Mathematics 5
Winter Term 2002
The World According to Mathematics
Dwight
Lahr and David Rudel
Weekly Schedule: Week #1
Readings:
Lahr's
manuscript—From the beginning through 1.2
Exercises:
Due Monday 1/7 |
•Exercises 1.1: 1-4 and
1.2: 1-7 |
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Friday discussion: (January 4, 2002)
The
discussion will center around the following quote, as well as the homework from
Lahr's manuscript. In particular:
• In the Measure of Reality by Alfred W. Crosby
(Cambridge, 1997), the author discusses the shift from qualitative to
quantitative descriptions of reality in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance.
He says (p. 228):
In practical terms, the new approach
was simply this: reduce what you are trying to think about to the minimum
required by its definition; visualize it on paper, or at least in your mind, be
it the fluctuation of wool prices ... or the course of Mars through the
heavens, and divide it, either in fact or in imagination, into equal quanta.
Then you can measure it, that is, count the quanta.
Then you possess a quantitative
representation of your subject that is, however simplified, even in its errors
and omissions, precise. You can think about it rigorously. You can manipulate
it and experiment with it....
Visualization and quantification:
together they snap the padlock—reality is fettered (at least tightly enough and
for long enough to get some work out of it...).
Think about the above description and critique it in light of how well it applies to today's world. Do you think that all of reality can be fettered according to the above approach? From your own experience, can you identify a field that takes a very different approach to gaining understanding through knowledge? Are you clear in your own mind about what constitutes reality? [Crosby says on p. 23: Reality [is] a word I will use to mean everything material within time and space, plus these two dimensions per se.]