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| Maria, John Sharp is right about origami; the square is only a part of the circle and does not generate enough information to make it a worthwhile teaching tool beyond the specialized area it now occupies. I will venture to say from my experience that folding circles is and will eventually will be a valuable teaching tool for mathematics, particular for lower and middle grade level students. I do not think anyone can argue this since I do not know anyone that has spent enough time comprehensively exploring the circle to know any different Drawing pictures of circles and folding squares gives no indication of the educational possibilities of folding circles. |
"However, because programming is now seen by the humanity as a huge value and a lucrative occupation, it has more chances to find its way into curricula than, say, origami." |
| You have put your finger on a big problem. The real incentive that drives math seems to be the money that can be made. How would one expect any different in this money-focused culturally corrupt planet we live on. Money is not how the universe works, nor is mathematics. We have so far shot ourselves in the foot and do not notice our leg turning green because we are looking at the abstractions of our own constructions. Don't get me wrong, I have a high regard for math as a language to better understanding this world we live in. Conrad Wolfram has made a strong case for reconsidering the curriculum from the bottom up, and there is an important place for mechanized computation but the concerns for developing human potential is not tied up with mathematics or money. Brad Bradford Hansen-Smith Wholemovement 4606 N. Elston #3 Chicago Il 60630 www.wholemovement.com wholemovement.blogspot.com/ --- On Tue, 11/16/10, Maria Droujkova <drou...@gmail.com> wrote: |
| Kirby, I agree with you, computer programing has advanced origami tremendously in the beauty and complexity of what can be done folding the square. Consider the square is one of five parts of the circle, and yet so much of math can be traced back to the circle, which is after all, treated as only an image. My question and challenge is to see what can be generated if as much time and effort went into programming the same level of folding with the circle as is done with the square. That would mean people would have to start seriously folding circles to know the difference and I don't think that is going to happen very soon. There is too much comfort in the level of confusion about mathematics. |
Brad Bradford Hansen-Smith Wholemovement 4606 N. Elston #3 Chicago Il 60630 www.wholemovement.com wholemovement.blogspot.com/ |
| --- On Tue, 11/16/10, kirby urner <kirby...@gmail.com> wrote: |
| Kirby, I am well grounded in Fuller, and the bit of folding circles he did. Ten years into Fuller and seeing how simply and elegantly he folded the spherical VE using four circles, it occurred to me that everything else could be folded from folding and joining circles. I have yet to believe any different. I think "another brand of blah." is rather harsh. What larger context is there than the unity of a sphere, and when compressed reforms to circle unity? We believe the image better suits our reasoning as a unit of nothing rather than unity. We do not even acknowledge that maybe the circle is both, or that it might be something different than the image we call circle. |
Brad Bradford Hansen-Smith Wholemovement 4606 N. Elston #3 Chicago Il 60630 www.wholemovement.com wholemovement.blogspot.com/ |
| --- On Tue, 11/16/10, kirby urner <kirby...@gmail.com> wrote: |
|
Kirby, I am well grounded in Fuller, and the bit of folding circles he did. Ten years into Fuller and seeing how simply and elegantly he folded the spherical VE using four circles, it occurred to me that everything else could be folded from folding and joining circles. I have yet to believe any different.
I think "another brand of blah." is rather harsh. What larger context is there than the unity of a sphere, and when compressed reforms to circle unity? We believe the image better suits our reasoning as a unit of nothing rather than unity. We do not even acknowledge that maybe the circle is both, or that it might be something different than the image we call circle.
|
Kirby wrote......"I was
referring to so many other approaches to curriculum writing, which have a
really hard time gaining traction or visibility because they're really not that
distinguishable from the background hodge podge." So with consideration to the past I respectfully updated this word
to the world I live in. Geo is earth and is spherical, the only form demonstrating unity of the whole; and to measure is simple keeping tract of
movement from one place to another. Wholemovement is then a word that refers to
a comprehensive understanding of the word geometry; the unity of
self-referencing, self generating nature of the Whole. This word concept embraces
fractals and all kinds of other geometries and at the same time offers a way to
begin to skim off conceptual impurities to begin to glimpse the beauty of the
metal we are working with that lies beneath the surface of all the hodge bodge floating on top. |