English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I was thinking basically when you break all math down it all adds up to me you multiplying and subtracting numbers and variables in the correct way right?
And what is the highest hardest level of math to all people including college professors and isn't there any way we could even get better forms of math even more fundamental then calculus. I'm sure they're is.

Thank you I know that I asked a lot of questions.

Thansk alot and god bless

2007-10-19 15:39:42 · 2 answers · asked by Luvon 3 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

Wow that was stupid. All math basically adds up to multiplying, adding, subtracting, dividing numbers. You act like you're so smart, but I bet you don't know the first thing about math.
You act like you're so smart, but you did'nt even know the most advanced form of math. Get off yahoo answers, if you don't got the knowledge peopel seek.....

2007-10-19 15:57:29 · update #1

2 answers

Spoken like a true dillitante.
Fact is, numbers have very little to do with mathematics. Mathematics has to do with collections of objects and the properties and characteristics these collections (sets) may take on under certain conditions and restrictions on the nature of the objects. It also has to do with relationships between such sets and, lastly, it has a lot to do with logic. Numbers just happen to be a convenient source of good examples.

Doug

2007-10-19 15:49:21 · answer #1 · answered by doug_donaghue 7 · 0 1

Not sure if I understand your question correctly.

Do you consider that Metric Geometry is a part of Math? Do you know that it usually works with any kind of numbers, in an own kind of way of thinking? Ok, not always, of course, sometimes you have to find the area of a polygon or the cathete of a right triangle. But it's about it.

Are you familiar with Topology? If you have to find a set that has n accumulations points that doesn't belong to it, where are the additions, multiplyings, substracting, etc, that you state that you would be doing?

Even while working with numbers in sets, what kind of operations do you think that you would be doing if you have to find the power set of a due set?

Sorry, I could eventually agree with you if you talk about Calculus or Algebra, and I still should think about it in a more profound way to state that you are.

Ilusion

EDIT

I guess that your added details were ment to be to Doug. He happens to be a bright man and he was a colllege Math professor. And, just in case that you state that I don't know about Math, I am a college professor too. The fact that some people disagree with you doesn't make them stupid, I am sorry.

2007-10-20 16:20:00 · answer #2 · answered by Ilusion 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers