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> Now what does does a mathematician do? He tries to understand nature and uses mathematics as a language to do that. I would argue that this is wrong. That's what physicists do, not mathematicians. Mathematics is about abstract ideas, which can live regardless of nature or application. Physics instead is about understanding nature. Most physicists use mathematics to do that, but that's just for practical reasons. They don't always take it for granted, there's a very famous article by Eugene Wigner on this: “The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences”. I think it's important to understand this. Sure, computer programming is not math. Physics is not math either. Mathematics is kind of a way of thinking, and mathematical language turns out to be very useful in describing and understanding nature and many other things. Computer programming theory stems out of mathematics, but I agree that everyday programming practice does not strictly require an in-depth math knowledge. But it depends. One day you wake up and you want to solve a problem: sometimes you need programming, sometimes you need math, sometimes both, or maybe you need some business experience, psychology, whatever. We need different perspectives, I don't think we can compartmentalize these things any more. |
Notice that many mathematicians would not agree with you, here (but probably, a majority would). As the mathematician V.I.Arnold famously said, "mathematics is a branch of physics where experiments are cheap". So, yes, in the minds of lots of mathematicians, what they do is precisely to study and understand nature.