I would like to thank Larry, who writes the blog, Maximize Productivity with Industrial Engineer and Operations Research Tools, IEOR Tools, for pointing out, in his latest blogpost, the wonderful essay written by Dr. Robert H. Lewis of Fordham University, entitled: Mathematics: The Most Misunderstood Subject. In the essay, Dr. Lewis takes us on a journey through the education system over time (beginning with Dick and Jane readers)  and illustrates effectively the relevance of mathematics not only to a liberal education but to today's highly technological world, in which math and accompanying implemented algorithms,  through computations,  make our high tech world operate.
In his eloquent essay he states:
Americans like technology but seldom have a grasp of the science behind  it. And the mathematics that is behind the science is regarded as even  more mysterious, like an inner sanctum into which only initiates may  gain entry. They see the rich and nourishing technological fruit on this  tree of knowledge, but they see no deeper than the surface branches and  twigs on which these fruits grow. To them, the region behind this  exterior of the tree, where the trunk and limbs grow, is pointless and  purposeless. "What's the use of math?" is the common query. "I'll never  use it." When a nation's leaders are composed primarily of lawyers,  administrators, military men and stars of the entertainment industry  rather than statesmen, philosophers, the spiritual, and the men and  women of science, then it should be no surprise that there is so little  grasp of the simple reality that one cannot dispense with the trunk and  limbs and still continue to enjoy the fruit. 
He concludes his piece with words from another essayist, David R. Garcia, which I find especially appropriate as many faculty from around the country are turning in their final grades for the semester:
Teaching is not a matter of pouring  knowledge from one mind into another as one pours water from one glass  into another. It is more like one candle igniting another. Each candle  burns with its own fuel. The true teacher awakens a love for truth and  beauty in the heart--not the mind--of a student after which the student  moves forward with powerful interest under the gentle guidance of the  teacher. (Isn't it interesting how the mention of these two most  important goals of learning--truth and beauty--now evokes snickers and  ridicule, almost as if by instinct, from those who shrink from all that  is not superficial.) These kinds of teachers will inspire love of  mathematics, while so many at present diffuse a distaste for it through  their own ignorance and clear lack of delight in a very delightful  subject. 
Interestingly, at the final exam for my undergraduate Transportation & Logistics, which I flew back early from Chicago (where I was speaking at the Measuring Systemic Risk Conference) to proctor, one student, after he handed in his exam, told me the following: Professor Nagurney, I was working on some of the practice exam problems that you gave us and I figured out how to solve one of the problems (which was  mathematical) in a different way and I got so much satisfaction from this experience and was on  such a high that even if I did not do as well on this final, I feel so good!
By the way, this student aced the final and the course, and, as importantly,   experienced the joy that comes with creating a solution to a challenging problem!
 
 
 
 
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