Let x be a differentiable real function.
I think precision would require you to state this in terms of a variable x and the function f(x). (EDIT: Sorry; please ignore this.)
If the averages of x and dx/dt over the whole real line exist,
This is a pretty harsh requirement! It will be true for constant functions, cyclic functions, symmetric functions, and maybe asymptotically-bounded functions. I don't think you can say it's true for y=x.
I think precision would require you to state this in terms of a variable x and the function f(x).
gjm has read the note I linked; I suggest you do the same. That is what a link is for.
This is a pretty harsh requirement!
Not particularly. The speed of a car, the temperature of a room, the height of an aircraft: such things are all around you. Stating the property of the whole real line is an idealisation, but Theorem 1 of the note treats of finite intervals also, and there is a version of the theorems for time series.
...I don't think you can say it's tr
It is a commonplace that correlation does not imply causality, however eyebrow-wagglingly suggestive it may be of causal hypotheses. It is less commonly noted that causality does not imply correlation either. It is quite possible for two variables to have zero correlation, and yet for one of them to be completely determined by the other.