Dr. Seafood said:
Well, to prove the product rule you pretty much just assume functions f and g are differentiable at x and let h(x) = f(x)g(x), then find h'(x) from first principles. By "more interesting", I meant proofs you can't carry out in such a direct manner. You have to be a bit clever and creative to get the result you want.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclid's_theorem#Euclid.27s_proof" is a good example of such an interesting "fun" proof -- he shows that the opposite of his hypothesis leads to a contradictory statement. If you haven't seen something like that before, check it out!
edit: You have a PhD? >_> Not in mathematics then, I suppose?
I don't have a PhD, but under degree in the "edit your details" section it says "Degree (or working towards) in what field?"...
So I'm working towards a degree of a PhD so I put that down. Maybe I should change it?
Fyi, I'm going to be a sophomore in college next semester and leaning toward theoretical physics because it fulfills my math and physics need =].
nickalh said:
Higher math not only encompasses the theoretical side but also other areas like numerical analysis & applied math. Many or most differential equations, nobody knows how to solve. So we use computers to approximate solutions. Or you've got a matrix equation with 50 variables. Again, the methods people program into computers are interesting. The theory helps guide us- is there a solution? are there infinitely many solutions? Can knowing one solution help us narrow in on the other solutions more quickly?
Most (90%?) of Calculus students struggle to simply understand Calculus, much less the proofs, which some professors don't emphasize.
If A. you have the ability to see the lack of rigor in some Calculus books, and
B. you desire to see more rigorous proofs
then C. you are probably well suited for higher level math. I'm assuming you're in an engineering based calculus course & not a business calculus or simplified calculus course.
The students who complain about higher math, may have been just as likely to complain about Calculus when learning Calculus.
Thanks! And your right. I see people complain about calculus and claiming differential equations to not make any sense.. but that simply means they don't understand it! A lot of people go through math at a superficial level and fail to dig deep to understand the underlying mathematics.
chiro said:
You generally deal with more abstraction and in the pure part, you have to prove things.
Personally I find the stuff I'm doing now really cool. The whole idea of wavelets being applications of hilbert spaces, which are a newly developed framework of analysis is great.
The higher you go, the more abstract it gets and by abstract I mean that you are dealing with things that have the capacity to represent more "things" (or if you are familiar with set theory, "larger sets").
As far as math goes, my opinion is that math is more or less created out of necessity. It is usually the case due to reasons like necessity to understand something (like in physics, or any other applied science), or to help solve existing problems in other developed areas of math (think of all the areas of mathematics and the new fields that crop up to help solve past problems).
The thing I find great about math is that when you see the reason why it exists and what questions it can answer, you just look back in awe and appreciate the labor of people gone by to contribute to our understanding of a tiny fraction of the world.
But also remember that a lot of things in math are tedious, but everything has its tedious parts, so don't get discouraged by that (but also be aware that not everything is "romantic").
I am aware that anything can become tedious at times. Beauty doesn't come cheap.
And I don't clearly understand your definition of abstract. To me I've thought abstract mathematics was something you can't visualize and doesn't have an immediate connection to the real world.
Anonymous217 said:
Not really. "Proofs" in HS/AP textbooks are more derivations than anything. It gets from point A, the use of several specific formulas and definitions, and we miraculously get to point B, the "proved" method. However, we're often left out on why we carried out each step to get from point A to point B. That is, how did we know that if we randomly thew in such steps, that we could discover such a formula?
I guess I'm saying that proofs in higher-level mathematics are easier to follow in terms of reasoning out "why this", "why that", etc. You're more at peace with how the process came to be and how the concept was discovered.
Oh great! I was following a couple of proofs in my calculus books such as the product rule and it turned me off. It said that the proof involved subtracting and adding the same quantity. >----> -f(x+@x)g(x)+f(x+@x)g(x) <------<
I was left with a big WHY??
I would like to understand something to the point that I could self-construct the proof through intuition. Not through memorizing that I should subtract and add the same quantity!
I hope higher level mathematics is in a way that if you try hard enough you can master the art of proofing and not through guesswork!
nickalh said:
The proofs in higher math are more akin to the proofs I saw in Honors Geometry. When it's done they are less trick ("why we carried out each step") based. One definitely sees some tricks, +b -b, *b/b, and more, but it's clearer earlier why we use them. However, finding an ironclad reasoning to get from start to finish without assuming anything was a challenge.
:(
pmsrw3 said:
I think, if you love "extremely powerful mathematical concepts through rationale and logic", that you will love proof-based math. (And I agree, calculus is pretty darn cool. :-) Proofs can be very beautiful.
It's possible that the whining and complaining you heard was not really about it's being proof-based, but about what I would call excessive rigor. I think good math teaching should balance rigor with intuition. But some mathematicians (Rudin's Real and Complex Analysis comes to mind) seem to feel that it's positively evil to give their students even the slightest understanding of the subject. In that regard, I think there's some substance to the complaints.
I haven't been exposed to rigor let alone excessive rigor but time will tell how I will feel about it.
MikeyW said:
Proofs are more than just a way of confirming something, in my opinion learning a proof is the fastest and most direct (and sometimes, the only) way of learning a subject. You can differentiate a million different functions without ever appreciating the meaning of what you're doing, then one day learn it from first principles and understand it instantly.
Also they're a far more intuitive and natural way of learning than simple memorisation of abstract formulas.
Wow that sounds awesome =D.