When we learn math, we are using our mind alone, not our senses. Socrates calls it a study that “by nature leads to intellection.”

It is a common occurrence: A math teacher stands at the front of the classroom, struggling to keep the student’s attention. One student is on the phone. Another stares straight ahead into the distance. And the kid in the back row is asleep again. However, as the teacher moves to the next topic, one student blurts, “Why do we have to learn this? When are we ever going to use this?” And there it is. The perennial question: Why do we learn math? When I was in high school, teachers responded to this question by pointing out that we need mathematics when we go grocery shopping, when we are building, and in certain careers. In short, we learn math because it is useful.

Professor Eric Gutstein and his colleagues are trying a new approach: to make mathematics more “relevant” by infusing cultural issues into math. Dr. Gutstein and colleagues compiled articles from educators nationwide to put together a book, Rethinking Mathematics: Social Justice by the Numbers. It gives teachers tips for mixing social justice issues into math classes. Looking at the chapter titles gives you an idea how they plan to do this. Dr. Gutstein wrote a chapter titled “Home Buying While Brown or Black,” and one of his colleagues wrote a chapter titled “Deconstructing Barbie: Math and Popular Culture.” In the introduction to the work, the contributors state their hope for this new approach:

Students can recognize the power of mathematics as an essential analytical tool to understand and potentially change the world, rather than merely regarding math as a collection of disconnected rules to be rotely [sic] memorized and regurgitated.

Why do we learn math? Dr. Gutstein’s opinion is clear: math is either a useful tool, or it is merely a “collection of disconnected rules.”

Now, I do not see anything wrong with applying math to real-life issues on occasion. But as a bit of a math-nerd myself, these teachers’ attitudes towards mathematics worry me. Although math is a useful tool, mathematicians throughout history have considered it to have a much higher purpose.

In Plato’s Republic, Socrates insists that learning math is essential for two reasons.

First, Socrates—like Dr. Gutstein—asserts that we should learn math because it is useful. Math is extremely useful: We apply math to physical bodies to get physics. When applied, it can explain much of what we see around us.

Second, Socrates asserts that learning math—pure, unapplied mathematics—forms our minds. It trains us to consider things that we cannot see but always exist without changing. Math does not depend on the physical world. I have never seen or heard a “5;” I can only think about 5 (although once I know what “five” means, I can see that I have five pens on my desk and find the number five in other places around me). In short, when we learn math, we are using our mind alone, not our senses. Socrates calls it a study that “by nature leads to intellection.”

And more importantly, math is always the same. I can change the number of pens on my desk, but I can never change the concept of “5.” This is essential. When we learn math, we use our minds to learn about things which are always true. As Socrates says, math is “for the sake of knowing what is always, and not at all for what is at any time coming into being and passing away.”

Ultimately, this teaches us that we do not learn math solely because it is useful or relevant. We learn math because it teaches us to think completely apart from what we sense. We learn math because it is one of the few things that never changes, no matter what happens around us. Math is unique: Physics, literature, chemistry, languages, and every other subject we learn in school comes from experience, and only math stands totally apart from that.

When we learn math, we are learning to think—to see the world with our minds and not only our senses. And is this not why children go to school in the first place? In this way, then, pure math is utterly useful—just not in the way Dr. Gutstein would have liked to think.

This is not to say that teachers should not teach students how to apply math in the world around us. Math is powerful and extremely useful. But I think that Dr. Gutstein’s book misses the mark when he implies that unless teachers make mathematics conventionally useful, it is only a “collection of disconnected rules.” He seems to think that until our math classes become conventionally useful, they will be pointless.

His book leads us to ask the question: Why do we learn? If we think the only point of education is to equip students to fight for their political party or to get a job, Dr. Gutstein is right: Unapplied mathematics is pointless.

But if we believe that there are higher goals to education, we ought to change our attitude towards “useless” math. What students learn in school may not be immediately useful to them. And sometimes that is okay.

Republished with gracious permission from Intellectual Takeout (June 2018).

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