Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

No time atm - don't know how many people are still interested in it also. I'll try and write another one this week sometime.

Posted

Another question for Dave.

 

I`ve been lent a book called "Calculus Made Easy" by, Sylvanus P. Thompson.

 

have you read it, and what`s your opinion on it?

I`ve read the 1`st chapter and it seems alright so far, but I`ve heard it`s very over simplified as in there`s a lot of shortcuts.

would you reccomend it as good reading, or am I likely to learn (some more) bad habits? LOL :)

Posted

I haven't read the book I'm afraid. There are a heck of a lot of calculus introduction books out there though, so my advice would be to find one that suits you best.

Posted

Hey, just because I haven't posted anything in that thread, it does not mean I never went it there. It's rather that the information posted in those 2 threads is now safely sitting on my PC in the form of a *.doc ;)

Posted

can i ask what is calculus? my maths teacher says it is "old" maths but i figure she either cant be rsed to telll me or doesnt know herself.

Posted
can i ask what is calculus? my maths teacher says it is "old" maths but i figure she either cant be rsed to telll me or doesnt know herself.

 

If you're not doing a masters or higher, all maths is 'old' maths.

 

Calculus is concerned with the rate of change of variables, and how you can get between them; for instance, how to get from distance, to speed, to acceleration and back again.

 

It is by far the most useful piece of mathematics ever devised.

Posted

To add a bit of historical background, it was developed by Isaac Newton to solve the two-body problem - which shows how clever the man was really.

Posted

don't forget leibniz!!!! he independently developed calculus, a dozen of years after newton . also his notation is far more logical and helped the rapid development of calculus from then on.

Posted

Indeed. But he didn't solve one of the most important problems of the time ;)

 

Although the Leibniz notation is a heck of a lot better than Newton's.

Posted

Probably not. I don't even know whether the problem was around when Newton developed his ideas - it would make sense that it'd appear after Newton's discoveries sometime. Maybe even after his death?

Posted

but surely, after solving the two body problem, he must have thought about the next one, which is the three body. its only logical that he should.

Posted
A three body problem being...three bodies orbiting each other?

 

Yes; as in the Moon, Earth and Sun.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.