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I heard something about the well known Leibniz notation of calculus, and I thought that you guys would be able to tell me if it's a load of hogwash or not.
The geist of it is this: \mathrm d and \int are actually operators, with \mathrm d being an operator that creates an infinitesimal from a variable, and \int being a special kind of summation operator. So, whereas now, we'd recognise \int \mathrm dx as being the same as \int 1 \mathrm dx, Leibniz would have seen it as applying an infinitesimal operation to a variable, and then it's inverse.
So, when Leibniz wrote things like \frac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx}=\frac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dt}\cdot \frac{\mathrm dt}{\mathrm dx}, he saw it as literally cancelling down fractions, not as a trick with limits that just resembles cancelling down fractions.
Is this really what the notation meant? Is it still valid?
The geist of it is this: \mathrm d and \int are actually operators, with \mathrm d being an operator that creates an infinitesimal from a variable, and \int being a special kind of summation operator. So, whereas now, we'd recognise \int \mathrm dx as being the same as \int 1 \mathrm dx, Leibniz would have seen it as applying an infinitesimal operation to a variable, and then it's inverse.
So, when Leibniz wrote things like \frac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dx}=\frac{\mathrm dy}{\mathrm dt}\cdot \frac{\mathrm dt}{\mathrm dx}, he saw it as literally cancelling down fractions, not as a trick with limits that just resembles cancelling down fractions.
Is this really what the notation meant? Is it still valid?