Summary
It has been customary in Cambridge for many years to include as part of the Mathematical Tripos a brief introductory course on the Theory of Numbers. This volume is a somewhat fuller version of the lecture notes attaching to the course as delivered by me in recent times. It has been prepared on the suggestion and with the encouragement of the University Press.
The subject has a long and distinguished history, and indeed the concepts and problems relating to the theory have been instrumental in the foundation of a large part of mathematics. The present text describes the rudiments of the field in a simple and direct manner. It is very much to be hoped that it will serve to stimulate the reader to delve into the rich literature associated with the subject and thereby to discover some of the deep and beautiful theories that have been created as a result of numerous researches over the centuries. Some guides to further study are given at the ends of the chapters. By way of introduction, there is a short account of the Disquisitiones arithmeticae of Gauss, and, to begin with, the reader can scarcely do better than to consult this famous work.
I am grateful to Mrs S. Lowe for her careful preparation of the typescript, to Mr P. Jackson for his meticulous subediting, to Dr D. J. Jackson for providing me with a computerized version of Fig. 8.1, and to Dr R. C. Mason for his help in checking the proof-sheets and for useful suggestions.
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- A Concise Introduction to the Theory of Numbers , pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1984