
I haven't quite ceased with my mathematical musings. Like the medieval theologians before me, I believe mathematics can unveil the mind of God.
On a graph of a function y=f(x), the average rate of change of y with respect to x between x=x1 and x=x2 is Δy/Δx=y2-y1/x2-x1.
It's interesting that we can choose any two arbitrary points on the secant line and it will always give the same answer for slope. Calculus gives us new tools that help you predict the behavior of functions.
Now that I've firmly established my intellectual limits, I hope to weigh in on a more thorough treatment of these concepts in the near future.
On a graph of a function y=f(x), the average rate of change of y with respect to x between x=x1 and x=x2 is Δy/Δx=y2-y1/x2-x1.
It's interesting that we can choose any two arbitrary points on the secant line and it will always give the same answer for slope. Calculus gives us new tools that help you predict the behavior of functions.
Now that I've firmly established my intellectual limits, I hope to weigh in on a more thorough treatment of these concepts in the near future.