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by backprojection
3754 days ago
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> Some thirty or so years ago, Bessel functions were included in
the syllabus, but in our day they are out of the question.
> Teaching a subject of which no honest examples can be given is, in my opinion, demoralizing. I don't get this. Differential equations theory is about proving existence and uniqueness of solutions. If you have to use numerical techniques to actually compute the solution, then that's perfectly fine. After all, even if the solution is explicit, like sin(x), or especially a special function, then we still need to use numerical techniques to actually evaluate that explicit solution. |
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As a body of work Differential equations are so messy that theorists landed on so many disparate results. As such Differential equations courses are commonly taught as a "survey of the land" type of courses, so they tend to be incoherent. On the other hand if the teaching focused on practicality there is a lot of commonality among the practical cases.