Don’t follow the maths out the window: Difference between revisions
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{{maxim|Don’t follow the maths out the window}} | {{m}}{{maxim|Don’t follow the maths out the window}} | ||
:—{{author|James Gleick}} | :—{{author|James Gleick}} | ||
A beautiful expression, articulated by Gleick in his tremendous book {{br|Time Travel}}, to make the point that theory is all fine and dandy, but the intractable real world has a way of confounding the most intricate predictions. Don’t jump out the window just because the mathematics tell you the parabolic curve you prescribe will see you right. Look first. | A beautiful expression, articulated by Gleick in his tremendous book {{br|Time Travel}}, to make the point that theory is all fine and dandy, but the intractable real world has a way of confounding the most intricate predictions. Don’t jump out the window just because the mathematics tell you the parabolic curve you prescribe will see you right. Look first. | ||
From the same stable as the observation {{maxim|no fielder catches a ball by performing differential equations}}. | From the same stable as the observation {{maxim|no fielder catches a ball by performing differential equations}}. |
Latest revision as of 11:16, 2 October 2019
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Don’t follow the maths out the window
A beautiful expression, articulated by Gleick in his tremendous book Time Travel, to make the point that theory is all fine and dandy, but the intractable real world has a way of confounding the most intricate predictions. Don’t jump out the window just because the mathematics tell you the parabolic curve you prescribe will see you right. Look first.
From the same stable as the observation no fielder catches a ball by performing differential equations.