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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
The complete integral of the differential equation
φ(xyzpq) = 0
is a relation among the variables, which includes as many arbitrary constants as there are independent variables. But it is important to distinguish carefully between differential equations which have been formed by the elimination of constants from some complete primitive, and those whose origin is quite unknown, or which may have been constructed by some method totally different from the first.
In the original case, the differential equation can always be integrated in finite terms, while in the latter, only under the conditions laid down in Cauchy's Existence Theorem can an integral be obtained, and even then usually as an infinite series.
page no 150 note * Goursat's “Leçons sur l'integration des Équations aux derivées partielles.”