what the fuck is with the 3rd order and higher derivatives.
absolutely pointless and unnecessary, ignore those who suggest 3rd or higher order.
2nd order is sufficient, even engineering mathematics doesnt use 3rd or higher order derivatives in finding local max or min of functions with 2 independent variables i.e. f(x, y)
What do functions of two variables and their mins and maxs have to do with this thread? And can you explain to me how the second derivative of y = x
4 tells me that (0,0) is a minimum of that function? Or isn't the second derivative
as sufficient as you suggest?
At the end of the day you're going to have to use some other method to determine that (0,0) is a minimum of y = x
4.
And now getting back to the actual topic of this thread, points of inflection, when looking for them you're just looking for mins and maxs of the first derivative. In doing so, applying the second derivative test to the any stationary points of the first derivative is exactly the same method as applying the second derivative test to the stationary points of any other function. The fact that you're working with the third derivative of
some function in this case is no reason to ditch the method. After all, every function is the third derivative or
some function ...