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I took elementary algebra in school, and now independently I want to understand physics equations. What is the mathematical progression from elementary algebra to advanced calculus? I want my learning to be geared towards the end result, and I cannot seem to find a more technical description than; algebra 1, algebra 2, geometry, trig, calc.. etcetera. What is the proper progression?

2007-09-16 04:58:28 · 4 answers · asked by justanotherfreak 1 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

Saying algebra seems very ambiguous.. Algebra..WHAT? 1? 2? linear, abstract, concrete, what are all the algebras? Thanks!

2007-09-16 11:13:10 · update #1

4 answers

You pretty much have it. Algebra, geometry, trig, calculus. After that it's linear algebra, differential equations, modern algebra, real and complex analysis, tensors, maybe some algebraic number theory and/or topology, and lots of applications.

Doug

2007-09-16 05:08:24 · answer #1 · answered by doug_donaghue 7 · 0 0

sure, and that i nonetheless have them now as considerable matters...physics & algebra are very lots proper in real existence yet calculus is for the extra technical people ...we use algebra & physics in on an familiar basis existence: like employing quickly or sluggish on a street, once you pitch that baseball in a interest, a unfastened throw in a basketball interest..very practically each and every thing! ^_^

2016-11-15 09:15:42 · answer #2 · answered by blaylock 4 · 0 0

All of the above plus calculus.

2007-09-16 05:03:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

maybe college algebra -> calculus I & general physics I concurently -> calculus II and physics II -> calculus III ...

2007-09-16 05:02:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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