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![]() "Stefan Wolfe" wrote in message ... "Mike Kaliski" wrote in message ... Integral calculus has been described as one of the greatest advances in mathematical science, but that is still only an approximation method and nobody complains about that. Mike, it is hard for me to let this go (but it is off topic). Integral calculus is not an approximation, it is exact. The prior art, the summation method of adding the areas of small rectangles, was the approximation. The genius of integral calculus was that it was able to sum an infinite number of infinitely small rectangles and come up with an exact answer. For the answer to be exact, it was necessary to deal with infinity (undefined) and the concept actually works. It even works in many cases where there is an asymptote that is infinitely long (f(x) = 1/x**2)). END OF COMMENT (no, I will not offer experimental proof that integral calculus is exact :-)) Stefan All true and it works very well. It's just that being forced into accepting such concepts as infinity and the square root of minus one without being able to pin down exactly what they are shows up how limited we are in our abilities to deal with the true nature of the universe. How can anyone really get to grips with such concepts as an infinity of infinities? Mike G0ULI |
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