This course continues the study of calculus, emphasizing more complex integration techniques, analytical geometry in two and three dimensions, more physical applications of calculus, and a study of infinite series of real numbers as well as of functions.
1. The primary task of Calculus II is to learn to integrate.
2. The second task is to learn what to do with integrals. This second task will probably be the more useful to you most of the time, but you can never tell when you'll step into a theorectical quagmire and have to reason your way out of it using the first task. Albert Einstein was a pragmatic physicist with considerable disdain for mathematical theory. He was deeply shocked when he discovered he was going to have to delve deeply into theorectical mathematics in order to complete his theory of relativity.
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