dd/mm/yyyy and yyyy/mm/dd are as valid as each other, since it proceeds in either increasing or decreasing unit size. Having dates as mm/dd/yyyy makes about as much logical sense as writing: 10492 as 49210.
It doesn't make sense mathematically because it isn't a mathematical notation, it's linguistic in nature.
In Europe, '4th May' is shortened to 4/5.
In the US, 'May 4th' is shortened to 5/4.
Neither is right, wrong or illogical.
I'm from the UK, but have spent a lot of time working with US based clients/colleagues. They only way I've found to avoid confusion and ambiguity is to use YYYY/MM/DD.
In Europe, '4th May' is shortened to 4/5.
In the US, 'May 4th' is shortened to 5/4.
Neither is right, wrong or illogical.
I'm from the UK, but have spent a lot of time working with US based clients/colleagues. They only way I've found to avoid confusion and ambiguity is to use YYYY/MM/DD.