The subject of physical mathematics is concerned with physically motivated mathematics and is different from mathematical physics.
The details of physical units and their manipulation were addressed by Alexander Macfarlane in Physical Arithmetic in 1885.[1]
The science of kinematics created a need for mathematical represention of motion and has found expression with complex numbers, quaternions, and linear algebra.
At Cambridge University the Mathematical Tripos tested students on their knowledge of "mixed mathematics".[2] "... [N]ew books which appeared in the mid-eighteenth century offered a systematic introduction to the fundamental operations of the fluxional calculus and showed how it could be applied to a wide range of mathematical and physical problems. ... The strongly problem-oriented presentation in the treatises ... made it much easier for university students to master the fluxional calculus and its applications [and] helped define a new field of mixed mathematical studies..."
An adventurous expression of physical mathematics is found in A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism which used partial differential equations. The text aspired to describe phenomena in four dimensions but the foundation for this physical world, Minkowski space, trailed by forty years.
String theorist Greg Moore said this about physical mathematics in his vision talk at Strings 2014.[3]
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Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the
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Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.