Hello all,New to the forum, and trying to make my way from physics to finance, as many others have before...I have seen this issue addressed in other threads, but I still had questions regarding the mathematical backgrounds of practicioners of quanitative finance. I hope I am not repeating an already dead issue...It seems to me, that when I see books related to stochastic calculus, they really emphasize the need to rigorously justify every single step done in the mathematics. Honestly if you talk to a lot of physicsts, finance people and engineers, I think many of them would have trouble remembering the rigorous derivation of an ORIDNARY Taylor series let alone the version used to derive Ito's Lemma in a lot of books. Yet people seem to take a different view of mathematics when the topic turns to derivatives pricing.As a physicist who always got along better with engineers

, I really feel like just learning how to do stochastic calculus the way I learned Ordinary calculus. I took analysis once, and I can truly say it did not make me a better physicist. It made me appreciate the hard work mathematicians have done to put calculus on a solid foundation, but it didn't help me do any new integrals or derivatives.My questions: 1) How much, REALLY do I need to know about analysis etc. to do stochastic calculus? I have seen some nice intro books that seem to give me all I would need to know without delving into sigma algebras or whatever... 2) For those of you have a solid math background (graduate level mathematics vs. say, engineering/physics or finance curriculum) do you see your colleagues from other disciplines struggling with their work and in need of a better mathematics background? 3) FOr those of you who came from a background where you simply used math, have you found this to be a problem, or have you been able to use math the way you did in your previous career.Sorry to simplify these categories. I know we are not all just mathematicians, finance guys, engineers, and physicists, but I know we all have varying math backgrounds and this has influenced how we view problem solving. I am working from my reference frame and put myself in other people's shoes...