I did my BS in applied math and miss it. The work made me feel good, but I never used the degree, and here i am a decade later having forgotten it all.
Applied mathematicians have the creative side which must first invent the structures for which there (pure) reasoning comes to rest on. But pure math is not about solving problems but learning arbitrary mathematical fact. A pure mathematician is merely a quick learner. But a good applied mathematician has the empiricist quality of inventing novel models (building a new “perspective”) and can switch gracefully to the mode of deep reasoning, shared by those pure mathematicians…all as a means of generate a useful solution to a very particular instance.
Izi Scott Math doesn't "love back" anyone... This is the hard thing about it. Neither does it hate anyone. Math is hard and it does not forgive mistakes but you can always rely on it. Math does not come "natural" or "easy" to almost everyone. It is just that those who are good at math enjoy thinking about it really hard which is really exhausting.
@@kiyoponnn It's really less than you think. It just starts in kindergarden or even before that... And you either have the right mindset to be good at math until then or you don't and if you have the right mindser it seems like it's "natural" when these kids start school... and then it just adds up. They are better in first grade and because maths always builds on previous skills in school they will also be better in decond grade, much better at third grade and so on until before leaving school there are really two groups: those who don't really have to do anything and are still good and those who (think they) can do whatever they want and will never get good (which is not true but they tell themselves that)...
I need someone who works on applied mathematics. I just want to learn. Is there any good source online where I can learn applied mathematics? Please, help me.
Hello! I got my bachelor's degree in engeneering (radiotechnics and electronics). And now I want enter to the master's program in applied mathematics. Will that be possible?
@@phenomenalphysics3548 definetly applied math has much more math. be sure to take some real/complex/functional analysis, pde, ode, stat, probility, you should be good. the analysis/proof courses are the main difference, but its vital for studying pde (like navier stokes)