Math and Intuition

Hi Gerald,

Keep in mind, I'm not a professor, I do not have a degree in mathematics, and I would be considered simply a student.

1. Where could I find Algebraic Theorems?

The best places would be College Algebra Textbooks and perhaps Wikipedia and Mathworld web sites. I personally refer to textbooks myself first.

Beyond this, nothing in math just “exists”– procedures in mathematics have been used since God knows when, and it's only because folks like Pythagoras, Euler, Newton, and others that we have any formal statements and rules about what works and what doesn't in math. It's only within the last few hundred years (if I recall correctly) that people have really been trying to answer questions like “What is Algebra?” via rings, groups, and such.

2. When solving problems, how much should one remember about either
Geo./Alg. theorems/identites in that

no one can remember everything and what should be remembered about them as
in,

I think a challenge is trying to find the “intuition” in any subject. I would say finding the intuition of Algebra is probably easier than Calculus if only because we tend to use Algebra more than Calculus on a day to day basis.

I don't think that anyone should expect mastery of a subject after one course of it, it takes independent study and interest.

what is your approach?

When I wrote the seven step guide, I had not had a course in formal logic. Since then though, I have, and I believe the best way to learn any math is to identify the core facts and implications, and simply base all your operations on them– much like simplifying a logic statement. Of course I still think it's important to find the intuition as well.

For instance, if you re-examine differentiation in calculus, you might notice that there is a core rule you can remember without having to remember others– logarithmic differentiation.

With the laws of logarithms, you can turn a differentiation problem, for example:

dx[ {(x + 3)^5}{(x + 5)^3} = y]

dx[ ln[{(x + 3)^5}{(x + 5)^3}] = ln y]

dx[ 5 ln(x + 3) + 3 ln(x + 5) = ln y]

5 dx[ln(x + 3)] + 3 dx[ln(x + 5)] = dx[ln y]

5 {1/(x+3)} + 3 {1/(x+5)} = {y prime} / {y} (Note this requires knowledge of the power rule but not much more.)

2(4x + 17)/{(x+3)(x+5)} = {y prime} / {y}

2(4x + 17)/{(x+3)(x+5)} = {y prime} / {(x + 3)^5 (x + 5)^3}

2(4x + 17)(x + 3)^4 (x + 5)^2 = {y prime}

What you might notice is that you avoid product rule, quotient rule, among other rules you might otherwise be required to remember…

And with logarithmic differentiation, you can derive product rule, quotient rule, even the trigonometric rules… thus in my opinion it is more fundamental than other rules. I would imagine there would be a similar situation with integration (probably involving e^x), but I haven't researched that yet.

Terence J. Grant 01/17/2007 21:53