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by susanrigetti
1560 days ago
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For what it’s worth, the curriculum in this guide is modeled after the math major maps of many universities, including the one I attended (Penn). I would be curious to know what part of an undergraduate math curriculum will lead people very far astray… |
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Apart from the applied stuff you mention, the real core of a mathematics education involves, I think, 4 main areas with significant overlap
Group A: number theory, graph theory, combinatorics
which shares concepts with
Group B: Algebra, Topology, complex analysis, differential geometry, metric spaces...etc
which shares concepts with
Group C: Functional analysis, measure theory
which shares concepts with
Group D: probability and statistics.
As for the applied math that you mention, you should really need to add vector calculus and I'd highly encourage anyone to take a course on fluid mechanics (from a mathematics department instead of an engineering department) to get a real feel for vector calculus in action.