The Nature of Mathematics
(These paragraphs are reprinted with permission from Everybody
Counts: A Report to the Nation on the Future of Mathematics
Education. ©1989
by the National Academy of Sciences. Courtesy of the National Academy
Press, Washington, D.C.) From: http://www.math.duke.edu/undergraduate/Handbook96_97/node5.html
Mathematics reveals hidden patterns that help us understand the
world around us. Now much more than arithmetic and geometry, mathematics
today is a diverse discipline that deals with data, measurements,
and observations from science; with inference, deduction, and proof;
and with mathematical models of natural phenomena, of human behavior,
and of social systems.
As a practical matter, mathematics is a science of pattern and
order. Its domain is not molecules or cells, but numbers, chance,
form, algorithms, and change. As a science of abstract objects,
mathematics relies on logic rather than on observation as its standard
of truth, yet employs observation, simulation, and even experimentation
as means of discovering truth.
The special role of mathematics in education is a consequence
of its universal applicability. The results of mathematics--theorems
and theories--are both significant and useful; the best results
are also elegant and deep. Through its theorems, mathematics offers
science both a foundation of truth and a standard of certainty.
In addition to theorems and theories, mathematics offers distinctive
modes of thought which are both versatile and powerful, including
modeling, abstraction, optimization, logical analysis, inference
from data, and use of symbols. Experience with mathematical modes
of thought builds mathematical power--a capacity of mind of increasing
value in this technological age that enables one to read critically,
to identify fallacies, to detect bias, to assess risk, and to suggest
alternatives. Mathematics empowers us to understand better the
information-laden world in which we live.
During the first half of the twentieth century, mathematical growth
was stimulated primarily by the power of abstraction and deduction,
climaxing more than two centuries of effort to extract full benefit
from the mathematical principles of physical science formulated
by Isaac Newton. Now, as the century closes, the historic alliances
of mathematics with science are expanding rapidly; the highly developed
legacy of classical mathematical theory is being put to broad and
often stunning use in a vast mathematical landscape.
Several particular events triggered periods of explosive growth.
The Second World War forced development of many new and powerful
methods of applied mathematics. Postwar government investment in
mathematics, fueled by Sputnik, accelerated growth in both education
and research. Then the development of electronic computing moved
mathematics toward an algorithmic perspective even as it provided
mathematicians with a powerful tool for exploring patterns and
testing conjectures.
At the end of the nineteenth century, the axiomatization of mathematics
on a foundation of logic and sets made possible grand theories
of algebra, analysis, and topology whose synthesis dominated mathematics
research and teaching for the first two thirds of the twentieth
century. These traditional areas have now been supplemented by
major developments in other mathematical sciences--in number theory,
logic, statistics, operations research, probability, computation,
geometry, and combinatorics.
In each of these subdisciplines, applications parallel theory.
Even the most esoteric and abstract parts of mathematics--number
theory and logic, for example--are now used routinely in applications
(for example, in computer science and cryptography). Fifty years
ago, the leading British mathematician G.H. Hardy could boast that
number theory was the most pure and least useful part of mathematics.
Today, Hardy's mathematics is studied as an essential prerequisite
to many applications, including control of automated systems, data
transmission from remote satellites, protection of financial records,
and efficient algorithms for computation.
In 1960, at a time when theoretical physics was the central jewel
in the crown of applied mathematics, Eugene Wigner wrote about
the ``unreasonable effectiveness'' of mathematics in the natural
sciences: ``The miracle of the appropriateness of the language
of mathematics for the formulation of the laws of physics is a
wonderful gift which we neither understand nor deserve.'' Theoretical
physics has continued to adopt (and occasionally invent) increasingly
abstract mathematical models as the foundation for current theories.
For example, Lie groups and gauge theories--exotic expressions
of symmetry--are fundamental tools in the physicist's search for
a unified theory of force.
During this same period, however, striking applications of mathematics
have emerged across the entire landscape of natural, behavioral,
and social sciences. All advances in design, control, and efficiency
of modern airliners depend on sophisticated mathematical models
that simulate performance before prototypes are built. From medical
technology (CAT scanners) to economic planning (input/output models
of economic behavior), from genetics (decoding of DNA) to geology
(locating oil reserves), mathematics has made an indelible imprint
on every part of modern science, even as science itself has stimulated
the growth of many branches of mathematics.
Applications of one part of mathematics to another--of geometry
to analysis, of probability to number theory--provide renewed evidence
of the fundamental unity of mathematics. Despite frequent connections
among problems in science and mathematics, the constant discovery
of new alliances retains a surprising degree of unpredictability
and serendipity. Whether planned or unplanned, the cross-fertilization
between science and mathematics in problems, theories, and concepts
has rarely been greater than it is now, in this last quarter of
the twentieth century.
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