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When I first looked at the question, my reaction was "Well, I don't - not really", but then I thought about it some more. At some point, I realized that without math, I would cease to function. You see, math is not about sitting around in classrooms and listening to infinite lectures. It is about applying numbers in a useful way. I derive enjoyment out of almost every CS class I take. And math is integrated into every one of those classes. It isn't always so obvious as a matrix inversion. Sometimes it is the addition of a reference to some numbers. Other times it is figuring out a set of principles. It really is the smallest things that make the difference. You may claim that this is an imaginary claim, but I know it to be real.
 
When I first looked at the question, my reaction was "Well, I don't - not really", but then I thought about it some more. At some point, I realized that without math, I would cease to function. You see, math is not about sitting around in classrooms and listening to infinite lectures. It is about applying numbers in a useful way. I derive enjoyment out of almost every CS class I take. And math is integrated into every one of those classes. It isn't always so obvious as a matrix inversion. Sometimes it is the addition of a reference to some numbers. Other times it is figuring out a set of principles. It really is the smallest things that make the difference. You may claim that this is an imaginary claim, but I know it to be real.
  
With all probability, I would be completely lost without math. Do you need some proof? Try traversing campus without planes or points. Then you will realize what a ray of sunshine math really is. It isn't just a segment of our lives, or a theory that runs tangent to what we do, but the base of everything. There is no way to divide our lives into a math portion and a non-math portion. It is just a constant part of my life.
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With all probability, I would be completely lost without math. Do you need some proof? Try traversing campus without planes or points. Then you will realize what a ray of sunshine math really is. It isn't just a segment of our lives, or a theory that runs tangent to what we do, but the base of everything. There is no way to divide our lives into a math portion and a non-math portion. It is just a constant part of what we do, even if the magnitude of how it intrudes is variable. Life without math just wouldn't be normal.
  
 
So why do I math? Because it is as natural as a log. Reality is just a vector for applying numbers, patterns, sets, and all things math. And you know what? If you groaned at a single pun in this essay (or even recognized a fraction of them), ''you math too''.
 
So why do I math? Because it is as natural as a log. Reality is just a vector for applying numbers, patterns, sets, and all things math. And you know what? If you groaned at a single pun in this essay (or even recognized a fraction of them), ''you math too''.

Latest revision as of 17:28, 20 July 2010

When I first looked at the question, my reaction was "Well, I don't - not really", but then I thought about it some more. At some point, I realized that without math, I would cease to function. You see, math is not about sitting around in classrooms and listening to infinite lectures. It is about applying numbers in a useful way. I derive enjoyment out of almost every CS class I take. And math is integrated into every one of those classes. It isn't always so obvious as a matrix inversion. Sometimes it is the addition of a reference to some numbers. Other times it is figuring out a set of principles. It really is the smallest things that make the difference. You may claim that this is an imaginary claim, but I know it to be real.

With all probability, I would be completely lost without math. Do you need some proof? Try traversing campus without planes or points. Then you will realize what a ray of sunshine math really is. It isn't just a segment of our lives, or a theory that runs tangent to what we do, but the base of everything. There is no way to divide our lives into a math portion and a non-math portion. It is just a constant part of what we do, even if the magnitude of how it intrudes is variable. Life without math just wouldn't be normal.

So why do I math? Because it is as natural as a log. Reality is just a vector for applying numbers, patterns, sets, and all things math. And you know what? If you groaned at a single pun in this essay (or even recognized a fraction of them), you math too.

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Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett