“Most people see the world as a photograph,” Elias said, his chalk hovering over the slate. “They see a car at a specific mile marker, or a population at a specific census count. They see what is .” He pressed the chalk hard against the board.
As Elias spoke, the chalkboard filled with the language of the shifting world: , where one side of the world is pulled away from the other to find clarity; Integrating Factors , the "magic" multipliers that turn chaos into a perfect derivative; and Initial Conditions , the single "X marks the spot" that tells you which of a thousand possible paths the universe actually took. An Introduction to Differential Equations: With...
“This,” he whispered, “is the beginning of everything. It is a . It doesn't tell you the value of y . It tells you that the way y changes is tied directly to what y is at that very moment. It’s the mathematics of growth, of decay, of the way heat leaves a cup of coffee or the way a virus ripples through a city.” “Most people see the world as a photograph,”