Zen2613
Member
Hey all,
So I've just finished the hsc this year and now that it's all over, I'm thinking about all the things in maths that made absolutely no sense to me. One of these is good old integration. Like when first learning calculus, we were told dy/dx is NOT a fraction. But then when we get to integration and substitutions, we treat it as one, so how is this justified ? Also the worst bit is how we write an integrand. The integral dx of something magically works perfectly with dy/dx so how can we be sure that the dx should go there like that, if all it means is taken with respect to the x-axis. Specifically it only doesn't make sense with integration by substitution, we're just told this is what to do, and don't question it, because it is beyond you. I hope when I get to uni, they approach calculus more rigorously so that it won't be just being told what to do, and more so actually understanding it...
So I've just finished the hsc this year and now that it's all over, I'm thinking about all the things in maths that made absolutely no sense to me. One of these is good old integration. Like when first learning calculus, we were told dy/dx is NOT a fraction. But then when we get to integration and substitutions, we treat it as one, so how is this justified ? Also the worst bit is how we write an integrand. The integral dx of something magically works perfectly with dy/dx so how can we be sure that the dx should go there like that, if all it means is taken with respect to the x-axis. Specifically it only doesn't make sense with integration by substitution, we're just told this is what to do, and don't question it, because it is beyond you. I hope when I get to uni, they approach calculus more rigorously so that it won't be just being told what to do, and more so actually understanding it...