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Re: [xmca] Numbers - Rational or Real?



Exactly, David. History proceeds from the concrete to the abstract, before the reconstruction process can begin.
A couple of tangential points.
Hegel agreed that mathematics is the science of quantity, but he correctly defined quantity as that "which may be changed, while the object remains the same." So that is why symmetries of a cube and tensor calculus and so on are part of mathematics, even though at first sight they have little to do with "quantity." To that end, don't get hung up on "complex numbers." These are just a number pair, that's all. Not a new domain of numbers at all, from the mathematicians' point of view, though perhaps they do represent a challenge to the teacher. Likewise, negative numbers. Finally, don't hang too much on the words. Mathematicians will tell you there is nothing irrational about irrational numbers and nothing real about real numbers or imaginary about imaginary numbers. Think of Vygotsky's Spiel on how words change their meaning in an etymological chain, according to inessential attributes. Oh, again, an algebraic number like the square root of two may be real but it can never be the result of a measurement, and that is why the Ancients called it irrational, so "Agreed" on all that.

andy

David Kellogg wrote:
Andy:
In the realm of numbers, Hegel's observation that what is real is rational and what is rational is real is simply not true. The square root of two is a real number. But it's not rational; the decimal expansion of the square root of two has no end. Similarly, the naturals are rational, but the rationals are not necessarily natural (e.g. negative numbers and zero). The historical progression, from naturals to rationals to reals is a very good example of what Anna was talking about, the tendency to reify a whole system as merely one special case of a larger metadiscourse about numbers. That's why I suggested that the notion of quantity doesn't really exhaust the idea of numbers: quantities (in the sense of taking a set of seven oranges and then mentally taking away the oranges) are really only one part of numbers. The "three" in "two thirds" is not really a quantity of oranges minus oranges, but rather a procedure, and this is certainly true of the 3 in f(x) = 3x. . Anna likes to consider the HISTORICAL progression (from naturals to rationals to reals to complex numbers) as the basis of numerical instruction (and so does Piaget!). I find Vygotsky's own account a much more linguistic one. Based on Thinking and Speech, especially Chapter Five (but also his distinction between indicating, naming, and signifying), I would say it looks something like this: a) POINTING: Pointing to three oranges. Counting by pointing. Number is a concrete group of objects.

b) NAMING: Saying “three oranges”. Counting by wording. Number is a concrete group of objects called by a name.

c) GENERALIZING: Learning that “three oranges” and “three apples” are both kinds of “three”. “Number” is a quality of a group of objects we call “quantity”.

d) ABSTRACTING: Thinking “three oranges” WITHOUT THE ORANGES, as a potential but not necessarily real quantity of objects.

e) CONCEPTUALIZING: Thinking of “three” WITHOUT THE QUANTITY, e.g. y = 3x, where neither side of the equation actually equals three, where three is simply a relationship between y and x and not an actual quantity at all.

David Kellogg Seoul National University of Education
--- On *Tue, 7/5/11, Andy Blunden /<ablunden@mira.net>/* wrote:


    From: Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net>
    Subject: Re: [xmca] Numbers - Natural or Real?
    To: annasfar@math.msu.edu, "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity"
    <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
    Date: Tuesday, July 5, 2011, 7:58 AM

    Can I just add a minor observation to this discussion, as to why I
    used the term "rational" rather than "real" in contadistinction to
    "natural"?

    It seemed intuitively impelling that the correct contrast to
    counting numbers [natural] was numbers expressing the continuum we
    imagine when we set out to measure something in the real world.
    "Rational number" evokes concepts like 3/4 or 1.76 and so on, and
    looks like a discontinuous series. But in fact, the rational
    numbers constitute a continuum, just as must as the real numbers
    do: between any pair of rational numbers, there is an infinity of
    other rational numbers.

    The technical point, the reason for saying "rational" and not
    "real" is that "real numbers" include numbers like the
    circumference of a circle of unit diameter, i.e., pi, and such
    numbers can never be the result of a measurement, they are
    hypothetic extensions of the concept of measuring.

    So, though "real" sounds right, and "rational" sounds wrong, I
    think it has to be "Natural or Rational"

    THis is just an afterthought and I am not trying to make any
    particular point here. :)

    Andy



    anna sfard wrote:
    Hi Bill, David, and Larry,

    Just quickly.

*Bill*:
    My yesterday piece on natural and rational (or rather real) numbers was
    supposed to be a commentary/footnote to Devlin's writings - didn't it show?
    My note was an elaboration and explication of what Devlin, following
    Davydov, meant by "beginning from rational numbers", and it was continuation
    of and  support for Delving/Davydov's ideas (some of which you quote).  As
    an aside, to understand these ideas better one should read at least two
    notes from his MAA columns  - the one you're talking about and the one that
    precedes it.

    *David*:

Re your question
    "My question is whether there is a non-numerical "posthistory" to
    mathematics in, say, algebraic relations (which are independent of specific
    quantities) and imaginary numbers (which seem to me to be almost entirely
    independent of any conceivable quantity at all)."

    I'm not sure how you divide discourses into mathematical and not, or more
    specifically, pre-mathematical, mathematical and post-mathematical, but for
    me, all the discourses you mention are developmentally inter-related. This
    is how I see it: in most general terms, mathematics expands by the
    systematic annexation of its own meta-discourses, that is, by turning the
    talk *about* mathematics into a part of mathematics itself. Thus, for
    example, elementary algebra, the one learned in school, is a formalized
    meta-arithmetic - a formalized discourse *about* arithmetic (it begins when
    the child starts talking about numerical patterns and about unknown
    quantities that produced a certain result). Similarly, the discourse on
    complex numbers (once known as imaginary) is a kind of formalized
    meta-discourse on the discourse on real numbers. Confused? Sorry, this is
    the best I can do right now. I've written about all this extensively in my
    book Thinking as Communication, though, and I hope it is written clearly
enough to be accessible also to interested non-mathematical readers..
    *Larry*:

    Thank you. Yes, like you, I believe communicating - the actual talk - should
    be emphasized also in math classroom. This principle is explicitly present
    in current policy documents, such as US Core Standards for teaching and
    learning math. Whether and how this recommendation is implemented is a
different story.
    Happy 4 July to all the American xmca-ers,

    anna

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