We all know confidently incorrect people. People displaying dunning-kruger. The majority of those people have low education and without someone giving them objectively true feedback on their opinions through their developmental years, they start to believe everything they think is true even without evidence.
Memorizing facts, dates, and formulas aren’t what necessarily makes someone intelligent. It’s the ability to second guess yourself and have an appropriate amount of confidence relative to your knowledge that is a sign of intelligence.
I could be wrong though.
A lot of adults don’t, then proceed to argue about order of operations, having forgotten that Brackets have to be all expanded out before doing anything else at all.
Yes we do. I use Maths every day, quite separate to the fact I teach it.
I mean Pythagoras is useful but what are you foiling?(garden fertilizer?) Or are you misconstruing “that math” for “all math”?
I wasn’t even commenting on that, hence why I quoted “remember FOIL?” and not the rest.
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I love this argument because it’s like a guy who catches and eats raw fish saying that we don’t need fire. Like, man, you’re not even trying to use it, though.
I think you missed that the next portion of their statement was connected to the part you (inappropriately) added the missing word to.
They’re saying, essentially, that it’s important to learn math just for a rounded education, even if it lacks application. They’re saying closer to “even if we’re eating sushi, we still need fire”.
I’m aware the quoted person agrees with me. I’m responding to a common public sentiment.
Ah, alright. :) sometimes these things are hard to tell in text.
Haha, no problem, friend. :p
and in fact had forgotten all about the fact that he cooked it over a fire as a treat for last Christmas 😂