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Department of Mathematics,
University of California San Diego

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Cognitive Science / Mathematics and Science Education Colloquium

James Alexander

Case Western Reserve University

Blending in mathematics

Abstract:

Mathematics is one of the richest, if more abstruse, areas of higher human cognition. It is a formal system, founded on a minimum of primitive concepts, but involving cognitive mechanisms, such as blending and framing, in an iterative manner, which lead to the rich structure of "higher" mathematics. The use of such cognitive mechanisms is done in a very controlled way, so as to maintain the rigor of the discipline. It is suggested that in mathematics blending and other such mechanisms are incorporated into the formal structure of the discipline. This thesis is examined via a number of examples. This has the effect that blends are easy to make in mathematics. On the other hand, before blends and other processes were incorporated into mathematics, some blends that are obvious, even necessary, in hindsight, have taken long times — sometimes centuries — to be realized. We hypothesize there is a cognitive cost to actualizing blends, which must be overcome. This phenomenon is investigated via the historical record. \\ \noindent Co-Sponsored by the Embodied Cognition Lab, Dept. of Cognitive Science, and the UCSD/SDSU Mathematics and Science Education joint doctoral program

Hosts: Rafael Núñez (Cognitive Science, UCSD) and Jeff Rabin (Mathematics, UCSD)

January 19, 2010

3:00 PM

CSB 003

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