Subject: OT: A random thought.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-12-15 03:15:00 UTC
Physics is to mathematics what literature is to languages.
Both physics and written works can describe things in the natural world in great detail, the former though numbers and the latter though words. Just like how someone can be inspired by a well-written short story, we can also see beauty in the derivation of an equation: consider the derivation of Kepler's laws of motion, the equations that govern stellar motion. Indeed, the word "mathematics" comes from the Greek word máthēma which means "knowledge" or "learning". It's a language of proofs, if you will.
And yet many people complain about mathematics! We've all heard of the stereotypical student that curses their math homework, saying that they weren't cut out for it after failing to solve a few problems. They all say the same thing, too. "But we're never going to use a quadratic/integral/exponential function outside of class!" or "What's the point of imaginary/irrational numbers?" and my favourite: "Teach us something useful!" Well, that's where they're wrong. Sure, maybe you won't use the equation per se, but math teaches you how to organize your givens, plan out a solution, execute it, troubleshoot, and solve problems. It's all in the process, not the formulas. Mathematics teaches discipline.
You see, math is exactly like any other language in the world: you have to study the structure, read about it, and never stop practicing. All of the above complaints sound like someone writing 2-3 sentences in a different language, realizing that the structure is wrong, and then loudly proclaiming that they weren't meant to learn French/Spanish/English/what have you. Furthermore, people seem to think that being mathematically illiterate is slightly embarrassing yet completely acceptable. It boggles my mind how people can take this so lightly!
I suppose that there's not really a point behind this spiel besides wanting to put this out in the open. D'you guys have any thoughts on this? How do you feel about math?