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According to Carl Benjamin Boyer, in the introduction to his The History of the Calculus and its Conceptual Development, concepts in calculus do not refer to perceptions.
As long as the concepts are useful and mutually compatible, they are accepted on their own.
For example, the concepts of the derivative and the integral are not considered to refer to spatial or temporal perceptions of the external world of experience.
Neither are they related in any way to mysterious limits in which quantities are on the verge of nascence or evanescence, that is, coming into or going out of existence.
The abstract concepts are now considered to be totally autonomous, even though they originated from the process of abstracting or taking away qualities from perceptions until only the common, essential attributes remained.

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