This monograph gives the reader an up-to-date account of the fine properties of real-valued functions and measures. The unifying theme of the book is the notion of nonmeasurability, from which one gets a full understanding of the structure of the subsets of the real line and the maps between them. The material covered in this book will be of interest to a wide audience of mathematicians, particularly to those working in the realm of real analysis, general topology, and probability theory. Set theorists interested in the foundations of real analysis will find a detailed discussion about the relationship between certain properties of the real numbers and the ZFC axioms, Martin's axiom, and the continuum hypothesis.
This monograph gives the reader an up-to-date account of the fine properties of real-valued functions and measures. The unifying theme of the book is the notion of nonmeasurability, from which one gets a full understanding of the structure of the subsets of the real line and the maps between them. The material covered in this book will be of interest to a wide audience of mathematicians, particularly to those working in the realm of real analysis, general topology, and probability theory. Set theorists interested in the foundations of real analysis will find a detailed discussion about the relationship between certain properties of the real numbers and the ZFC axioms, Martin's axiom, and the continuum hypothesis.
Alexander Kharazishvili
Alexander Kharazishvili Strange Functions in Real Analysis Real Analysis textbook Measure Theory textbook Foundations of real analysis textbook Fine properties of real sets Fine properties of real functions Martin's axiom Analysis and ZFC axioms Non-measurable functions Non-measurable sets Mazurkiewicz Sets
“This monograph deals with classical topics of real analysis and measure theory which show a number of interesting phenomena. … This makes the presented material useful and inspiring. … Every chapter is finished with a solid portion of exercises … of various difficulty. More advanced exercises are enriched with hints and comments.” (Marek Balcerzak, Mathematical Reviews, June, 2023)