Wednesday, October 1, 2008

universal language

Can I respond to a previous question/student's answer??? I don't think this qualifies as starting a "new discussion"....ah but anyway, on the question of MATH AS A UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE.  I think that math is absolutely a universal language.  It's not necessarily the numbers and symbols we should be concerned with, but the concepts behind them.  One may reply, "well, that applies to language, too, as all words represent concepts...what's the difference with math, then?"  Yes, languages are, to a certain extent, translations.  We can now master many languages in the world because of these translations.  The word "book" in English represents the same object as a "libro" does in Spanish.  But not ALL words can be exactly translated.  Different cultures treat different objects and subjects differently, and so their words--although listed together in a language-to-language dictionary--may have slightly different connotations.  The "words" of Math, however, always represent the same concepts....in ALL languages and cultures, no connotations needed.

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