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https://www.azquotes.com/quote/1446354
This is one thing I tell people about math. Like, yes, we have amazing calculators in our pockets everywhere we go, and in the real world we will likely never need to do more complex math than, like, seventh grade algebra, and even that would be a rarity.
But that brain-crushing, painful learning of the process of math and how to compute is like power-lifting for your brain.
If you can power through that and train your brain to learn something as abstrusely taught as modern mathematics, then that will make all of the other learning things that you have to do in your life 100 times easier.
As someone with a math degree it frustrates me that people always say "but when will I use this in the real world?" Whether or not you need that math in the real world the real value in learning math is learning how to approach problems in an organized, specific, and detail oriented process. The process of learning formal logic and following through to the end is a very important skill for people to have. Instead, it's all about "how do I get to the answer?" There's a reason why 75% of your score in higher level math is your work and not your answer. The work is what matters
Another important thing is knowing when to use maths. I've been doing some statistical analysis for a personal project lately and it struck me that without those tedious lessons I'd have no idea this was even possible, never mind how to do it.
I'm not gonna argue with Socrates :)
Plato's the one you don't wanna argue with. Dude was an ex-wrestler.
Friedrich Nietzsche hurts my brain.
Meh, you probably should.
Most of his students that we know of were vicious oligarchs who abolished democracy in Athens until they killed so many people that there was an uprising against them.
If he was around today, there's a good chance he'd be part of the trump regime.