Originally posted by Lul Thyme
No mathematicians think that engineers do any real math...
Most engineers barely take any math besides some first year University calc like any economist or even manager, and then maybe a couple extra numerical methods...
No mathematicians think that engineers do any real math...
Most engineers barely take any math besides some first year University calc like any economist or even manager, and then maybe a couple extra numerical methods...
Indeed, my brother's PhD is in maths, but is actually done with the engineering department in part, and paid for by Rolls-Royce. Any engineering degree worth it's salt will include some 'real' maths, as do all the decent Economics degrees over here.
Especially things involving the Axiom of Choice (I just was doing a homework problem involving ultrafilters (I had to show there was a 1-1 correspondence between the elements of teh Stone-Cech compactification of a discrete space and the set of ultrafilters over the space) and I had to show there was a unique ultrafilter with a certain property. What was interesting was that as soon as you can show there is at least one such ultrafilter (using the axiom of choice), you can completely specify what the elements of the unique ultrafilter are, but if you don't know one exists, you can't figure out what it is (well you can but the process of doing so is practically equivalent to proving that one exists).
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