By Stan Brin
Some of us are
good at math, some of us struggle merely to get through it.
Whether we’re good
at it or bad, few of us will ever again use anything we learned in calculus or
trigonometry class ever again, not even once. After graduation, few will even
be able to recognize such general terms as sine and cosine,
much less be able to explain what they mean.
For those who want
to become engineers, scientists or economists, math is the foundation of their
careers. It’s vital, not to be questioned.
For the rest of us
— and I include technicians and medical workers* among the rest of us — math
is, more often than not, a painful and soul-breaking ritual that we are forced
to endure if we hope to have a decent life.
The official line
is that lots and lots of math is supposed to prepare us for work. It’s supposed
to teach us to think logically. It’s also supposed to help America compete
against Asian Tiger economies that are eating our national lunch.