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Unread 05-02-2006, 00:12
b_mallerd b_mallerd is offline
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Re: Math in careers

Not really....I think programming language are mainly just syntax. The fundamental logic is still the same. Unless you are like jumping language generations...assembly is NOTHING like sql...and so on =D
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Unread 26-12-2005, 20:02
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Re: Math in careers

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Originally Posted by sciguy125
If you're a lawyer, you need to figure out how much to gouge your client.
HEYY! my dad is a laywer!!! (jk, bout the mad faces)

Sooo true! haha, actually not that kinda of lawyer though
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Unread 22-06-2008, 17:47
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Re: Math in careers

Well obviously a math teacher requires math lol.
I'm a math major, and that's the first thing people think of when I tell them that - that I want to be a math teacher. I definately do not haha. I want to be a statistician or actuary. Both, obviosuly, require lots of math and knowing how to apply it. Gotta know a bit of everything, and not just math, in order to succeed (so I am finding out haha).
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Unread 22-06-2008, 20:16
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Re: Math in careers

A bit more off-beat answer is city planners. The GIS software that they use to analyze spatial data requires good knowledge of set theory in order to deduce results.

For example:
Task: Find a suitable site for a new daycare
1. Select all sites in the right zone code.
2. Remove all sites that are within 1000m of a jail
3. Remove all shapes that aren't compact (perimeter / sqrt(area) > 6.0ish)
4. Remove sites that aren't near major roads
... many more steps of elimination ...
5. You will almost certainly end up with several sites that meet all your "hard" criteria like law and bylaw-compliance, so determine a weighting of the attributes of the remaining sites so that you can create a ranking of which sites are best. For instance, one site may require upgrades to the existing building, while another may require the design and construction of a new building. Depending on what your priorities are, one may be preferable to another.

I think though, this is another job where math skills aren't NEEDED, but they certainly help your thinking a lot.
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Unread 22-06-2008, 20:44
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Re: Math in careers

The only things I can think of that wouldn't use math are philosophy and religious studies. You would still have to know it, because of everyday life. Maybe if you become a monk or a nun, you would be free of all math.
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Unread 23-06-2008, 12:04
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Re: Math in careers

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Originally Posted by Water Bandit23 View Post
The only things I can think of that wouldn't use math are philosophy and religious studies. You would still have to know it, because of everyday life. Maybe if you become a monk or a nun, you would be free of all math.
Actually, math can be infinitely (ha) useful in enhancing one's appreciation for both philosophy and religious studies.

Blaise Pascal, author of Pensees, was both a philosopher and a mathematician/physicist (the Pascal computer language and the metric unit of measure were named after him). In Pascal's Wager, he uses binary logic to demonstrate the reasonableness (though not proof) of belief in God. Basically, there are 2 possibilities: God exists or God doesn't exist.
There are 2 choices of action: believe or don't believe.

The possible outcomes/results based on existence and belief are:


-------------- God exists ----- God doesn't exist
believe------- reward---------no punishment or reward
don't believe-- punishment -----no punishment or reward

If one believes, the possible outcomes are reward or nothing. If one doesn't believe, the possible outcomes are punishment or nothing. Pascal's premise was that if one were making a wager, there is no reason not to believe in a probabilistic sense – one who believes has everything to gain and nothing to lose.

Math can also provide interesting insights in religious studies. For example, Genesis 5:25 (of the Bible) reports that Methuselah was 187 years old when he became the father Lamech, and Lamech was 182 when he became the father of Noah. The Flood came when Noah was 600 years old. If you add 187 + 182 + 600, you get 969, the age of Methuselah at his death. This means that Methuselah died in the year of the flood, and possibly died in the flood itself, implying that he may not have been a very righteous man.

Math may also point to seeming discrepancies in religious records, but with further information, they often work themselves out. For example, Daniel 9:25 reports that it will take 7 sevens (49 years) from the issuing of the decree to rebuild Jerusalem to its completion, and an addition 62 sevens (434 years) from the completion until the Annointed One is "cut off" (killed).
434 + 49 = 483 years

Historically, it is reported that the decree to rebuild Jerusalem was issued in 444 B.C. If you conjecture that the Annointed One was Christ, he lived 33 years (dying in 33 A.D.) and adding the years you get:
444 + 33 = 477 years (according to the Roman calendar)

The discrepancy between 477 years and 483 years might seem to indicate that the event described as the "cut off of the Anointed One" is not the death of Christ, unless you take into account that the Roman calendar has 365.24 days/year, but the Jewish calendar (which would have been used in the writing of Daniel) is 360 days. Converting 483 Jewish years:

483 X 360/365.24 = 476.1 years (by Roman calendar). Still not quite 477, but "pretty close," especially since the 444 and 33 years may include fractional increments.

Really, I think there are fun things to discover mathematically in just about everything.
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Unread 23-06-2008, 12:12
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Re: Math in careers

I know Pascal from math and chemistry, but I didn't know he was a philosopher, too. Wow, that's education coming back to bite me. I never thought I'd have to think about him again.

"Actually, math can be infinitely (ha) useful in enhancing one's appreciation for both philosophy and religious studies."

I meant above elementary school. All of the math you used wasn't, you know, calculus. But I uderstand your point. I also like your religious mathematical insights into the bible. It makes me actually want to use math!
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Unread 23-06-2008, 12:36
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Re: Math in careers

Quote:
Originally Posted by Water Bandit23 View Post
I know Pascal from math and chemistry, but I didn't know he was a philosopher, too. Wow, that's education coming back to bite me. I never thought I'd have to think about him again.

"Actually, math can be infinitely (ha) useful in enhancing one's appreciation for both philosophy and religious studies."

I meant above elementary school. All of the math you used wasn't, you know, calculus. But I uderstand your point. I also like your religious mathematical insights into the bible. It makes me actually want to use math!
Not only was Pascal a philosopher, so was Galileo and Aristotle.

Kinda funny how math and philosophy go hand-in-hand
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Unread 23-06-2008, 12:44
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Re: Math in careers

Sigh, I guess this is true. Sad, though. But it makes for great mathematical theories.
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Unread 23-06-2008, 13:07
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Re: Math in careers

Sorry if this is out of place, but I just had to post it. This shows that math can be useful even to comedians I suppose.

If you don't get it, don't worry. Only real nerds do.
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Unread 23-06-2008, 13:10
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Re: Math in careers

Could you explain this?? Please!
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Unread 23-06-2008, 13:12
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Re: Math in careers

the integral of 1 / cabin with respect to cabin = ln(cabin) + c

log cabin + sea = houseboat
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Unread 23-06-2008, 12:43
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Re: Math in careers

If you love math then you would like my job. I work on SONAR systems for a living. This is the convergence of graduate level course work in signal processing, detection/estimation theory, array processing, acoustics, multi-target tracking, etc. Needless to say you don't learn all of this overnight! I'm still learning after 15 years... I do algorithmic design so I spend a lot of time with fairly complex math. My engineering friends sometimes laugh at me because I regularly use eigenvalue decomposition and (less frequently) Bessel functions - things they typically never use. I think modern engineering is especially tough since not only is technology rapidly changing but it is enabling historical mathematic approaches that have only been theoretical due to computational load. This causes us to have to not only have to keep up with current research moving forward but also to dig into the past as well.
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Unread 23-06-2008, 20:46
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Re: Math in careers

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Originally Posted by Dmentor View Post
If you love math then you would like my job. I work on SONAR systems for a living.

Quote:
Vision without a task is only a dream. A task without a vision is but drudgery. But vision with a task is a dream fulfilled.

Dean Kamen quoting an ancient saying
Except for a gifted few, most people go through school/college grinding through courses because it is required. If you are lucky you will find a job that will challenge you to really go back and learn something well.

I'd like to flip Dmentor's statement and say you can really learn to love math by doing a job like his. The work can be so compelling it leaves you gasping for more math knowledge and skill.

I was never a great math student but when I started doing signal processing it was an eye opening experience, both in the applications and how you really learn math.
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Unread 24-06-2008, 21:45
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Re: Math in careers

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Originally Posted by ManicMechanic View Post
Math can also provide interesting insights in religious studies. For example, Genesis 5:25 (of the Bible) reports that Methuselah was 187 years old when he became the father Lamech, and Lamech was 182 when he became the father of Noah. The Flood came when Noah was 600 years old. If you add 187 + 182 + 600, you get 969, the age of Methuselah at his death. This means that Methuselah died in the year of the flood, and possibly died in the flood itself, implying that he may not have been a very righteous man.
Almost, but not quite. "Methuselah" means "dead sent" or "when he is dead, it shall be sent." Methuselah almost certainly died during the year of the flood, and probably beforehand due to his name.
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