Alphathree33
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- Dec 1, 2000
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No, engineering applications of calculus are all about approximations. After all, none of us needs infinitely many decimal places of accuracy.
The math of calculus is exactly correct. The mathematicians of the past thousand years weren't kinda right, they really were.
e = mc^2 isn't a good example here. For the purpose of my previous post let's remember that it's E for energy and not e for the base of a natural logarithm.
The speed of light, c, is not defined exactly and so yes I agree with you for all calculations done with that equation for measured values (mass, speed of light), your answer will be approximate.
Again, properties of the real number system are not approximate. They are axioms. These things work by definition, not by proof or by punching a lot of numbers on your calculator and scratching your head.
The math of calculus is exactly correct. The mathematicians of the past thousand years weren't kinda right, they really were.
e = mc^2 isn't a good example here. For the purpose of my previous post let's remember that it's E for energy and not e for the base of a natural logarithm.
The speed of light, c, is not defined exactly and so yes I agree with you for all calculations done with that equation for measured values (mass, speed of light), your answer will be approximate.
Again, properties of the real number system are not approximate. They are axioms. These things work by definition, not by proof or by punching a lot of numbers on your calculator and scratching your head.