Redirected from Talk:Classical treatment of tensors
What I think this article should be:
This article is confusing. First statement: tensors generalise vectors and matrices. Fine: a vector is a 1-dimensional array of numbers, a matrix is a 2-dimensional array of numbers. The only obvious generalisation is to an n-dimensional array of numbers, n integral, possibly > 2. Is that what a tensor is? No.
Second statement: "A tensor is an invariant multi-dimensional transformation". So, it's a transformation? Well, as far as I know, a vector and a matrix can represent a transformation, for example, of coordinates. I'm not sure that representation is identity; however, perhaps this is just quibbling. Provided the representation is unique, that may do for practical purposes.
Definitions: To define <math>{T}^i</math>, we get an equation relating <math>\bar{T}^i</math> and <math>\bar{T}_i</math>. Where is the definiend? Supposing that was meant to be <math>\bar{T}^i</math>, the term <math>\bar{T}_i</math> on the right is undefined. And why must a transformation necessarily take the form of a partial derivative? Similar problems afflict the second definition.
Yahya Abdal-Aziz - 2003/04/29.
I agree with the two sentiments expressed above, this article is very unclear. I think it is best to merge it with tensor, and redirect. AxelBoldt 17:18 May 1, 2003 (UTC)
Instead of trying to push a political agenda, maybe we should attempt to clearly present the information, with a focus on developing concepts( as opposed to constructing a rigourous self-referential mathematical soup).Kevin Baas
I don't understand where your reference to a political agenda comes from. The modern and the classical approach are really talking about the same thing, but from different angles. They need to be explained in the same article so that the reader sees how and why they are about the same thing. By the way, the coordinate approach is already mentioned in tensor, just not very prominently. AxelBoldt 23:20 May 1, 2003 (UTC)
You obviously are in agreement with me that both methods must be presented. We are, then, only in disagreement on a more subtle point: whether the two treatments( which are, ofcourse, about the same thing) should be presented simultaneously or in parrallel. I would image that an encyclopedia in book form would present one in whole, followed by the other in whole, and would not entangle them. If the reader cannot clearly identify their equavalency, which is explicitly stated, clearly marked, and geometrically neccessary, then it is clear that they have not geometrically comprehended the material, and thus the manner of presentation is failing. It is of little practicality for one to recognize the equivalence of two things that they cannot understand. However, once they understand them, the equavalence is obvious and trivial.
--Kevin Baas 2003.05.02
This article text has mostly been replaced by material adapted from the PlanetMath GFDL article on tensors.
Credit: An earlier version of this article was adapted from the GFDL article on tensors at http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/Tensor from PlanetMath, written by Robert Milson and others
Here are some PlanetMath to Wikipedia TeX transformations:
This equation does not work at the moment, so I will paraphrase it for now. Moving it here for future reference when \overbrace is fixed:
Note: bold alphas do not seem to render properly. The Anome 12:13 2 Jul 2003 (UTC)
Also, keep in mind that this is the starting page for the classical treatment, not the final page. You write as if they already knew everything about tensors, in which case, why the hell would they be reading this? Kevin Baas
This page is now renamed Intermediate treatment of tensors, and your article is back at Classical treatment of tensors -- please hack away. -- Anon.
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