GUIDE TO DISTRIBUTION THEORY AND FOURIER TRANSFORMS, A Quotes

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GUIDE TO DISTRIBUTION THEORY AND FOURIER TRANSFORMS, A GUIDE TO DISTRIBUTION THEORY AND FOURIER TRANSFORMS, A by Strichartz Robert S
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GUIDE TO DISTRIBUTION THEORY AND FOURIER TRANSFORMS, A Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“Distribution theory was one of the two great revolutions in mathematical analysis in the 20th century. It can be thought of as the completion of differential calculus, just as the other great revolution, measure theory (or Lebesgue integration theory), can be thought of as the completion of integral calculus. There are many parallels between the two revolutions. Both were created by young, highly individualistic French mathematicians (Henri Lebesgue and Laurent Schwartz). Both were rapidly assimilated by the mathematical community, and opened up new worlds of mathematical development. Both forced a complete rethinking of all mathematical analysis that had come before, and basically altered the nature of the questions that mathematical analysts asked.”
Robert S. Strichartz, GUIDE TO DISTRIBUTION THEORY AND FOURIER TRANSFORMS, A
“Distribution theory was one of the two great revolutions in mathematical analysis in the 20th century. It can be thought of as the completion of differential calculus, just as the other great revolution, measure theory (or Lebesgue integration theory), can be thought of as the completion of integral calculus. There are many parallels between the two revolutions. Both were created by young, highly individualistic French mathematicians (Henri Lebesgue and
Laurent Schwartz). Both were rapidly assimilated by the mathematical community, and opened up new worlds of mathematical development. Both forced a complete rethinking of all mathematical analysis that had come before, and basically altered the nature of the questions that mathematical analysts asked.”
Robert S. Strichartz, GUIDE TO DISTRIBUTION THEORY AND FOURIER TRANSFORMS, A