Science
Related: About this forumIs the idea of "2 + 2 = 4" cultural?
1984 called. It wants Room 101 back.
Continued at: https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/paula-bolyard/2020/07/08/orwellian-teacher-blames-western-imperialism-colonization-for-concept-of-224-n614048
As a mathematician, I'm inclined to think that math is barely cultural at all--it's quite universal in the sense that I can sit down and study the inner workings of polynomials and someone in a different culture can do the same, and we'll reach the same conclusions.
What do you think the phrase in that tweet means?
LakeArenal
(28,820 posts)grumpyduck
(6,240 posts)including how she thinks "non-Western" cultures think about it, I'm not going to waste my time second-guessing her.
And given the bio included in the article, it sounds like somebody trying to get attention.
Bye Felicia.
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)so I have no idea if she expanded on it or what her thought process was. But there are other tweeters who are supporting the idea, so it seems like it's not a lone view.
chia
(2,244 posts)separating the colonial/religious influence from mathematics?
https://www.amazon.com/Euclid-Jesus-mathematics-Christianity-religious-ebook/dp/B00CKDE2TK/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=euclid+and+jesus&qid=1594230588&sr=8-2
but that idea of decolonizing mathematics is less about math and more about the history of math. (Who did what, who came up with what ideas, who stole ideas, etc.) Those are legitimate areas of inquiry, but they're more in the area of history.
It's possible that's what the original tweet meant, but it seems strange to relate it to a more concrete thing like "2 + 2 = 4"; that makes it sound like it's the mathematical theory that's cultural.
grumpyduck
(6,240 posts)Is that Jennifer Grey in your avatar?
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)It's Jim Morrison.
muriel_volestrangler
(101,321 posts)I would say she still comes across as full of shit:
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:B3PjyjicHuAJ:http s://twitter.com/brittanylm3281/status/1279980164756242433+&cd=2&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk
Here's what I can get from the cache (there are more replies after):
Ida Bae Wells @nhannahjones
I wonder if folks always talking about standards ever stop to consider that its their so-called standards that are the actual problem.
Chris @CeJayGe
Woke Minis
2+2=4: A perspective in white, Western mathematics that marginalizes other possible values
Brittany Marshall @brittanylm3281
British researcher Alan Bishop wrote about how mathematics was western imperialisms secret tool. Also American researcher Danny Martin talks about the whiteness of math spaces in education. I wont go too far into it but 2 apples + 2 cars dont equal 4 anything.
John Dawkins @johndawkins
It does amount to 4 objects or items or ...
Marshall:
Its not real. Every culture had their own ways of categorizing, measuring, and recognizing patterns. European imperialists created & stole from others then forced its symbols and reasoning on the world; convincing different cultures that their original ways werent valid.
Dawkins:
The notion object is a European invention or it was stolen?
Marshall:
Nope the idea of 2 + 2 equaling 4 is cultural and because of western imperialism/colonization, we think of it as the only way of knowing.
Dawkins:
But people have been counting, and thereby abstracting the idea of number for a long time.
Marshall:
Of course, since the beginning of time... but different cultures didnt use the same numbers & symbols nor did they have the same meanings. Its like how some words in different languages dont have a translation in English.
[more replies]
Ariana B. @TheAriBella
This is interesting ti me only b/c going back and forth with #ADOS about reparations, they seemed to have no understanding of the fact that acquiring skills enables people to create wealth. If you won't master 2+2=4 you cannot be a programmer, engineer, doctor, architect, etc.
Marshall:
Somehow discussing that different cultures used measurement and comparisons differently before Western Imperialism became I'm a moron and a host of other derogatory words. I didn't realize discussing the history of math would make people so angry. Also, I'm a trained architect
Frankly, I wouldn't trust a "trained architect" who doesn't know the difference between counting in abstract or unitless terms, and measurement. And putting this down to "Western Imperialism" is bullshit. I do tend to see her as a moron.
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)Yeah, I think you're right. I don't see anything that she's adding that makes sense of the cultural issue.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,015 posts)janterry
(4,429 posts)I loved reading the postmodernists when I was in college and grad school. But, over the past few years I have come to see it as irrational.
Igel
(35,320 posts)whatever solid surface you were on was both spinning and accelerating at right angles.
Then it didn't make any more or less sense than anything else.
Ron Obvious
(6,261 posts)This is vapid.
Voltaire2
(13,061 posts)Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)But there are other tweets supporting the idea. I don't think it's just trolling.
CatLady78
(1,041 posts)chia
(2,244 posts)Wondering if this has something to do with Euclid?
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)But that isn't an option.
grumpyduck
(6,240 posts)And some people will believe it. I'd love to see them butter it on the bottom.
Lucky Luciano
(11,257 posts)Warpy
(111,274 posts)and that there is a path to truth out there that is effortless to find, short to walk, and completely avoids the messy business of ever having to sit quietly and try to learn something from an expert.
Brittany needs to look at the type of training non math based cultures use. There are no short cuts.
Midnight Writer
(21,768 posts)Wounded Bear
(58,666 posts)If you're working in Base 3, she's "right."
But when making an argument, not including all the parameters of one's supposition is disingenuous at best and gaslighting at worst.
Since most of society works in Base 10 most of the time, her supposition sounds irrational. It doesn't work in binary, because there is no '2' in the binary-Base 2- number system. It doesn't work in base 5 or above, or any number system that includes the numeral '2' and '4.'
Igel
(35,320 posts)Jim__
(14,077 posts)Apparently the Walpiri culture did not use numbers:
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)But I still don't know if I would call it a cultural issue. I think there's still a universality in the sense that if the Walpiri decided to extend their enumeration, whatever they ended up developing would have to be consistent with every other culture's development. At least, consistent in the sense that if, for example, the Walpiri recognize/come up with the concept of prime numbers, they will find that there are infinitely many of them. No culture has accepted that there are only many finitely many primes (assuming they even look at such things).
Jim__
(14,077 posts)She seems to be saying it's a cultural way of knowing, but not the only way of knowing. I'm not sure we need the concepts of math and numbers to have a sufficient understanding of the world - sufficient being enough understanding to survive.
applegrove
(118,683 posts)If you add your thumb and index finger together on each hand you get the same amount of digits as if you add together your daddy toe and second one on each foot together. What you call it does not matter.
Igel
(35,320 posts)The whole Celtic '20' based thing that still shows up in French vingt, quatre-vingt crap that drove me slightly batty.
Then there's the horrid Babylon base-60 that we use in time and degrees of a circle. Seriously, base 60?
They all work. Stick with one that's standard instead of showing how virtuous you are by engaging in mindless anti-ist kneejerking.
applegrove
(118,683 posts)applegrove
(118,683 posts)used the base 6 to teach us. I thought it was really cool and got it. Since then the few times it has come up i have a mind block and just can't get my head around bases.
BadgerKid
(4,553 posts)Eugene
(61,900 posts)2 + 2 = 4 is objectively true. Is objective truth the only truth? That's a philosophical debate that doesn't fit in a tweet.
The reality-based approach prevails because it has earned a good reputation for effectiveness. Its more responsible proponents never claim that it is the only way.
The tweet mainly gives right-wingers a broad brush to paint the left as "loonies."
NNadir
(33,525 posts)...Principia Mathematica proving that 1+1 = 2.
I'm not sure if they ever got to 2+2 = 4.
Principia Mathematica is not a book one reads while waiting for a phone call.
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)This post bemoans the attacks on the original author, but doesn't seem to address the original question at all.
janterry
(4,429 posts)this really is post-modernism (as I thought up thread) taken to it's illogical conclusion.
We need the so-called hard sciences to push back on this mess.
Dr. Strange
(25,921 posts)His tweets were what alerted me to this issue in the first place.
I'm flabbergasted that they think his tweet was an "attack". And there are a couple of tweeters who were still trying to hash this out. They seem to think it's okay for Devlin to object, but not really because he did it while others were attacking.
I would certainly be inclined to push back on this if it's just postmodern crap. But I'd like to make sure that's all it is. And while I see people defending her, those same people won't address her claims.
muriel_volestrangler
(101,321 posts)she really should have found out by now, as a PhD student, that people will reply. It's not as if this is some high school student on their first trip into the big wide world. She ought to understand what public speech is, before using it. That's not too much to ask of a person who got a first degree, is it?
hunter
(38,317 posts)The universe doesn't work that way. All groups are artificial. Every object unique. No two marbles are the same.
I measure everything by Plank Constant.
2 + 2 = 4 only by statistics. Sometimes it's a little more, sometimes a little less. The chances of it being exactly four are infinitesimal.
Lucky Luciano
(11,257 posts)BadgerKid
(4,553 posts)"Western" numerals derive from "eastern" numerals actually, specifically Western Arabic and, before that, various Indian languages.
The representation "2+2=4" reflects the evolution of numerals and symbolic convention.
Anyway, the idea of 2+2=4 seems axiomatic to me, not cultural. Some animals can count, too. What about those cultures?