The abstraction cliff
In universities in the USA, a math major typically starts with calculus, followed by courses such as linear algebra, discrete math, or a special intro course for math majors (which may be taken simultaneously with calculus), then go on to abstract algebra, analysis, and other courses involving abstraction and proofs.
At this point, too many of them hit a wall; their grades drop and they change majors. They had been getting good grades in high school and in calculus because they were strong in algebra and geometry, but the sudden increase in abstraction in the newer courses completely baffles them. I believe that one big difficulty is that they can't grasp how to think about abstract mathematical objects. (See Reference [9] and note [a].) They have fallen off the abstraction cliff. We lose too many math majors this way. (Abstractmath.org is my major effort to address the problems math majors have during or after calculus.)
This post is a summary of the way I see how mathematicians and students think about math. I will use it as a reference in later posts where I will write about how we can communicate these ways of thinking.
Concept Image
In 1981, Tall and Vinner [5] introduced the notion of the concept image that a person has about a mathematical concept or object. Their paper's abstract says
The concept image consists of all the cognitive structure in the individual's mind that is associated with a given concept. This may not be globally coherent and may have aspects which are quite different from the formal concept definition.
The concept image you may have of an abstract object generally contains many kinds of constituents:
- visual images of the object
- metaphors connecting the object to other concepts
- descriptions of the object in mathematical English
- descriptions and symbols of the object in the symbolic language of math
- kinetic feelings concerning certain aspects of the object
- how you calculate parameters of the object
- how you prove particular statements about the object
This list is incomplete and the items overlap. I will write in detail about these ideas later.
The name "concept image" is misleading [b]), so when I have written about them, I have called them metaphors or mental representations as well as concept images, for example in [3] and [4].
Abstract mathematical concepts
This is my take on the notion of concept image, which may be different from that of most researchers in math ed. It owes a lot to the ideas of Reuben Hersh [7], [8].
- An abstract mathematical concept is represented physically in your brain by what I have called "modules" [1] (physical constituents or activities of the brain [c]).
- The representation generally consists of many modules. They correspond to the list of constituents of a concept image given above. There is no assumption that all the modules are "correct".
- This representation exists in a semi-public network of mathematicians' and students' brains. This network exercises (incomplete) control over your personal representation of the abstract structure by means of conversation with other mathematicians and reading books and papers. In this sense, an abstract concept is a social object. (This is the only point of view in the philosophy of math that I know of that contains any scientific content.)
Notes
[a] Before you object that abstraction isn't the only thing they have trouble with, note that a proof is an abstract mathematical object. The written proof is a representation of the abstract structure of the proof. Of course, proofs are a special kind of abstract structure that causes special problems for students.
[b] Cognitive science people use "image" to include nonvisual representations, but not everyone does. Indeed, cognitive scientists use "metaphor" as well with a broader meaning than your high school English teacher. A metaphor involves the cognitive merging of parts of two concepts (specifically with other parts not merged). See [6].
[c] Note that I am carefully not saying what the modules actually are — neurons, networks of neurons, events in the brain, etc. From the point of view of teaching and understanding math, it doesn't matter what they are, only that they exist and live in a society where they get modified by memes (ideas, attitudes, styles physically transmitted from brain to brain by speech, writing, nonverbal communication, appearance, and in other ways).
References
- Math and modules of the mind (previous post)
- Mathematical Concepts (previous post)
- Mental, physical and mathematical representations (previous post)
- Images and Metaphors (abstractmath.org)
- David Tall and Schlomo Vinner, Concept Image and Concept Definition in Mathematics with particular reference to limits and continuity, Journal Educational Studies in Mathematics, 12 (May, 1981), no. 2, 151–169.
- Conceptual metaphor (Wikipedia article).
- What is mathematics, really? by Reuben Hersh, Oxford University Press, 1999. Read online at Questia.
- 18 Unconventional Essays on the Nature of Mathematics, by Reuben Hersh. Springer, 2005.
- Mathematical objects (abstractmath.org).
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