Newton's fundamental discovery, the one which he considered necessary to keep secret and published only in the form of an anagram, consists of the following: Data aequatione quotcunque fluentes quantitae involvente fluxiones invenire et vice' versa. In contemporary mathematical language, this means: "It is useful to solve differential equations".
At present, the theory of differential equations represents a vast con- glomerate of a great many ideas and methods of different nature, very useful for many applications and constantly stimulating theoretical in- vestigations in all areas of mathematics.
Many of the routes connecting abstract mathematical theories to appli- cations in the natural sciences lead through differential equations. Many topics of the theory of differential equations grew so much that they became disciplines in themselves; problems from the theory of differential equations had great significance in the origins of such disciplines as linear algebra, the theory of Lie groups, functional analysis, quantum mechanics, etc. Consequently, differential equations lie at the basis of scientific mathematical philosophy (Weltanschauung).
【目录】
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Notation
Chapter 1 Special Equations
1 Differential Equations Invariant under Groups of Symmetries
2 Resolution of Singularities of Differential Equations
3 Implicit Equations
4 Normal Form of an Implicit Differential Equation in the Neighborhood of a Regular,Singular Point
5 The Stationary Schr6dinger Equation
6 Geometry of a Second-Order Differential Equation and Geometry of a Pair of Direction Fields in Three-Dimensional Space
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