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Previous: Chapter 18, part i, Waking
up
The child learns
In moving objects from here to there, in learning to get dressed and to eat,
and in learning to talk, the child may come to accept the environment. Beyond
this, the child may dream. The dreams of the child are perhaps echoes of recent
experiences or sensations, the suggestions of others, or both. Dreams may be
directed or not in the child's imagination where pleasant thoughts or fears may
govern. (Directed dreams and images are a visual form of thought.)
In growing, the child may learn the difference between mental experiences,
here dreams, and the ongoing physical experiences of the body and its five
senses. The latter need to be given priority. Different times and cultures
may favor a different emphasis. The undirected dreams or images may then be
suppressed or discounted. That is, the child accepts the priority of the five
external senses, the environment they represent, and does not remain or withdraw
fully into the echo or memories of past experiences. Loss of control here may
appear as madness or as a withdrawal from the world given by the physical
senses.
The words of others are external to the child. Words provide information and
instructions. When a noise is heard, a child will identify its source. The
source is often external. But as the child learns to speak, the source is not
external. That is, when a word is spoken, it echoes in the ears and therefore
the mind of the talker.
Then in learning to read or speak silently, the external spoken word is
internalized. [1] In this, the child finds an inner mind
to explore. Silent words echo without an audible use of the vocal chords, if
they are used at all. They are heard in the mind. The infant or child needs to
learn to recognize this silent voice as his or her own, a voice that may remain
one and not be divided.
[1] In Roman days, loss of voice meant the loss of the
ability to read aloud and hence the loss of the ability to read.
Thought appears to involve the formation of images in the mind, the formation
of words on the lips or in the mind, and the formation or the recall of
sensation fragments from the physical senses of sight, sound, touch and heat,
taste and smell. When awake, this thought should or may remain linked to
everyday reality, the sometimes rude external environment.
The thoughts of a person are not usually isolated. Interaction with the
environment, the feeling that it is too hot here; body needs such as hunger; the
voices/actions of others intervene and sometimes direct thoughts and actions.
The words of others in particular pass on ideas and stories. Knowledge itself
may be a reflection or a consequence of the ability to describe, to tell,
understand and remember stories. As the infant child grows, stories as told by
elders (or as written in books) transfer knowledge or pass on the culture and
knowledge of a community. Organized or not, it is food for thought. When
deliberately organized, as in education, this transfer may result in the
accumulation of skills and techniques. In particular the deliberate description
of rules and patterns, and the theories that they form, extends the ability to
follow stories and act upon their content, their plots and the characters that
exist within them.
Next: Chapter 19 Symbols &
Logic
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Pattern
Based
Reason
Volume 1A
Printed in Canada
ISBN 0-9697564-5-3
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Volume 1 = 1A+1B
bounded together
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Table of Contents Foreword PS. Three Remark 1. What is reason 2. Inductive Ed Principles 2. Communication 3. Elements of Reason 4. Implication Rules [10] 5. Hype & Deception 5. Hype & Ethics 6. Chains of Reason [4] 7. Longer Chains of Reason 7. Mathematical Induction 8. Language Change [2] 9. Next Chapters, About. 10. Limits to Freedom [2] 11. Accidental Patterns 12. Two Analogies 12. Knowledge Islands 13. Euclidean Model 13. Euclidean Reason 14 Math: Deductive/Empirical [6] 15. Objectivity 15. Objectivity, More 16 Rules-Patterns Origins [10] Knowledge & Story Telling 17. Objective Ways 17. Trial & Error Discovery 18. Conciousness 19. Symbols & Logic 20. Pronouns & Symbols 21. Truth Tables I. [3] 22. Contrapositive 22. Vacuously True 24. Indirect Reason More 24PS. Excluded Middle Law 24PS. Proof by Absurdity PS. Reality vs Imagination PS. Ahistorical Logic Links Elsewhere - Go GoGo
1A Logic Postscripts
- online only
+Proof
by Absurdity alias proof by contradiction
+How
the demand for consistency supports the law of the excluded middle
+Reality
versus or with the aid of Imagination
+Links for
reason, logic and crtical thinking
+History
Lost or Missing
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For
Senior
High School & Calculus Students
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Words to clearly
introduce algebra and variables
have been missing in course design. For people who cannot do
algebra,
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the missing words may
explain or ease their difficulties. Volume 2 ,Three
Skills for Algebra, in Chapters
8 to 14 & 18 etc, puts words before symbols to
providing the missing words in a way that enrich the
comprehension of all. Those words form the middle part of a algebra
(and logic) lessons aimed at helping or improving all
of high school mathematics and also calculus course
design & delivery.
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For Avid Readers in School & Out -
Online Books
1. Elements of
Reason. 1996
1A. Pattern
Based Reason 1995
1B. Math
Curriculum Notes 1996
2. Three
Skills for Algebra 1995
3.Why
Slopes & More.Math
1995
Tour their forewords.
Calculus Prep or Help: See Volumes 2 & 3,
and this bigger
Calculus
Guide. If your
calculus questions is not answered here, submit
it. Over time, that may complete the site development of
calculus.
For Parents: Speaking
Skills, Reading
& Writing,
Preparing for Science, ends,
values and methods for work and study, parent- friendly maths
skill development booklets for ages 4-14.
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Mostly
For High
School
Intro to Solving
Linear Equations
- a different paths for junior and even senior high
school students. Question for Tutors: When do
you use and when you skip the stick diagram method
here?
Fraction
Skills, thought-based development, Ages 10 to 14 may need a
tutor. Students who have to understand in order
to do may like the development in all or part.
For Senior
High School Mathematics & Calculus
5
wordy Logic
Chapters
4 curious Algebra
Chapters
Words before & besides symbols. A Key Algebra
forward & backwards Chapter
First Calculus
Preview (1st intro)
Four Calculus
Chapters
(2nd intro)
Intro to Complex
Numbers (long)
Intro to Mathematical
Induction (romantic & wordy at first)
Tutors & Instructors:
These lessons introduce skills differently Would you
recommend them?
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More Topics
1. Decimal
Arithmetic Reference!
2. Integers
- Intro to Signed No.s
3. Fractions
- fully explained.
4. Fractions
with Units
5. Number
Theory,
6. Solving
Linear Equations
7 Formulas
for- & backwards -
8. Proportionality,
Back- & For-wards.
9. Logic
Chapters:
10. Euclidean-Geometry
11. Slopes
& Equations of Straight Lines. (Take
I. See take II below)
12. Why
Study Slopes.
13. Maps,
Plans, Similarity & Trig,
(Take II included here)
14. Quadratics:
Starter lessons
15. Polynomials:
Starter lessons
16 Why
Factor Polynomials:
17 Functions
- Forwards & Backwards.
18. Exponents,
Radicals & logs.
19. Complex
Numbers before trig (new advance/ starter lesson)
20. DC
Electric
Circuits Etc
21. Real
Analysis
22. The
Olde Complex No, Trig
& Vector Section.
23. More
Calculus Stuff
- written after Volumes 2 and 3.
Level I Material: New Stuff
Time and Date Matters
Level I Arithmetic.
Money Matters
Measurement Matters
Matters of Chance (Risk Control)
Logic
Chapters
(leave what's not clear in Level I to Level II)
Using/Making Maps and Plans.
(A variant of
Maps,
Plans, Similarity & Trig, to
appear here).
For Instructors
-
Education
Essays
(opinions,
possibilities, references)
- Free
Advice and Directions for teaching primary & high school maths
will be given in online meeting place with voice &
whiteboard.
- Math & Logic How-TOs
1. Arithmetic
2. Algebra
3. More Algebra
4. Beginner Geometry
5. More Geometry
6. Calculus
7. Show Work or Logic
These may be too dense for students. Offering ideas to change
education makes this site different. Nothing
ventured, nothing gained. Site material is
mathematically correct, and where not, please report
errors. The two level program POMME in the site
entrance implies multiple paths for instruction. Supporting
those paths in turn implies a clear destination for
site development and perhaps a new name.
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