that's an interesting perspective
recently I've been thinking about it in an opposite way. it started during a conversation about brains, in particular how stupid and flawed they are, I realized that I enjoy math because it gives me a break from being human. there is no place for emotion and cognitive bias, only formal reasoning and proofs. it feels so safe and so distant from the day-to-day life filled with problems caused by the human nature, it feels so clean. it's a place for me to enjoy only the best qualities of my existence. it's an acceptable way to separate myself from everyone, and simultaneously stay connected
I love how different this is from what is described above, as if math offered a place for everyone to find something that they will like
Im trying to find a really long Tumblr post that talked about how sad it was that people are so happy to complain about how much they hated math and how math can be a way to connect with your fundamental humanity and...
Yeah, I've been studying a little bit of it on my own, ten years after I dropped out of college, I've been going back to seeing some basics of calculus, and I've been really feeling some of that.
There is this sense that math is this alien thing, separate from the true concerns of humanity. This external topic, strange and inhumane that only those few weirdos with a eccentric and atypical cast of mind, who are themselves separate by a few degrees from human nature, can grasp.
But it's not that, We, messy warm emotional dumb humans came up with it, we silly atavistic creatures dedicated so much time and effort to develop it and explore it, this silly, quirky, wet, ape-like species is the only living creature on this planet that concerns itself with doing math in any serious capacity. It didn't come from aliens or the gods or from dolphins, math came from humans and humans are the only ones that use them. There could be nothing more human, more fundamentally ours, more intrinsic to our nature than math.
And it's not just a tool! Is not just this thing to be celebrated because its useful in a purely base pragmatical, prosaic way. Is not this thing we have to dissapasionatly conceed credit to because I guess it does useful things like bridges and rockets and computers and taxes. Math is not just the civilizational equivalent of going to the dentist or eating your vegetables.
i hesitate to call it a philosophy or an art, it is a way of human thinking, it is a way of thinking like a human, of thinking in a way that only humans can think. its is one of our oldest and proudest traditions, it is a way to feel greater than onself, it is a way of growing. it is a song with a prosody all its own. There is such a profound sense of meaning and beauty and truth and purpose to be found in math, and the best of all is that it works, when it says something it means something, its telling you a thing that is meaningful, that represents something true, that couldnt be any other way, that has consequences and uses and can be relied upon, that it representes something which carries weight and its ours, its truly a part of our nature, of what we are.
did that to me
We need books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like being banished into forests far from everyone. A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us. That is my belief.
Franz Kafka
this is going to be difficult -> i am capable of doing difficult things -> i have done everything prior to this moment -> this difficulty will soon be proof of capability
remember if you ever want to read an article for free and the subscription ad prevents you from reading the entire article DO NOT
Reload it and immediately turn off your Internet access (data/WiFi if you are using a phone)
Reload it and click the 'X' next to the return icon on the top left of your window (if you are on desktop)
Reload the page, type 'Ctrl+ A' and 'Ctrl+ C' and paste everything onto an open document
this has worked for me 97ish % everytime hope this works for u too
this is kinda cool, I might do one of these when the semester starts
Studying can be a daunting task, especially when we're not feeling motivated or don't know where to start. Luckily you are on Tumblr, where the Tumblr Studyblr community lives!
A group of individuals who share their study tips, techniques, and challenges to help motivate and inspire others.
As a member of this community, I've compiled a master post of study challenges created by Studyblr bloggers. These challenges aim to help students stay on track, improve their focus, and achieve their academic goals. So you can join in and start achieving your academic potential!
>> π π¨ π π
If you know any other challenges or you've created ones yourself and want to share them, do message me with the link to the post so I can update the list! I too will be creating some, more coding-related ones as I am a coding studyblr (codeblr) blog! That's all and hope you find a challenge you'd like to start!
@tranquilstudy's Studyblr Challenge - π π π πΒ
@sub-at-omic-studies' Study Challenge - π π π πΒ
@wecandoitβs Study Challenege - π π π πΒ
@cheereader's The βBack To Collegeβ Study Challenge - π π π πΒ
@myhoneststudyblr's The Studyblr Community Challenge - π π π πΒ
@ddaengstudies' Wabi-Sabi Studyblr Challenge - π π π π
@hayley-studies' 30-Day Study Challenge - π π π πΒ
@ddaengstudies' Zoomester Studyblr Challenge - π π π π
@cheereader's Summer Studying Challenge: Southern Hemisphere Edition -Β π π π π
@cheereader's Horrortober Challenge - π π π πΒ
@caramelcuppaccino's Autumn Studying Challenge - π π π πΒ
@myhoneststudyblr's Winter Studying Challenge - π π π π
@ddaengstudies' Winter Wonderland Studyblr Challenge - π π π πΒ Β
@stu-dna's January Study Challenge -Β π π π π
@planningforpatience's February Study Love Challenge - π π π πΒ
@littlestudyblrblogβs March Study Challenge - π π π πΒ
@smallstudyblrsunite's The June Challenge - π π π πΒ
@stu-dnaβs October Study Challenge - π π π πΒ
@alfalfaaaryaβs 21-Day Productivity Challenge - π π π πΒ
@work-before-glory's G's Productivity Challenge - π π π π
@moltre-se-s' 30 Day Langblr Challenge - π π π π
@drunkbloodyqueenβs The language challenge - π π π π
@caramelcuppaccino's 20 Language Learning Challenge - π π π πΒ
@prepolygotβs Langblr Reactivation Challenge - π π π πΒ
@xiacodes' 5in5weeks Coding Challenge - π π π πΒ Β
@friend-crow's Tarot Study Challenge - π π π πΒ Β Β
Right. So. A Tarot sequence of three cards, A -> B -> C is exact if everything you take from A as part of B is all that you leave behind when you interpret B as part of C.
For example let's look at a relationship spread:
Self -> Other -> Dynamic
Start with the Self, then identify the self with aspects of the Other; those aspects are precisely the parts of the Other that you ignore when interpreting the Other in the Dynamic. With me so far?
Let's add another link to the sequence:
Self -> Other -> Dynamic -> void
"void" has no card. It has no interpretation, consumes all, and yields nothing. All aspects of the Dynamic are consumed by the void, but when we know this sequence to be exact this tells us much:
The aspects of the Self that we see in the Other are those parts we leave behind when we see the Other in the Dynamic. The aspects of the Other that we see in the Dynamic are those parts we leave behind in the void (which is everything). So for this sequence to be exact we know that the Dynamic is fully explored by those parts of the Other than we cannot identify with the Self.
omg this + bonus points if this is yet another "autistic genius" representation. don't even get me started on how harmful both of those things are for various reasons
Fuck the way media talks about βchild prodigiesβ and βgeniusesβ especially in fields like music and mathematics.
Like they are gods whose level of understanding we could never reach.
How come we rarely hear about all the people who started young and then fizzled out? How come we never hear the stories of people who started late in life and made a huge difference.
Why do we only hear about their natural aptitude and not the hard work and misteps they took to get there.
For gods sakeβ¦
Terry is just a guy!
Hello, dear! π»
I saw your post wanting book recommendations. I'm sorry for your previous struggles, but I hope this list may help you find something you love!
-"The Housekeeper and the Professor" by YΕko Ogawa (The professor is a mathematician!)
-if you like Vonnegut, you may like Haruki Murakami, specifically his older titles like "Wind-Up Bird Chronicle" and "Norwegian Wood" (I feel these books do a good job of expanding on people's motivations and moods.)
-"The Elegance of the Hedgehog" by Muriel Barbery (Again, excellent at conveying emotions.)
-"Hunting and Gathering" by Anna Gavalda (This one is technically a romance - a genre which I personally would normally HATE - but it portrays such realistic characters, their struggles and their natural dialogue during fights that it actually felt more like I was reading about a collection of lives that I had the pleasure of spying on from above. I really love this book!)
-for WWI and WWII-themed titles, I'd recommend the Battlefield comics by Garth Ennis (He's SO good at writing believable characters and realistic dialogues.)
-if you don't mind high fantasy, any of the books in Terry Praychett's Discworld series about the wizards might be up your alley (You can read them independently without issue, or start from the beginning of any of the wizard titles. You can find a reading guide online! The wizards of his world are very regimented about how magic works - somewhat like mathematicians - and it's very funny.)
-the "Cemetery of Forgotten Books" series by Carlos Ruiz ZafΓ³n (I'd skip the 4th one - the main character/POV changed and I wasn't as impressed with the writing in that one - but the first 3 books are an absolute dream to read. The characters are so charming, lovable or completely horrifying, it feels like a wonderful foreign mystery series that takes place in 1940s Spain. It was really interesting to try to keep track of such a unique mystery amidst the second world war.)
I hope those help! Please enjoy your reading journey. β‘
hi, and thank you so much for the recommendations! I appreciate it a lot, those books sound really good
i gotta say i don't buy all them planning strategies and tips that require more effort than just sitting and doing the work
i mean that might help some people but i find that when i am doing something important to me i need no plans nor do i need motivation, i also don't procrastinate, everything falls into its right place
and if achieving something takes so much effort in preparation, is this even supposed to be a thing? idk, maybe that's the reason why i have no external proof of my work lol
β 3 IX 2021
such a weird day today. i finished complete spaces and then moved on to preparing for the math conference i'm going to on sunday. there is a lot of high level stuff so i won't be able to learn everything, of course, but i'm doing my fav thing ever and enjoying it thoroughly. that is, switching from a topic to a topic in the spare of 15 minutes and reading a bit about anything until it stops being β¨super excitingβ¨
this amounts to a total of 8 hours of math and i am not done yet. love it, absolutely love to waste time like that
concentration: fucking β
tomorrow i'm doing an algebra speedrun with bf and two of our friends. this is an experiment aiming at seeing how much information we are able to pack into our heads in one sitting. we haven't studied abstract algebra before. then in a few as i mentioned i am going to a math conference, with bf and our other friend. excited about that too. i fucking love math
i am! obsessed! with this book from the late ming dynasty about scams to watch out for (esp. if you are a traveling merchant). this guy is like, there ARE immortals who can survive without food but you WILL NOT encounter them because they live alone in the mountains and don't talk to anyone. if a monk comes to your house and claims to not need to eat, it's probably because he's secretly eating human fetuses, or something. eunuchs are invariably corrupt and the court system is useless. however, do NOT try to bribe anyone for a better SAT result for your idiot failson; this never works. nuns WILL try to seduce your wife into cheating on you. if your idiot failson does really badly on the SAT, make sure to have his father's remains buried somewhere with A+ fengshui; this is Guaranteed to work (unless your wife is cheating on you).
β pure math undergrad β in love with anything algebraic β
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