I find higher level maths (algebra) to lack common sense to me; instead becoming sought of a rote process. My foundations start to break down.
e.g. For growth and decay (from 3U), finding the equation of Q given
dQ/dt = kQ
So, dQ/kQ = dt ---------(1)
integral (dQ/kQ) = integral (dt) ---------(2)
1/k . ln(Q) = t
... so forth and making Q the subject.
Questions:
* In (1), I treat the dy/dx operator as a fraction (this works since it arises from rise/run in first principle - I GET THIS).
BUT WHEN I MAKE IT SUCH THAT
dQ/ kQ = dt; what the hell does it mean to just have a dQ on itself? It's like dy = 3. What!?? dy/dx = 1 makes sense to me. Not dy = dx. What does the fundamentals speak about this? What happened to everything I learnt about differentiation (gradients)?
* In (2), I apply the integration operator to both sides. BUT WHY CAN I APPLY IT WITHOUT RESPECT TO ANYTHING? Usually if I had, say, a = b
Then I can apply the integral operator on both WITH RESPECT TO time, say. Not just slap on the integral sign without respect to anything as such in (2)
Am I making sense to anyone? Math doesn't appeal to common sense to me anymore.
e.g. For growth and decay (from 3U), finding the equation of Q given
dQ/dt = kQ
So, dQ/kQ = dt ---------(1)
integral (dQ/kQ) = integral (dt) ---------(2)
1/k . ln(Q) = t
... so forth and making Q the subject.
Questions:
* In (1), I treat the dy/dx operator as a fraction (this works since it arises from rise/run in first principle - I GET THIS).
BUT WHEN I MAKE IT SUCH THAT
dQ/ kQ = dt; what the hell does it mean to just have a dQ on itself? It's like dy = 3. What!?? dy/dx = 1 makes sense to me. Not dy = dx. What does the fundamentals speak about this? What happened to everything I learnt about differentiation (gradients)?
* In (2), I apply the integration operator to both sides. BUT WHY CAN I APPLY IT WITHOUT RESPECT TO ANYTHING? Usually if I had, say, a = b
Then I can apply the integral operator on both WITH RESPECT TO time, say. Not just slap on the integral sign without respect to anything as such in (2)
Am I making sense to anyone? Math doesn't appeal to common sense to me anymore.