In my opinion the intuition and the knowledge are the most important.
If you don't have intuition, it will be hard to develop alone.
If you don't have knowledges, you'll waste your time end intuition on subjects, already discovered, instead of learning them.
This. I remembered when I was still at school age, I noticed that if two numbers whose difference is 2 is multiplied by each other, the result would be the square of the middle number minus 1. Years later when I took math mayor in college, I tried to write that in algebraic form and found out that it's just
, an equation already well-known at the time.]]>Quote:
"I was wondering if something like a math intuition exists"
Yes!! for sure! Math and other things are solved in certain peoples minds,before they can actually explain How they have solved the problem!
Having forums like this! help a person to explain what they are trying to say,by the way other people question and answer.
There have been many examples where someone has said something! and everyone has disagreed with what that person is saying,then when its made clearer! everyone then says WOW!
Interesting points. Yes, I get a "feeling" that something is going in the right direction. But the feeling CAN be wrong. It is like I have a rough model of the problem in my mind, but actually working on the problem can change it.
And I think intuition plays a bigger role in mathematical discovery than people admit. I remember some mathematician said (something like): "the idea hit me when I was in the bus. It then took me months to make it look like I got there in logical steps."
Yes, same for me, sometimes the feeling is actually wrong, but it gives me a sense of control over the problem and motivation to solve it.
]]>Thank you.
]]>I think intuition plays a bigger role in mathematical discovery than people admit. I remember some mathematician said (something like): "the idea hit me when I was in the bus. It then took me months to make it look like I got there in logical steps."
Pioncaré maybe?
Before the age of 30 he developed the concept of automorphic functions which are functions of one complex variable invariant under a group of transformations characterised algebraically by ratios of linear terms ... The crucial idea came to him as he was about to get onto a bus, as he relates in Science and Method (1908)
And I think intuition plays a bigger role in mathematical discovery than people admit. I remember some mathematician said (something like): "the idea hit me when I was in the bus. It then took me months to make it look like I got there in logical steps."
]]>In common reasoning, one will think step by step, having little chance to get a leap of reasoning all of a sudden. And if so, I guess it will be sheer guess.
What about your experiences? May you analyze them, and see if my hypothesis stands.
]]>I noticed that after practising mental maths skills and memorizing new formulas for known concepts (different ways of showing equivalences) this intuition seems to get more clear.
It kinda knowing in advance wether knowing an approach to the problem will work or not by checking different insights.
Have you ever experienced this?
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