When first published posthumously in 1963, this bookpresented a
radically different approach to the teaching of calculus. In sharp
contrast to the methods of his time, Otto Toeplitz did not teach
calculus as a static system of techniques and facts to be memorized.
Instead, he drew on his knowledge of the history of mathematics and
presented calculus as an organic evolution of ideas beginning with the
discoveries of Greek scholars, such as Archimedes, Pythagoras, and
Euclid, and developing through the centuries in the work of Kepler,
Galileo, Fermat, Newton, and Leibniz. Through this unique approach,
Toeplitz summarized and elucidated the major mathematical advances that
contributed to modern calculus.
Reissued for the first time since 1981 and updated with a new foreword,
this classic text in the field of mathematics is experiencing a
resurgence of interest among students and educators of calculus today.