DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

The Math Myth

1st September 2016

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The math myth is the myth that the future of the American economy is dependent upon the masses having higher mathematics skills. This myth goes back to at least Sputnik, when the Russians were going to surpass us because they were better in math and science. It returned in the late 80’s when the Germans and Japanese were going to surpass us because they were better in math and science. It’s occurring again now because the Indians and Chinese are better than us in math and science.

I find it difficult to find anyone who uses more than Excel and eighth grade level mathematics (=arithmetic, and a little bit of algebra, statistics and programming). In the summer of 2007 I taught an advanced geometry course and had two students in the class who had been engineers and one who had been an actuary. They claimed never to have used anything beyond Excel and eighth grade level mathematics; never a trig function or even a log or exponential function! There is in fact a deskilling going on in our economy, where even the ability to make change is about to disappear as an important skill.

I’ve actually used calculus once, in a D&D game where I needed to find out the maximum length of a spear that would fit around the corner of the intersection of a 10-foot-wide corridor and a 5-foot-wide corridor. I’ve used algebra and trig in Navy electronics — again, in school, never out in the Fleet.

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