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by javajosh
1836 days ago
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I tutored calc too, but I had an unanswered complaint about the epsilon/delta definition of a limit - I found it to be circular. There was no impact on the computations required by the class, but the definition seemed rather circular, as it presupposes the reality of the infinity implicit in induction. Over time I recognized that my intuition was rebelling against unphysical math concepts. I was a physics major and so I was content to hand-wave my own concerns away as a merely philosophical problem, since you could always pick a sufficiently large number of induction iterations to satisfy any practical need. But yeah, it left a bad taste in my mouth that no-one seemed to care about this issue. (Oddly the use of induction for similar things, like Cantor's diagonal argument, didn't bother me at all. It was specifically epsilon delta that did, and still does, bother me.) |
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I'm genuinely curious as to what you were getting hung up on, because odds are you learned the wrong definitions or somehow changed the definition to something that is incorrect, and then discovered the error later on. It's a fairly straightforward definition if you can do the proper bookkeeping over the quantifiers, and is designed to not have anything to do with infinities. But many people struggle with quantifiers.