This work presents a structural reinterpretation of classical differential calculus based on the analysis of algebraic developments prior to the application of the limiting process. By examining the role of the limit as a mechanism of information selection, it is shown that higher–order terms suppressed in the standard definition of the derivative contain structured neighborhood information rather than arbitrary approximation error.Within this framework, the asymmetry operator is introduced as a pre–limit formal tool designed to classify explicit and implicit contributions without redefining classical differential operators or introducing new fundamental equations. The operator acts as a structural classifier, preserving the dependence on scale and neighborhood while remaining independent of any specific physical field.Through controlled algebraic examples and conceptual analysis, the work demonstrates that classical formulations in kinematics and dynamics can be reinterpreted as reorganizations of pre–limit information. This perspective allows traditional notions such as truncation error and ad hoc corrections to be understood as manifestations of omitted structural content.The results do not aim to solve open physical problems, but rather to provide a coherent formal framework for organizing and interpreting them. Potential applications to contemporary issues in mathematical physics are identified as future lines of research.
Carlos Ariel Vargas (Tue,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: