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by giomasce 2912 days ago
I agree with you, but this is not what GGP is saying. GGP is saying another true fact (i.e., that derivative of a linear function is that same function), which a different thing than stating, as the article says, that the differentiation operator is linear. On a manifold there is no concept of a linear function, so you cannot say that the derivative of a linear function is the same function, but the differentiation operator is still defined and linear.
2 comments

Yes, you are right. My apologies.
Of course you are correct, even though one could argue the linearity of differentiation is a property you can obtain by differentiating in coordinate charts, where the reasoning is still valid.

In any case, it is probably a good thing to get a good intuition of what differentiation and derivatives are in the vector space setting before digging into differential geometry.

Not all vector spaces are manifolds (in fact most aren't), and you don't need charts to define differential operators (just see functional analysis).
I most definitely agree with you, however this brings us even further away from the author's setting.