In the Lagrangian formalism, $L$ itself is NOT a functional and $q$ and $\dot q$ are not functions of $t$, but as soon as we write the action, it becomes a functional.
Before: $L(q, \dot q, t)$
After: $S = \int_{t_1}^{t_2} L(q(t), \dot q(t), t)$
What is it that allows us to decide that: "ah, now, we can now start saying $q$ is a function of $t$ and $\dot q$ then is automatically the derivative of it ? Why can we do that ?" Is there some solid explanation about this ? I mean before we wrote an action, $L$ was thought to be the function of $q, \dot q$ which didn't depend on t, but in actio…
Before: $L(q, \dot q, t)$
After: $S = \int_{t_1}^{t_2} L(q(t), \dot q(t), t)$
What is it that allows us to decide that: "ah, now, we can now start saying $q$ is a function of $t$ and $\dot q$ then is automatically the derivative of it ? Why can we do that ?" Is there some solid explanation about this ? I mean before we wrote an action, $L$ was thought to be the function of $q, \dot q$ which didn't depend on t, but in actio…