A lot of the same ground but Sets for Mathematics is more concise and probably goes into more depth by the end. If you've previously done rings, groups, vector spaces, topological spaces, the concepts tie nicely together in Sets for Mathematics.
Conceptual Mathematics puts a lot more time up front motivating the material with examples and tries to build your intuition before getting into the details. If all you've done previously was linear algebra and some discrete math, this book is probably better.
Conceptual Mathematics puts a lot more time up front motivating the material with examples and tries to build your intuition before getting into the details. If all you've done previously was linear algebra and some discrete math, this book is probably better.