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by bmitc
1431 days ago
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I am not entirely sure what the above commenter means that dx is rigorously defined in "infinitesimal calculus" because I don't know what they necessarily mean by "infinitesimal calculus". As far as I am aware, there is standard calculus, non-standard analysis by Robinson, and smooth infinitesimal analysis that uses intuitionistic logic. The three are very different. dx has no meaning in standard calculus. It is simply there for notation. It is given meaning by the theory of smooth manifolds and differential forms. In that setting, differentials such as dx are given explicit meaning: they are functions that operate on tangent vectors. For example, apply dx to the unit vector d/dx + d/dy to get dx(d/dx+ d/dy) = d/dx(x) + d/dy(x) = 1 + 0 = 1. |
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Sure it does. There is no need to know about smooth manifolds or differential forms to understand the differential of a function of one variable at a point and the meaning of dy = f’(x)dx.