"For classical (non-quantum) systems, the action is an extremum that can never be a maximum; that leaves us with a minimum or a saddle point, and both are possible."
The above statement is an excerpt from the "Introduction" (preface) of the book "THE PRINCIPLE OF LEAST ACTION - History and Physics" by ALBERTO ROJO & ANTHONY BLOCH.
I want to know whether the "For classical (non-quantum) systems, the action is an extremum that can never be a maximum"
aspect of that statement is true because it looks pretty definitive.
(definitive in the sense certain or assertive)
Note: Now I know there are a lot of related questions that look like this, but not any of them looks for a direct and definitive answer for this direct and definitive question, most are descriptive questions for descriptive scenarios and most answer's given are describing particular scenarios, incomplete ones or ones that asserting irrelevance of such question's for actual path determination as we only seek stationary action not whether that is minimum, maximum or inflexion point. (This is intended as to why this should not be labelled as a duplicate, not as a judgement on other questions or their answers as they serve their intended purpose. It is however important to differentiate between the scope of this question and other similar questions. I hope the Phys.SE community will respect the original poster's judgement on the relevance and uniqueness of their own questions unless there is overwhelming evidence to say otherwise.). I have already browsed similar questions as indicated by the system and have not found any definitive question or definitive answer. This definitive question clearly expects a definitive answer, so I hope it will remain a question, not a duplicate.