This clear and lively introduction to probability theory concentrates on the results that are the most useful for applications, including combinatorial probability and Markov chains. Concise and focused, it is designed for a one-semester introductory course in probability for students who have some familiarity with basic calculus. Reflecting the author's philosophy that the best way to learn probability is to see it in action, there are more than 350 problems and 200 examples.
Lines, Planes and Solids - Studies in the Seventeenth-Century Writings
A university booklet for the students of English literature. Contains a set of essays devoted to the notions presented in the literary output by Descartes and Spinoza.
"Прямые линии, плоскости и тела" Исследования по литературе XVII века
Internal Investigations: A Basic Guide Anyone Can Use
The book provides a simple but effective method for carrying out reliable and defensible internal investigations. This easy-to-use guide offers anyone asked to conduct such an investigation a working set of standards, set out in a BASIC approach that follows five main steps: Beginning the Investigation, Assessing the Issues, Substantiating the Claims, Investigating the Implications, and Communicating the results.
Real Estate Investing in Canada: Creating Wealth with the ACRE System
Don R. Campbell, for more than 20 years, has offered proven, unbiased, professional advice, and strategies to average Canadians to empower them with the key knowledge they need to build and manage a Canadian real estate portfolio. Now these strategies—embodied in the Authentic Canadian Real Estate System—have proven to be an powerful draw for Canadians who have purchased more than 35,000 copies of the first edition.
The proposed book Generalized Gaussian Error Calculus addresses for the first time since 200 years a rigorous, complete and self-consistent revision of the Gaussian error calculus. Since experimentalists realized that measurements in general are burdened by unknown systematic errors, the classical, widespread used evaluation procedures scrutinizing the consequences of random errors alone turned out to be obsolete.