Pete19741 wrote:
For some reason Math is an almost taboo topic in the United States, or so I've heard never having traveled out of country. Even those who major in math tend to despise it! It's almost as if people hate being challenged. As if people see failure at grasping something as failure itself. I think many people believe falsely that, where language and other education can be more or less learned that math is somehow an innate ability. The truth is that the hardest thing about math is that it can be boring at first and extremely frustrating, it was for me,but the reason I stuck with it and continue to do so is I understand the great advantage of honing these skills.
I agree, I see FAR too many people saying things like "I could never do math, it's too hard", or "Wow you can add, you must be really smart!". I think most people see it as something reserved for the Stephen Hawkings of the world (As a side note, ever notice how on T.V./movies, any time they show a genius professor or something there's a chalk board behind him with a bunch of random integrals scribbled on it?). The truth is, most math really isn't that hard, it's just memorizing a set of rules and putting them into practice. Heck, with the internet you don't even really need to memorize them, Google does that for you! Now some of the more advanced math can indeed get pretty wacky (4-dimensional graphs???), but most of that really isn't used for any practical purpose.
That said, most people don't really need more than the most basic understanding of math, so there's not much point for them to learn it. If I was going to be, say, an advertising executive, I wouldn't need to know much more than how to add and multiply. The same goes for the majority of non-technical fields, I'm not exactly going to be calculating triple integrals as a cashier.
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It's hard to find,even in school,people curious and motivated to understanding the number e, I mean really understanding it. Also, I know of no one who sees the benefit of being able to read and actually understand trig formula's, not simply rely on rote memory.
Well that's because you don't really need to understand them to use them...some people that lived a while ago did all that work so we wouldn't have to
. If I was going to re-derive and fully investigate every mathematical formula or parameter I've come across, I'd still be stuck 10 years in the past!! That said there are some things that you DO need to understand to be able to use effectively, and those are the ones I usually put the bulk of my effort in.
Also I agree with the physicsforums.com suggestion, lots of extremely smart people on there (warning: they will make you feel stupid). May not be the best for pure learning though, since for one there is some faulty information on it (as with any online forum), and since it's mostly just people answering questions rather than going through complete descriptions.