Since the first edition of this book, geometrical methods in the theory
of ordinary differential equations have become very popular and some
progress has been made partly with the help of computers. Much of this
progress is represented in this revised, expanded edition, including
such topics as the Feigenbaum universality of period doubling, the
Zoladec solution, the Iljashenko proof, the Ecalle and Voronin theory,
the Varchenko and Hovanski theorems, and the Neistadt theory. In the
selection of material for this book, the author explains basic ideas and
methods applicable to the study of differential equations. Special
efforts were made to keep the basic ideas free from excessive
technicalities. Thus the most fundamental questions are considered in
great detail, while of the more special and difficult parts of the
theory have the character of a survey. Consequently, the reader needs
only a general mathematical knowledge to easily follow this text. It is
directed to mathematicians, as well as all users of the theory of
differential equations.