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I am looking for a book on Newtonian mechanics which is very careful to explain why, where and how you need to use calculus to develop physics. Or even, a book which introduce basic notion and propositions of calculus in terms of the latter being necessary to develop Newtonian mechanics.

My interest is partly pedagogical partly philosophical, and I would like to read something with all the subtle points well explained, and as self contained as possble.

Indeed, maybe I am looking to an essays on how to write such kind of book.

mario
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  • Your question is pretty general. If you explained problems you've had with existing book recommendations on the internet, perhaps we could help better. https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-best-book-on-physics-and-calculus-for-beginners https://www.reddit.com/r/Physics/comments/35tc51/a_physics_book_for_a_beginner/ –  Aug 23 '17 at 02:09
  • I am not looking for a book to study for SAT or JEE. My interest is more of a pedagogical kind, on how I could/should write such kind of a intro book. Do you know about this book? its title is promising. – mario Aug 23 '17 at 10:56

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Principia. Anything else is just someone else's version. How am I the first to suggest this?

D'alembert also wrote a decent primer.

Qmechanic
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