Originally posted by: futuristicmonkey
Originally posted by: Gannon
Originally posted by: piasabird
Our brains probably do work in methematical ways.
They do or language would be impossible, we are able to calculate and turn continous signals into discrete ones where there is differentiation. Where there is distinction, there is math.
I'm trying to grasp it myself but I think "Math" is an expansion and a subset of simply arbitrary abstract counting functions to keep track of distinct patterns.
When looking at the history of mathematics, math arose because of the need to measure and keep track of distinct objects. I'm still trying to formulate where exactly math sits.
It seems to be that math is intimately connected to our ability to communicate in languages.
Spoken/written Language --> MATH <-- Our senses
Gannon, you still have not answered my question back from one of your previous threads -- what is your level of education? Other members have asked you similar questions trying to judge your level of qualification in these matters. Will you please provide a concise answer as to what amount of education you have received (on these matters, or otherwise)?
I already answered, go Look for yourself (at the end of the thread). More importantly, if the logic is sound, why is this relevant? Credentials are irrelevant to determine the truth of something. Do you need a degree to know that you'll fall off a cliff? No you use logic. Did you learn to talk before you went to school? For certain. We are constantly learning, whether we are aware of it or not. Statements of truth stand on their own, they do not need to be qualified by social status. Social status is quite simply, irrelevant. While I do acknowledge credentials, you can make a mountain out of a molehill, credentialism is a disease if taken too far out of it's place.
What matters is the content, not the person. This 'bad by association' is tribalistic thinking -- by creating a stigma and not judging the content itself. History is littered with feral thinking among even the most intelligent and educated men, which is a sad reflection on the poverty of how the human psyche functions.