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ill_1

(http://www.physics.
udel.edu/~watson/phys208/maxwell-review.html)

 

ill titleA Brief Soapbox 

You might hear physicists (especially physics professors... you know who you are) make the claim that mathematics is the language of physics. Therefore, we can use mathematics to describe what is going on when we are exploring a physics question. While this is indeed true, it is not a complete picture of what happens when a physicist uses mathematics and it strips mathematics of the credit it deserves for being the power behind physics.

If mathematics is a language, it is the tank of languages. It is not only how physics is described, but also the high powered computing machinery that makes actually doing physics possible. Consider that without mathematics, physicists could still describe the basic principles of physics without mathematics. For example, one can state the principle of conservation of energy in plain, everyday language. Yet, this would not be very useful. What can I do with this knowledge?

With the power of mathematics, however, we can both apply these laws to specific situations and combine and manipulate these laws to learn new and beautiful things about the world around us. It is mathematics that not only allows us to write the concepts of physics in it's sleekest form, but to both apply and generalize our knowledge! Math opens the doors of both theory and application!

With that rant out of the way, you may be surprised to learn that this website will explore the physics of mathematics and how physics, in some way or another, affected the development of mathematics. If you'd like to continue on this journey with me, then please click the "Egyptian Floods" link on the left!