If you were in Boston still I'd recommend a professor of mine who is the absolute best at teaching logic. I don't know anyone in NYC :(
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You make me feel dumb for only ever living in one place :D
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City and State colleges are free so long as you're an undergrad with 30 credits a year and live in-state for however long you take the classes, so you can shop around for Associate/Bachelor's programs that cover what you want.
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Discrete math classes will cover formal logic
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Although you can also just learn formal logic and skip the rest of discrete, if that's what you're most interested in
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In lieu of a recommendation for a person who could help you with all that, I can recommend textbooks. Probability is the basis for statistics, so it should precede it. So: Read "A First Course in Probability" and then go for "Mathematica Statistics and Its Applications".
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What kind of dance? Steps on Broadway is great!
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A good friend of mine does some Python tutoring for beginners (or at least, he has in the past). I'd be happy to ask him on your behalf. Also, happy to be available as a Python learning resource too. No charge.
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Definitely hang out with
@SpencrGreenberg: https://www.facebook.com/spencer.greenberg … All-around awesome guy, but also a pretty brilliant mathematician.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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