Home Parent Dads En Passant - From Dad's Point of View
En Passant - From Dad's Point of View PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Written by Jenny Wanderscheid   

En Passant - From Dad's Point of View

byJerry Randal Bauer

 

 

When he was about fourteen years old, my son Jeremy started consulting with me about what mathematics courses he should pursue in high school.   The standard stuff for college prep was geometry, algebra I and II, and trigonometry.   He was interested in architecture and thought he might become an architect.   He asked me about calculus.

"What is calculus?"

I told him that calculus is "how to cheat at arithmetic."   "All those things you were taught that you couldn't do, calculus is how to do them.   It's how to divide by zero."

"So what is eight divided by zero?"

"In general, any constant divided by zero is infinity.   We get this answer by `taking the limit.'   It goes something like this.   First, we ask `What is eight divided by one?'   We get the answer `eight.'   What is eight divided by point five -- sixteen.   We see that the smaller the denominator, the larger the result.   We can see where it is going; when the denominator is zero, the result is infinity.   We say, `The limit of eight divided by x, as x goes to zero, is infinity.'"

"That seems easy, and pretty obvious."

"That's because it is just a demonstration.   There are ways, acceptable to most mathematicians, of proving that.   In calculus, you learn to prove those things, not just demonstrate them.   Actually, the concept of `proof' comes with geometry, where you start with some information and with a sequence of steps, each legal within the context, show that some other information is either true or not true.   You prove or disprove the other information."

"I thought geometry was about parallel lines and stuff."

"That's the subject matter.   That is the imaginary world, with the information and the legal steps.   Points, lines, and angles are the chessmen, axioms are the rules of the game.   But they are not the game.   Once you've learned geometry, you will have learned more than how to prove triangles are similar.   You will have learned the rudiments of symbolic logic."

We went on with this for a while, glossing symbolic logic, algebra, analytic geometry, trigonometry, and some more calculus.   It finally hit him.

"Hey, this stuff isn't about numbers at all, is it?   It's about solving all kinds of problems.   It's how to think about things!   Numbers are just chessmen!"

I can still beat him at chess.   Maybe not much longer, though.


Jerry is a husband, father, son, brother, and friend. He
works as a software engineer. In his spare time (hah!) he
enjoys making music, woodworking, reading, camping, writing,
and a lot of other stuff. He has a wonderful wife and two
terrific sons, aged 23 and 13. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it



 


Dear Reader:  You can help us make this website even better!

We'd love to hear your comments about this article!  Scroll down to sound off!  All of our articles and ideas have come from our imagination and from reader submissions.  Please use this form to contact us if you have articles, crafts, activities, games, recipes, songs or poems that you would like to add to this website. Make sure to stop by our friendly forums too!  Read more articles from dads in our section devoted just to them!

Webmasters and Authors:

We are looking for more "dad authors'!  We will gladly include a link back to your site or book in exchange for sharing your content.  Just contact us!

 


(0 Votes)

Trackback(0)

TrackBack URI for this entry

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Write comment

smaller | bigger
security image
Write the displayed characters

busy Quote this article on your site

To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.




Preview :

En Passant - From Dad's Point of View
Monday, 26 January 2009
En Passant - From Dad's Point of View byJerry Randal Bauer When he was about fourteen years old, my son Jeremy started consulting with...

Powered by QuoteThis © 2008
Last Updated on Monday, 26 January 2009 11:55
 

Featured Holiday



One of our favorite holidays is Easter.  We love the religious and non-religious alike.  There is much joy to be had in spring and no matter how you celebrate, we are sure that you can find something for everyone in our Easter section. Click here to get started.

Upcoming Holidays


If you like to plan ahead, this is the section for you!
We've got year round fun on tap every day of the year!
Independence Day
Grandparents Day
Columbus Day
Halloween
Thanksgiving
 

Share This Page!









Click here to Shop Scentsy





Your Opinion

What do you think of baby walkers?
 

Subscribe to ChildFun

Subscribe now to get updated when we add new articles, activities, crafts, stories, fingerplays, parenting advice and more. You will be updated each time we add a new article to ChildFun. (This replaces our previous newsletters.)
Click here to subscribe!
subscribe

What's New at ChildFun

↑ Grab this Headline Animator



Search Wikipedia

Like it? Share it!


© Copyright 1996 - 2010
ChildFun is a trademark of ChildFun, Inc.
All Graphics on this site are copyright protected
© ChildFun, Inc. and © Original Country Clipart
ChildFun, Inc., PO Box 1173, Mankato, MN 56002
Voice/Fax: 507.625.1124