What do you mean? — Bartricks
Why doesn't everyone just sum up their views of truth in roughly two to three paragraphs. No responses to the summation, just your particular point of view. At least no responses until the summaries are complete. — Sam26
Why doesn't everyone just sum up their views of truth in roughly two to three paragraphs — Sam26
Why doesn't everyone just sum up their views of truth in roughly two to three paragraphs. — Sam26
But then, doesn't it bare to reason that if our imaginations cannot image particle-wave duality, yet particle-wave duality is true, that logic isn't based on images? That these are more like heuristic arguments? — Moliere
Que?No. — Tate
Why doesn't everyone just sum up their views of truth in roughly two to three paragraphs. No responses to the summation, just your particular point of view. At least no responses until the summaries are complete. — Sam26
The numbers are usually shown to correspond with objects, like five fingers, ten fingers, two eyes and so on. — Janus
1. Stable Order
The first principle of counting involves the student using a list of words to count in a repeatable order. This ordered or “stable” list of counting words must be at least as long as the number of items to be counted. — https://makemathmoments.com/counting-principles/
In my view the meaning of the words must be learnt by reference to numbers of objects. How would you explain what "two" means without showing two whatevers? — Janus
Two being after one means nothing without a notion of quantity. — Janus
Sure, I'm not trying to establish a theory of teaching numbers, but counting is not counting without things to be counted. — Janus
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8......at each point in that series represented by a different numeral, the number of numerals, including the one selected and all those to the left of the one selected, is equal to the number represented by the numeral at the point selected. — Janus
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