Talk:Pure mathematics
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Pure mathematics is not the opposite of applied math. Many results in "pure math" manage to find applications in other fields. Besides, results in "pure math" are often applied in other math fields and many fields in math are motivated by other fields. Critical
Yo
I recall that some mathematician/group or school of mathematicians was skeptical of the value of proof at all and instead desired to simply experiment with methods and find the best ones for physical modeling (and by this I do not mean the 18th century). If anybody knows anything about him/her/them/it, please add it before or after the entry on Hardy under "Purism" (which can be molded to fit the knowledge of those other persons). Diocles
About Users Critical and CStar
For the record, the user Critical ( talk, contributions), who slapped the "disputed NPoV" sticker on this page, has made his or her first edits tonight (or today) and within less than two hours has attacked eight articles for PoV, including (ironically given the CStar example given on the Logical fallacy talk page), Physical law. These were the only "edits" (plus weak justifications on talk pages in the same vein as this one). I don't think the PoV claim has merit. We may ask if this series of attacks is to be taken seriously.
For the following reasons I am thinking that these pages has been the victim of a tiresome semi-sophisticated troll and the PoV sticker should be removed sooner rather than later, if not immediately. We may note that CStar ( talk, contributions) after making edits, paused during the period user Critical made edits, and then CStar took up responding to these edits after the series of user Critical edits ends, as if there is only one user involved, and the user logged out, changed cookies and logged back in. Further, user CStar left a note on Charles Matthew's talk page, Chalst's talk page, and Angela's talk page pointing to a supposed PoV accusation placed on the Logical argument page, when in fact no such sticker has been placed. Perhaps the irony regarding the Physical law page is not so ironic. Hu 05:18, 2004 Dec 1 (UTC)
- I have responded to this on the logical fallacy talk page, as well as on the pages of the above mentioned users. It does appear that these pages were as Hu suggests the victim of a tiresome semi-sophisticated troll. But I wasn't the perpetrator. This suggestion appears to have been an honest mistake, I consider the matter closed, and it appears that Hu does as well. CSTAR 01:36, 2 Dec 2004 (UTC)
- Just because he hasn't been a registered user for very long doesn't mean he has no right to an opinion on the page. If you want to dispute his statement then do so, do not belittle his merit.
- Having said that though, the article doesn't state that pure is the opposite of applied. And if it did, that is not POV, rather a simplification to the point of fallacy. Critical: Just change the wording next time.
A mathematician is walking through a carpark, late at night. Halfway to his car, he drops his keys. If he was an applied mathematician, he would drop to his knees and methodically search around his feet. If he was a pure mathematician, he would realise the probability of him finding his keys is greater in the lighted region 500m away, so he heads in that direction.
18/19th century
The introduction says the origin is in the 18th century, yet the history farther down begins at the 19th century. Which is it?
subfields of pure mathematics
The article says about number theory "It is perhaps the most accessible discipline in pure mathematics for the general public."
This is just wrong. If you are talking about statements of theorems, yes there are some hard theorems of number theory with elementary statements. But that is true in other subjects -- the isoperimetric inequality, the Poincare conjecture, can be stated in a way anyone can understand. But the real substance of the subject cannot be readily understood by the public ... things like factorization of ideals in a ring of algebraic integers, on to the Langlands program, or the Riemann hypothesis. 86.128.141.126 11:24, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
subjective?
The opening stagement "It is distinguished by its rigour, abstraction and beauty." seems to be a little subjective, what do people think?
Definitely. This should be removed; there's no way to prove it's something that's a matter of opinion, and if you wanted to prove that most people thought it beautiful, you'd need a citation. Verisimilarity (talk) 03:53, 1 December 2009 (UTC)
Mathematical logic
Perhaps mathematical logic should be listed as a subfield? --Quux0r 07:22, 16 April 2007 (UTC)
You also do probablity in Mathamatics its not only a little kid thing. Well there much other things that you can do with math that what you might of used in elementary school. SO GET USED TO IT. CUZ IT IS NOT FUNNY.
He's crackin' —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.112.13.41 (talk) 06:07, 18 January 2009 (UTC)
Bridging Pure Mathematics and Philosophy of Mind/Body (x_0)
"intrinsic to nature"
(said about automorphic forms) What does this mean, if anything?
And if it does mean something (e.g. implying some relevance to "nature"), how does the rest of the sentence make any sense? It seems like this needs to be removed or clarified. 211.31.63.48 (talk) 09:10, 25 June 2015 (UTC)
Euclidean geometry is the the most accessible pure math
We live in a universe of curved Einsteinian space-time. Neither Euclidean geometry nor Newtonian mechanics actually exist anyplace in our universe. That makes them pure math by the definition in this article. Before you get to the example of the Banach–Tarski paradox given in the article, it's fair to point out that there are no real spheres, they are paradoxical, but if you had a paradoxical sphere then you could see the increased paradoxicality of the Banach-Tarski proof 74.65.224.183 (talk) 17:50, 26 October 2017 (UTC)
Edits of the lead
I have restored the last version of the lead before the recent edit war. Please do not edit the lead again without getting first a WP:consensus in this talk page. Without consensus, every edit will be reverted, and if a reverted edit is restored, administrators intervention will be required for either protecting the article and/or blocking edit-warriors.
My opinion is that the version that I have restored is not good, but the reverted edits make it worse. I'll discuss the different points in separate threads for making easier the discussions toward a consensus. D.Lazard (talk) 15:11, 24 November 2018 (UTC)
- I agree with all of the above.Paul August ☎ 15:43, 24 November 2018 (UTC)
Fundamental mathematics
One of the edits in the recent edit-war was the introduction of "fundamental mathematics" as a synonymous for "pure mathematics". This is not true. The reference that has been added for supporting the claim is non-reliable source, as it is simply a course title, and does not establish any relationship between the two phrases. So the phrase "or fundamental mathematics" is original research (Wikipedia meaning), and its addition breaks Wikipedia policy WP:NOR.
The term "fundamental mathematics" is also confusing, because it seems to refer to foundations of mathematics, which is a completely different subject. D.Lazard (talk) 15:30, 24 November 2018 (UTC)
- I removed "fundamental mathematics" as synonymous for "pure mathematics" (but was reverted), since I've never heard of that term being used this way. So even if it is used this way somewhere, I doubt that this use is common enough to be included here. Paul August ☎ 15:51, 24 November 2018 (UTC)
- I've never heard "fundamental mathematics" used as a synonym for "pure mathematics", either. To me, "fundamental mathematics" might refer to foundational studies, or to the basic contents of a primary school curriculum, depending on whether a philosopher or a schoolteacher is speaking. I agree: it doesn't belong here. XOR'easter (talk) 15:58, 24 November 2018 (UTC)
Mathematics is not necessarily applied mathematics
Edit warriors removed "is not" from this sentence. The result is not grammatical. However the first sentence of this paragraph may be confusing, although the remainder of the paragraph is essentially correct. A more correct first sentence would be
In pure mathematics concepts are defined and studied independently of any application to the real word. However, these concepts may often be applied to the real world because, either they were introduced for modeling the real world (for example numbers and geometry), or after having been introduced independently of any application, they become widely used outside mathematics. An example is elliptic curves over a finite field, which are used for securing internet connexions (HTTPS protocol)
.
However, this is a definition of pure mathematics, which is better than the one that is given in the first paragraph. In fact it uses the concept of "entirely abstract concept", which is an oxymoron, as implying the existence of "partially abstract concepts".
So the lead deserves to be completely rewritten. I'll propose later a new version of the lead. D.Lazard (talk) 16:27, 24 November 2018 (UTC)
- I agree that the current lead is terrible, even if better than than what it replaced. I am looking forward to D. Lazard's new version and if it is in line with the above snippet I will heartily approve it. A few suggestions. I think that "elliptic curves over a finite field" may be a bit too esoteric for the lead and doesn't sit well being juxtaposed with the other examples ("numbers" and "geometry"). I would suggest that it be replaced by number theory or even more pointedly "factoring large numbers". This would also entail replacing "numbers" in the earlier example for fear of confusion. Maybe with something like "networks" or probability. Also, I have a friend (a pure mathematician working in an applied mathematics department) who was fond of making the distinction between applicable mathematics and applied mathematics, the latter being a field of study and the former referring to the mathematics that possibly could be used in some application. This may be a useful turn of phrase in this article. --Bill Cherowitzo (talk) 20:22, 24 November 2018 (UTC)