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by hellbannedguy
1760 days ago
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I looked at you information, and your quote interesting. If you happen to come back, what do you mean by this partial quote, "Hardy couldn't have been more wrong about the innocence of pure mathematics." I'm just getting more interested in math the older I get. Thanks in advance. |
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I graded very well in math through college, but later in life, I went back and explored more how all the concepts relate. In college, you are sort of fed calculus through a fire hose, and you just have to 'accept it' and move on. And you are left wondering, how were these ideas, these conclusions, reached? Until you go back through and see the long history of infinite series and see the various attempts to codify solutions. The problem is, as a student, you cannot possibly spend that much time deriving the whole solution from scratch and still hope to finish a degree in four years. As Carl Sagan said “If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.”
Which is why you can never stop learning. I am in my mid 60s, and I still learn something new regularly. Something big at least once a year, something smaller at least once a month. Never stop learning.