Fundamental Theorem of Calculus

jpanknin

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Does anyone have recommendations for videos/books/articles that explain the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus intuitively? Like, why are integrals and antiderivatives related and how? I've watched hours of videos, read sections in 3 textbooks, and asked ChatGPT, but still don't get the intuition.
 
I like to think in higher dimensions. If you follow a flow through a potential field, then the gain of energy is determined by your path, and is zero if it is a closed curve. What happens inside is determined by what's happening at the boundary. You can write this as [imath]\int_a^b +\int_b^a=0. [/imath] For a concrete example, you may consider climbing stairs between two floors: the potential is the gravity, the energy gain the difference in potential energy. Your energy gain is [imath] F(3rd)-F(2nd)[/imath] no matter what you did in between, climbing back and forth, pausing, or taking two steps at a time.

I am sure you have seen a lot of examples and maybe a few proofs, too, so it's hard to imagine what else can be done. This is how I see it: it is technically correct, so I accept it. A flow through a vector field is my intuition. If you break this picture down to two dimensions, the graph of a function, you end up with Riemann sums.
 
It may help if you state your question a little more specifically, because there are many ways to look at this. Which part of the FTC are you primarily thinking of? What is the statement of that theorem as you think of it? What feels wrong to you about it? And what explanation that you've seen came closest to answering your question?
 
It may help if you state your question a little more specifically, because there are many ways to look at this. Which part of the FTC are you primarily thinking of? What is the statement of that theorem as you think of it? What feels wrong to you about it? And what explanation that you've seen came closest to answering your question?
Well, it's difficult to say what I don't understand about it when I don't really understand it (I don't mean that sarcastically). Some part of it just isn't coming together. I don't get how antiderivatives give area under a graph. I don't get how or why that translation happens. The closest I think I've gotten is that as x varies, the slope (derivative) gives an indication of the amount by which the area (integration of the area of a new slice into the whole) will change. But the rate of change doesn't give an idea of the height of that slice, only the change in height. So how do you compute area when you don't know the actual height? And how does F(b) - F(a) give the area regardless of the shape of the graph (and the area under the graph - assuming for now that f(x) >= 0 for all x). I've seen examples that are vastly different shapes of graphs that all have the same F(b) and F(a). How can the area of all these be the same?

So...kind of all of it. I can calculate it based on mechanically following the rules, but I don't "get" it.

All other concepts I've been able to get with a little time, but I don't feel like I'm making any progress with FTC.
 
It is not an easy concept. Many aspects reveal their secrets at higher levels, e.g., the historical development, or some closely related theorems. I learned it mechanically, like you at school, and even in university: The area under the curve is filled by using increasingly smaller rectangles and adding their areas.

1776291614243.png


Differentiation is easier, the slope of secants that approach the slope of a tangent [imath] x_1\longrightarrow x_0. [/imath]


1776291796226.png

Both concepts involve limits. One with an increasing number of rectangles, and one with an increasing number of secants. However, this does not tell us anything about the functions involved: [imath] Y=\int f(t)\,dt=F(x)\, , \,y=f(x)\, , \, y'=\dfrac{df(x)}{dx}=f'(x).[/imath]

Differentiation means: Given [imath] y, [/imath] find [imath] y'. [/imath]
Integration means: Given [imath] y, [/imath] find [imath] Y. [/imath]

Is your question more about those images and why they describe the tasks, or are you looking for algebraic equations that relate differentiation to integration, in which case I have to think about it a bit longer? The notation is a first hint if we take it a bit sloppily: [imath] Y=y\cdot dx [/imath] and [imath] y'=\dfrac{y}{dx}. [/imath]
 
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