sehw-i. e. JL. i. gkede. n . i. n dell AM 6iihJumg deAl. > e. n, WM . i. hn 1. >0 k. tnde. llR. ueh. t diink. te., ge. hoJL. tg ellke. nne. n; von unell a. nde. lln abell aueh de. n Punk. t deA ElllluehbMe. n, wOMn ma. n dUlleh g£. ueh6iilUll. i. ge. AMtlte. ngung a. Uell Kltii6te., d. i. e. . i. n un!. > e. JLe. ll GewaU I. >. i. nd, ge. R. a. nge. n ka. nn, ll. i. eWgell ZIL beAUmme. n ILnd wedell Mna. 1L6 zUlliieke. n. " Vell Giillingell Na. tUll6oMehell Ge. Ollg FORSTER (11811 iibell den bll. i. - t. tI. lehe. n Entde. eke. ll Ja. meA COOK INHALTLICHE MOTIVATION. Intensivere Nutzung mathematischer Ideen, Methoden und Techniken in den Einzelwissenschaften und zur Losung praktischer Probleme erfordert yom Mathematiker neben groBerer auBermathematischer "Anwendungsbereit- schaft" zugleich eine umfassendere innermathematische "Orientiertheit". In der Praxis kommt es haufig nicht so sehr darauf an, aus einer mathematischen Idee be- sonders weitrei chende Kon. sequenzen zu zi ehen, sondern ei nen Gegenstands- oder Problembereich moglichst angemessen mit einer Vielfalt mathematischer Theorien versuchsweise zu Uberdecken.