This is getting ridiculous. I haven't looked at this thread for some time and ...
Doesn't work like that in real life, you say it works in Belgium but in America where it is different our system works better. It's not a bad way of doing things but seperating the classes has just proved to be better.
To the one who began this thread: no, American schools are not in general superior to those who educate students with a mixture of proofs and applications. Who the heck said that? Arguably the best undergrad schools are in Europe. France, the UK, etc are filled with absolutely top class, insane mathematics.
I've written many posts supporting aspects of what you're suggesting, but I don't understand this sudden justification via the supposed superiority of US schools.
Bottom line is that people need to be able to communicate their reasoning clearly in engineering too. Epsilon-delta stuff can be minimized (really, I don't see the mania about this, because
even in rigorous mathematics, you develop a lot of calculus after you just set up the basics using epsilon-delta type stuff). In practice, you only prove a few things using the basic principles.
The clamoring to use L'Hopital's rule is not just from the engineer, it's from the mathematician too - who the heck wants to compute out limits using first principles only, except as an illustrative exercise? We prove theorems for a reason - so they reduce our burden later, and illustrate the depth of the theory.
Blind calculation is not what engineering is about either. You just don't really care about proving the existence of the Riemann integral. Proving that it has certain properties can be a useful tool, however, because that involves manipulating the basic properties, and that actually CAN be useful in engineering derivations.
I think there's a great medium between a real analysis course and a totally computational calculus course, and that's what is needed.
I do NOT favor a totally computational course, because it leaves out the meaning of things you're tossing around. The meaning is important, though all the details are not crucial.