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sysprog said:I thhink that a difference may be articulated as: doing Physics specifically requires Mathematics, while doing Mathematics has only the general dependencies on facts of Physics that doing anything has.
I think this is missing the point that doing physics is *not* doing mathematics. It uses mathematics as a communication tool, but there are plenty of examples where a physicist says 'then I do xyz and get a prediction", and the mathematicians say 'well wait that computation wasn't valid', and then the physicist does an experiment and what do you know their prediction was correct.
A lot of physics is taking a situation where calculation is infeasible, asserting things must be true because come on, physics, and then solving the remaining math problem. I think it does physics a great disservice to think the thing in the middle is irrelevant, and the bulk of the field is the first and third step.
Like, if Albert Einstein *only* speculated that the speed of light was the same for all observers, and asked someone else to do the math, we would still know all about special relativity. Identifying the new axiom was the interesting part, the rest was just verification. You don't even really need to do any math to get a decent number of interesting predictions from this idea.