borealys
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- May 26, 2008
- Messages
- 428
But it seems like the mathematically inclined tend to get snobby with those who prefer to avoid math. Suppose there's a room full of people and somebody says, "If 9 people donated a total of 72 dollars, what was the average donation?" It seems like you'd expect everyone to give the answer.
Well, what if in that same room someone said, "Who would like to come draw a cat's face on the blackboard?" Do you think everyone should volunteer? It's really easy. In the world of drawing, it's basic addition. Would you look down on anyone who said, "No way. I suck at drawing."
I've always been terribly slow at mental arithmetic. I'm fairly good (given my minimal post-secondary math education) at reasoning my way through mathematical concepts -- put a calculator in my hand and I can solve some pretty complicated stuff. But simple multiplication tables have never really stuck in my head. It isn't that I can't do it at all, it just takes me longer than it "should," and I need a pen and paper at least. I'm sure if I had a need to do calculations in my daily life, I'd pick it up with the practice. (I did improve quite a lot when I started using pen and paper to track my word counts for some daily creative writing challenges I was doing.) I suppose I would say that I "can't be bothered" to master that particular skill. I've just never needed mental arithmetic the way I need other skills -- typing, for instance, or phonetic transcription, or even drawing.
And yes, I've been judged for it. I remember, in my undergrad days, admitting how bad I was at mental math in the presence of a chemistry grad student, who promptly informed me that I was "innumerate" and therefore "uneducated."
He probably thought exactly the same thing of me that has been expressed by some people in this thread -- that I was lazy and anti-intellectual and thought people good at math were geeks and was flaunting that I wasn't a geek like him. The fact that I was the token arts student in a group of friends composed mostly of scientists and engineers probably didn't help my case in his mind.
I can only laugh at how very poorly he read me.
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