So, putting all of the pedagogy and math trails aside, what exists within philosophical discourse that promotes this way of seeing? — Paul Fishwick
Mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe. — Galileo Galilei
Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted. — Albert Einstein
There may be no single philosophy of mathematics that is situated empirically in seeing math in everything. — Paul Fishwick
I'd agree with this if one important and logical field of mathematics is taken into account: the uncomputable and the incommeasurable.I have searched on and off for years on what philosophical movements promote, or are in agreement with, the idea that everything in our experience can be interpreted/translated as mathematics. — Paul Fishwick
Beats me. I was a math prof for years and never had an interest in seeing math in everything. :chin: — jgill
Phenomenology and Empiricism might also contribute as philosophies as well as embodied mind theories. — Paul Fishwick
"What are the philosophies of mathematics that underlie the movements in math education based on math trails/walks?" — Paul Fishwick
So, putting all of the pedagogy and math trails aside, what exists within philosophical discourse that promotes this way of seeing? The closest I have seen in my research is "embodied mathematics" (e.g. Lakoff/Nunez). — Paul Fishwick
There is nothing I ever did that "embodied" math for me like taking surveying in college. — T Clark
Mathematicians seek and use PATTERNS to formulate new conjectures; they resolve the truth or falsity of such by mathematical proof. — Wikipedia
It's a tendency in philosophy to look for generalizations [patterns] that covers all the cases and we always lose but we can't resist trying. — Hillary Putnam
psychology — Paul Fishwick
going by what Hillary Putnam says, philosophy is math and vice versa since both seek patterns (generalizations) but mind the words "...we always lose..." which to my reckoning simply means that the patterns philosophy is interested usually don't cover all the bases i.e. there are exceptions that gum up the works. — TheMadFool
To see math everywhere is to pay attention to a second order derived action that we perform that covers over its basis in living. — Joshs
If I understand what you're saying (and it wasn't till the very end that I thought I did), existence is what it is, and math is a secondary thing that humans use to model and explain it. In which case "math is everywhere" spoken by humans, is in the same sense that "echoes are everywhere" is to bats. Which is to say, "math is everywhere" is purely a human-centric conceit. Math is nowhere at all, except in the mind of humans. — fishfry
But fundamentally, the idea of a world of things existing independently of us is incoherent. — Joshs
But surely the world didn't come into existence when you were born. Or when the first fish crawled out of the ocean (or whatever they did, I'm not a biologist). — fishfry
But when we model the world we’re not capturing it in a bottle, we’re interacting with it, making changes in it for our purposes. I know this seems counterintuitive. For centuries we assumed that the world is a set of object out there and our job is to mirror it with our representations.
But when we know something we are engaged in an activity involving that thing, producing that thing. Perceptual psychologists discovered this about the way that we perceive our perceptual world. To perceive something is not a passive inputting of a stimulus. It is a constructive activity involving anticipating of the way the world will respond to our behaviors in relation to it.
Looked at this way, the evolution of knowledge isn’t getting closer and closer to something sitting static out there. It’s the building of something always new, in conformity with our changing needs and purposes. At each step the ‘outside’ world only announces itself as affordances and constraints intricately responsive to our creative efforts.
Math and logic are a part of this but are only one element in a dance that moves back and forth between the fixing of set patterns and their dismantling and reformation as fresh structures.
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