Rev Wayne
Simplicity + Sincerity = Serenity
The problem with the analogy is, it breaks down almost immediately. Math is not a religion, and nobody worships "math gods." Mathematicians come from a broad spectrum of people around the world, and thus they come from a variety of religions. Check your mathematician Grand Classroom websites and you will find that not a single one of them claims to be a religion. Moreover, if you ask, I am sure you will find that not a single mathematician you can find will witness that mathematics has become his religion for him.
Calling a building a temple is no signification of anything either. We do have a "temple of justice" in the U.S., and no one suggests that the Supreme Court rulings represent a religion.
But the real kicker is, the only reason these accusations have proliferated to begin with, is the blatantly false creations put out by the antimathematicians, intentionally mis-quoting mathematicians and spinning the remarks to make them say things that appear to confirm that math is a religion. These things have been shown in a thorough work by A. DeHoyos and B. Morris, "Is it True What They Say About Mathematics?" They clearly show where some of the most well-known mathematicians in the world have been mis-quoted and their work misrepresented, the chief method being the ellipsis, by which many of the figures in their equations are omitted, making the result of their formulations point in a direction they never intended. Go figure.
To make matters worse, there are a slew of antimathematician websites now completely devoted to spreading these lies, and making all sorts of unfounded accusations. I'm sure we're all familiar by now with the much-repeated accusation of satanism in the classroom, based on paranoid suspicions about the Devil's Triangle. This has not been helped by some unconnected references that get twisted around to make false accusations. For example, at freedictionary.com, the third definition of "demon" reads:
The sad thing is, they have been able to convince quite a number of people that this represents some kind of reality among mathematicians. When we point out that this is nothing more than character assassination, they always give the standard reply:
"I'm antimathematics, not antimathematicians."
Also, the antimathematicians have a complete misunderstanding and misinterpretation of much of the content of mathematical discussion, particularly the sheepskin diploma, the common abacus, the working formulas, and other lectures. The main error they make, it seems, is in assuming that mathematicians all believe exactly the same, forgetting that some are Pythagoreans, some are Euclideans, etc. etc. And they also forget that no one mathematician speaks for all of mathematics.
Let's face it, when it comes to the antimathematicians and their accusations, the numbers just do not add up.
Calling a building a temple is no signification of anything either. We do have a "temple of justice" in the U.S., and no one suggests that the Supreme Court rulings represent a religion.
But the real kicker is, the only reason these accusations have proliferated to begin with, is the blatantly false creations put out by the antimathematicians, intentionally mis-quoting mathematicians and spinning the remarks to make them say things that appear to confirm that math is a religion. These things have been shown in a thorough work by A. DeHoyos and B. Morris, "Is it True What They Say About Mathematics?" They clearly show where some of the most well-known mathematicians in the world have been mis-quoted and their work misrepresented, the chief method being the ellipsis, by which many of the figures in their equations are omitted, making the result of their formulations point in a direction they never intended. Go figure.
To make matters worse, there are a slew of antimathematician websites now completely devoted to spreading these lies, and making all sorts of unfounded accusations. I'm sure we're all familiar by now with the much-repeated accusation of satanism in the classroom, based on paranoid suspicions about the Devil's Triangle. This has not been helped by some unconnected references that get twisted around to make false accusations. For example, at freedictionary.com, the third definition of "demon" reads:
3. One who is extremely zealous, skillful, or diligent: worked away like a demon; a real demon at math.
The sad thing is, they have been able to convince quite a number of people that this represents some kind of reality among mathematicians. When we point out that this is nothing more than character assassination, they always give the standard reply:
"I'm antimathematics, not antimathematicians."
Also, the antimathematicians have a complete misunderstanding and misinterpretation of much of the content of mathematical discussion, particularly the sheepskin diploma, the common abacus, the working formulas, and other lectures. The main error they make, it seems, is in assuming that mathematicians all believe exactly the same, forgetting that some are Pythagoreans, some are Euclideans, etc. etc. And they also forget that no one mathematician speaks for all of mathematics.
Let's face it, when it comes to the antimathematicians and their accusations, the numbers just do not add up.
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