Does that means tribal banging on drums is also way better than all other music? Since it all stems from that..SL33TBL1ND said:Maths is a proper term in places other than the US. It is short for mathematics not mathematic.Clarke3000 said:I think some English should have some importance because Maths isn't a proper term.
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I think history and math are equally important because those who fail to learn from history is doomed to repeat it, and we use Math to break down and understand our world
OT: Since maths is the basis of practically everything, I'll go with that. In the end, everything can be put down to numbers.
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But Maths is the use of numbers to express and solve problems based on numbers, so math itself is a tool created using numbers to solve the questions that can be structure with maths from numbers. Meaning maths is a system for thinking about how to think about mathematical things, making it a branch of thinking about how to solve questions, which is Philosophy. So a philosopher is at the farthest right of that little drawing, as following the same logic math is applied philosophy.SL33TBL1ND said:Maths is a proper term in places other than the US. It is short for mathematics not mathematic.Clarke3000 said:I think some English should have some importance because Maths isn't a proper term.
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I think history and math are equally important because those who fail to learn from history is doomed to repeat it, and we use Math to break down and understand our world
OT: Since maths is the basis of practically everything, I'll go with that. In the end, everything can be put down to numbers.
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Better? No. The most basic and pure form? Sure.headshotcatcher said:Does that means tribal banging on drums is also way better than all other music? Since it all stems from that..SL33TBL1ND said:Maths is a proper term in places other than the US. It is short for mathematics not mathematic.Clarke3000 said:I think some English should have some importance because Maths isn't a proper term.
OT
I think history and math are equally important because those who fail to learn from history is doomed to repeat it, and we use Math to break down and understand our world
OT: Since maths is the basis of practically everything, I'll go with that. In the end, everything can be put down to numbers.
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Philosophy is not about thinking how to solve problems. It's thinking about why we solve problems.Magnesium360 said:But Maths is the use of numbers to express and solve problems based on numbers, so math itself is a tool created using numbers to solve the questions that can be structure with maths from numbers. Meaning maths is a system for thinking about how to think about mathematical things, making it a branch of thinking about how to solve questions, which is Philosophy. So a philosopher is at the farthest right of that little drawing, as following the same logic math is applied philosophy.SL33TBL1ND said:Maths is a proper term in places other than the US. It is short for mathematics not mathematic.Clarke3000 said:I think some English should have some importance because Maths isn't a proper term.
OT
I think history and math are equally important because those who fail to learn from history is doomed to repeat it, and we use Math to break down and understand our world
OT: Since maths is the basis of practically everything, I'll go with that. In the end, everything can be put down to numbers.
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He means he's American and believes that the correct word is "Math" rather than "Maths" despite it being short for "Mathematics".Numachuka said:What do you mean not a proper term?Clarke3000 said:I think some English should have some importance because Maths isn't a proper term.
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I think history and math are equally important because those who fail to learn from history is doomed to repeat it, and we use Math to break down and understand our world
Sounds like your experience of studying history was soured by doing too much about the 3rd Reich. While i think covering Nazi Germany and WW2 should be mandatory in high school history, i think perhaps we learn a bit *too* much on how and why the Nazi's were bad.Thaliur said:I've heard this often enough, I'm German after all...khiliani said:History is equaly important because of the old saying of those who fail to learn from history is doomed to repeat it.
Pretty much all our history lessons from seventh grade on (when we left the interesting epochs where society actually developed, things were invented, cities were built...) were about third Reich.
I understand that it was a bad time to be around for anyone, but everything I actually learned from these lessons was "Don't be stupid", and - frankly - I already knew that from watching Transformers and MASK as a child.
I didn't learn anything useful in history, only a few interesting bits about medieval warfare.
Judging from the time devoted to specific events in history class, mankind went from fish to industry in about two weeks, and then stayed in the second World War for roughly thirty years. Nothing happened afterwards, we just suddenly made a jump to "now".
Apparently I was supposed to feel guilty for something that happened even before my parents were born, so I spent most of the lessons about WW2 in a kind of defiant trance.
Oh, and I learned that it's possible to improvise a source text interpretation just by reading the title and catching up a few words from the text.
Maths on the other hand...
Well, without it, we wouldn't have computers, which would have quite an impact. Not even the radio would work, since tuning into a station would be a trial-and-error activity, at best.
Basically nothing where engineering is involved would exist.
Concerning "stuff you learn after 8th grade is useless" argumentations:
I agree that Math should be just a tool, but in almost any remotely scientific field (i.e. the useful ones) you will need it, and you will need it a lot.
History basically enables you to be a history teacher, while maths can be a pathway to just about anything.
David McCullough said:"History is a guide to navigation in perilous times. History is who we are and why we are the way we are."
To understand history is to understand why things are how they are today. By forsaking that knowledge, we loose a great understanding about (as McCullough says) politics, economics, society and culture. All of which are very much grounded in the past.David McCullough said:"Reading history is good for all of us," he says, not surprisingly, perhaps, but his rationale is a fresh, somewhat bracing thought: "If you know history, you know that there is no such thing as a self-made man or self-made woman. We are shaped by people we have never met. Yes, reading history will make you a better citizen and more appreciative of the law, and of freedom, and of how the economy works or doesn't work, but it is also an immense pleasure-the way art is, or music is, or poetry is. And it's never stale."
No. Apples, in terms of sales, are more popular and therefore more important. That said, orange juice isn't be accounted for...Pirate Kitty said:Is an orange more important than an apple?