Flogen
In Honor of Nobel Laureate Prof. Ferid Murad
Logo
Banner

Abstract Submission Open! About 500 abstracts submitted from about 60 countries


Featuring 9 Nobel Laureates and other Distinguished Guests

Abstract Submission

DETAILLED PROGRAM OVERVIEW

(Provisional)

Back
    The gradual abandonment of many types of well known experimental based physical models in favor of a more Universal Algebraic Theory: Part I - General framework
    Mike Mikalajunas1;
    1CIME, iLe Perrot, Canada;
    PAPER: 338/Mathematics/Keynote (Oral)
    SCHEDULED: 12:20/Wed. 30 Nov. 2022/Arcadia 3



    ABSTRACT:
    The importance of theoretical models in Science and Engineering far outweighs that of experimental based models. The result of our lack of transparency towards the use of a more unified approach to analytical integration for solving some of the most difficult problems related to the Physical and Biological Sciences has forced us to become dependent on the use of experimental based models. In reality, this has never been a matter of choice for all of us but rather a direct consequence in our failure to fully understand exactly why the vast majority of differential equations behave the way they do by not admitting highly predictable patterns of analytical solutions for resolving them. In this talk I will begin by extending the traditional concept of a “differential” in Calculus by introducing an entirely new algorithm capable of representing all mathematical equations consisting of only algebraic and elementary functions in complete specialized differential form. Such a universal algorithm would involve the use of multivariate polynomials and the differential of multivariate polynomials all defined in a very unique algebraic configuration. At first glance this may not sound like a major breakthrough in the Physical Sciences but progressively throughout this entire presentation, it will become very apparent that such a specialized differential representation of all mathematical equations would lead to some form of a unified theory of integration. It is only from the general numerical application of such a universal theory in mathematics that we can expect to arrive at some form of a unified theory of Physics. This would be constructed from the development of very advanced physical models that would be built exclusively on general rather than on the local analytical solutions of many well known fundamental differential equations of the Physical and Biological Sciences.