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Where Mathematics Come From: How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics into Being by
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 453 of 512
using a suite of metaphors, Lakoff and Nunez intuitively explain Euler's magic formula and how an exponential e raised to an imaginary power i times Pi equals negative one. It is amazing that with normal human brains, we can grasp something so abstract and amazing.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:49PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 383 of 512
going over the metaphors to Euler's magic formula e^i(pi)-1=0
— Nov 19, 2025 12:45PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 364 of 512
I agree that embodied cognition is a good gateway to math, but I still think Math exists independently of the mind. These concepts kick back like when you kick tires. So, l like embodied cognition for pedagogical purposes. I still think math is discovered, not just metaphor play.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:42PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 325 of 512
Dedekind cuts and metaphors for the continuum, and Weierstrass and taming monster functions.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:39PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 292 of 512
Points and the continuum and space-filling curves, and the way we build them from the concrete.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:36PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 259 of 512
Transfinite diagonalization arguments and the specks or dots of infinitesimals.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:34PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 208 of 512
extending this infinity to infinite numbers, polynomials, and sequences. And the concept of a least upper bound to get Dedekind cuts and the real numbers filling the number line.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:15PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 181 of 512
Infinity and indefinite iterative processes like breathing and day-night cycles. Iterative processes happen all over the place, and many have no definite end and are good metaphors for the infinity of natural numbers.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:11PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 155 of 512
ordered pairs and the metaphor of set theory in terms of ordinality and Cardinality.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:08PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 140 of 512
essences and numbers and sets and classes and symbolic logic of Boolean algebra.
— Nov 19, 2025 12:06PM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 107 of 512
Taking numbers as things and the collections schema, we get natural numbers by mapping them out to directions, we get positive and negative and imaginary numbers via a directional schema.
— Nov 19, 2025 11:57AM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 76 of 512
Goes into how we take simple concrete schemas and metaphorically generalize them to math concepts, like say set theory concepts of number, and how to manipulate through common operations gets more to the nuts and bolts, and names the types of schemas involved.
— Nov 19, 2025 11:46AM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 51 of 512
One of the surprising things about cognition is that a lot of it is unconscious. Some of these unconscious frameworks or schemas are involved in cognition, which are applied concretely and, by metaphor, abstractly. In math, some are the above-below schema, a succession schema, a container schema, a path goal schema, and others that get used for daily needs but can be adapted via metaphor to abstraction.
— Nov 19, 2025 11:41AM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 26 of 512
inherent subitizing abilities of newborns and some animals. This is a kernel of numbers in the brains of humans and some animals.
— Nov 19, 2025 11:35AM
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Paige McLoughlin
is on page 15 of 512
How we build abstract mathematical concepts via concrete bodily and sensory metaphors and use a via odd form of metaphor to abstract and generalize. I disagree, I think Plato's Plenum of mathematical forms is real, but manifests in patterns in the physical reality. I will say, however, that the cognitive body/sensory approach is the right one for pedagogy.
— Nov 19, 2025 11:24AM
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Petter Wolff
is 20% done
Promising but the book was stolen before it's could finish it :(
— Sep 27, 2025 12:30AM
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path
is on page 325 of 512
I’m growing convinced of the basic point that (some) mathematics is developed according to conceptual models that have metaphoric expression and that changes in metaphoric expression can precede and drive changes in mathematical practice. I’m getting a little itchy for some implications at this point.
— Apr 01, 2025 06:14AM
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path
is on page 140 of 512
The book’s purpose is a bit muddled so far. I’m not yet convinced that math is metaphorically grounded in embodied experience. At best the authors have shown that bodily experience coherently overlaps math, but in a way that accounts more for rational numbers and arithmetic. Even there causal directionality is hard to show. Does math derive from embodied experience or does embodied sense derive from math?
— Mar 29, 2025 09:01AM
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