66

Mathematical Thinking Isn't What You Think It Is

I like the idea of math as "self help." People don't realize it, but the more math you learn, the easier/simpler life becomes... In other words, people learn math not because they like complexity, but because they are lazy and don't want complexity in their life.

For a specific example, consider some complicated arithmetic expression involving a dozen numbers and repeated operations +/-/*/รท. A person who knows high school algebra, could introduce some structure in the expression (e.g. by defining variables), then use the rules of algebra to simplify the expression, and end up doing much arithmetic overall to compute the answer.

The more (as in abstraction and modelling) math you know, the less math (as in arithmetic) you'll have to do!

7 days agoivan_ah

That's not what I call laziness. Laziness is doing a half-assed, inefficient job that you don't have to concentrate on. Putting underwear away by throwing it. Spilling your drink on yourself because you didn't want to sit up in bed. Trying repeatedly to flick a switch with your toes rather than bend down. Communicating in grunts because thinking of words is demanding. What you're describing is cleverness, and it's a strain.

4 days agocard_zero

Sure, that's one way to define it. But to people who think work (and effort) is in itself a virtue, optimization is lazy, because it reduces the total work you'll need to do.

Even some of your examples I'm not convinced are lazy according to your own definition. Am I lazy for flicking a switch at ankle level with my toes if I can do it well enough, when bending down would take so much more effort? I think by your standard I should be commended for my foot dexterity! When does the desire to reduce effort cease to be vicious and become virtuous?

4 days agofluoridation

> But to people who think work (and effort) is in itself a virtue

... Who thinks that? Is it the same people that think pre-marital sex is a vice?

3 days agoalmostgotcaught

I work hard to be lazy.

3 days agokeithalewis

[dead]

2 days agofdhfdjkfhdkj

Already discussed here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42200209

4 days agoauggierose

243 comments, posted 15 hours ago

4 days agonullhole

How come they have the same URL?

4 days agomdp2021

42172857 vs 4220020

Edit: Sorry, I think maybe you are asking why HN doesn't enforce article URL uniqueness - I can't answer that.

4 days agoemptiestplace

> maybe

Yes. The system here normally seems to check uniqueness.

4 days agomdp2021

It seems like submissions that don't get much traction after a day or so don't get counted as duplicates if resubmitted. There were 4 submissions of this article, and until this one turned back up today (second chance pool, this one was originally submitted 3 days ago) only one submission actually had any traction, and that was from yesterday evening.

4 days agoJtsummers

Related to another quantum mag article on the front page today: "Why everyone can benefit from something that isnt what you think it is"?

4 days agohavefunbesafe