最近的最近
三点小不爽.
1. 工作上. 项目进展很慢且目标不明确, 每天在研究论文, 可是效率很低.
2. 学业上. 收到第一个据信, CMU的. 虽然意料之中, 因为在国内它喜欢招THU的学生, 况且我那GPA……但怎么说这也是跟我背景最match的一间学校. 不管如何, 如果没有尝试申请它肯定会留下遗憾. 同时我结束三无.
3. 感情上. 最近跟小ran相处得不是很好, 似乎我的话总是在不经意中伤害她. 也许是我一个人生活了太久, 已经有点不适应总是要考虑对方的感受; 也许我是一个极度自私的人, 只会汲取不会给予. 研究了pongba的[BetterExplained]亲密关系中的冲突解决后, anyway, 我正在努力尝试改变.
还想说的一件事是, 你把博客关了我很难过. 今天打开iGoogle, 发现你博客的feed竟然是Information is temporarily unavailable, 进去后发现你连留言板都撤了. 一开始我以为是昨天我在开blog一周年零两个月差五天中的留言伤害了你, 我本想跟你解释我说的话仅仅是指我自己, 如果扯上别人, 那可能会招来至少两亿网民的口水, 我可担当不起. 每个人的价值观都不一样.
后来我想到其实你这是下定决心要好好利用时间, 补充知识, 改变目前的生活状态. 一方面我感到很欣慰, 因为我喜欢看到你聪明的, 认真的和懂事的一面, 而不是过度焦虑的, 感到无聊的. (我现在能充分完全理解你的焦虑和面临的压力, 即使是我面对你的处境也不可能表现得毫无烦恼. 但我相信你, 相信我们会一起度过这段最艰难的部分. Just keep hope and improving. Hope is a good thing. ) 另一方面我很难过, 因为只要能上网, 我就喜欢去看看你的博客更新了没有. 你的文字能带给我思考, 欢乐, 能让我和你的朋友们了解你的近况.
我认为有三点理由你应该把博客重新启用:
1. 我已经提到过. 大部分时候博客是你跟我和朋友们联系的纽带, 关闭它之后可以想象你的生活会变得相对封闭. 久而久之, 你变得跟我一样沉默寡言那我俩呆一起的时候不完了?
2. 这是宣泄情绪的好地方. 其实我知道你写一篇博文并没有想象中消耗时间. 而且你可以控制好发文的频率. 况且, 我知道最近你很需要宣泄情绪和压力.
3. 博客不仅可以记录生活和发泄情绪, 而且是一个总结生活和学习的好地方. 每隔一段时间把自己学到的知识和生活总结总结, 不仅可以作为人生发展的刻度供日后参考, 也可以作为分享帮助更多的人进步. 这点可以参考pongba的博客. 我从他的总结中学到很多知识, 同时也引导我去了解认知心理学这个有意思的领域.
真的希望你能好好考虑一下. 当然我尊重你的选择^^
看pongba的博客总是能让我发现有意义, 有价值和有趣的东西~今天他介绍的一个博客BetterExplained简直太棒了! 一打开我就流连了好几个小时. 这个博客的作者Kalid喜欢用最直观的最简单的方法解释数学, 计算机, 金融等各方面的知识, 就比如e这个常数吧, 它除了等于2.718281828459外有什么意义? 它到底是什么? 看完这篇文章我觉得白学了这么多年数学. 然后我不得不转一篇文章过来, 因为它实在是讲得太好了! E文不好的同学, 可以用我们博客右边的google小工具来帮忙阅读(发现那工具在混合语言的文章不太好使, 要正常使用只好点进去Google Translate的网页了). 建议尽量看原文, 因为其实写得非常生动易懂: ).
[转]建立起对数学的直觉
Developing Your Intuition For Math
Our initial exposure to an idea shapes our intuition. And our intuition impacts how much we enjoy a subject. What do I mean?
Suppose we want to define a “cat”:
- Caveman definition: A furry animal with claws, teeth, a tail, 4 legs, that purrs when happy and hisses when angry…
- Evolutionary definition: Mammalian descendants of a certain species (F. catus), sharing certain characteristics…
- Modern definition: You call those definitions? Cats are animals sharing the following DNA: ACATACATACATACAT…
The modern definition is precise, sure. But is it the best? Is it what you’d teach a child learning the word? Does it give better insight into the “catness” of the animal? Not really. The modern definition is useful, but after getting an understanding of what a cat is. It shouldn’t be our starting point.
Unfortunately, math understanding seems to follow the DNA pattern. We’re taught the modern, rigorous definition and not the insights that led up to it. We’re left with arcane formulas (DNA) but little understanding of what the idea is.
Let’s approach ideas from a different angle. I imagine a circle: the center is the idea you’re studying, and along the outside are the facts describing it. We start in one corner, with one fact or insight, and work our way around to develop our understanding. Cats have common physical traits leads to Cats have a common ancestor leads to A species can be identified by certain portions of DNA. Aha! I can see how the modern definition evolved from the caveman one.
But not all starting points are equal. The right perspective makes math click — and the mathematical “cavemen” who first found an idea often had an enlightening viewpoint. Let’s learn how to build our intuition.
What is a Circle?
Time for a math example: How do you define a circle?

There are seemingly countless definitions. Here’s a few:
- The most symmetric 2-d shape possible
- The shape that gets the most area for the least perimeter (see the isoperimeter property)
- All points in a plane the same distance from a given point (drawn with a compass, or a pencil on a string)
- The points (x,y) in the equation x2 + y2 = r2 (analytic version of the geometric definition above)
- The points in the equation r* sin(t), r* cos(t), for all t (really analytic version)
- The shape whose tangent line is always perpendicular to the position vector (physical interpretation)
The list goes on, but here’s the key: the facts all describe the same idea! It’s like saying 1, one, uno, ein, “the solution to 2x + 3 = 5″ or “the number of noses on your face” — just different names for the idea of “unity”.
But these initial descriptions are important — they shape our intuition. Because we see circles in the real world before the classroom, we understand their “roundness”. No matter what fancy equation we see (x2 + y2 = r2), we know deep inside that a circle is “round”. If we graphed that equation and it appeared square, or lopsided, we’d know there was a mistake.
As children, we learn the “caveman” definition of a circle (a really round thing), which gives us a comfortable intuition. We can see that every point on our “round thing” is the same distance from the center. x2 + y2 = r2 is the analytic way of expressing that fact (using the Pythagorean theorem for distance). We started in one corner, with our intuition, and worked our way around to the formal definition.
Other ideas aren’t so lucky. Do we instinctively see the growth of e, or is it an abstract definition? Do we realize the rotation of i, or is it an artificial, useless idea?
A Strategy For Developing Insight
I still have to remind myself about the deeper meaning of e and i — which seems as absurd as “remembering” that a circle is round or what a cat looks like! It should be the natural insight we start with.
Missing the big picture drives me crazy: math is about ideas — formulas are just a way to express them. Once the central concept is clear, the equations snap into place. Here’s a strategy that has helped me:
- Step 1: Find the central theme of a math concept. This can be difficult, but try starting with its history. Where was the idea first used? What was the discoverer doing? This use may be different from our modern interpretation and application.
- Step 2: Explain a property/fact using the theme. Use the theme to make an analogy to the formal definition. If you’re lucky, you can translate the math equation (x2 + y2 = r^2) into a plain-english statement (”All points the same distance from the center”).
- Step 3: Explore related properties using the same theme. Once you have an analogy or interpretation that works, see if it applies to other properties. Sometimes it will, sometimes it won’t (and you’ll need a new insight), but you’d be surprised what you can discover.
Let’s try it out.
A Real Example: Understanding e
Understanding the number e has been a major battle. e appears all of science, and has numerous definitions, yet rarely clicks in a natural way. Let’s build some insight around this idea. The following section will have several equations, which are simply ways to describe ideas. Even if the equation is gibberish, there’s a plain-english idea behind it.
Here’s a few popular definitions of e:

The first step is to find a theme. Looking at e’s history, it seems it has something to do wtih growth or interest rates. e was discovered when performing business calculations (not abstract mathematical conjectures) so “interest” (growth) is a possible theme.
Let’s look at the first definition, in the upper left. The key jump, for me, was to realize how much this looked like the formula for compound interest. In fact, it is the interest formula when you compound 100% interest for 1 unit of time, compounding as fast as possible.
- Definition 1: Define e as 100% compound growth at the smallest increment possible.
The article on e describes this interpretation.
Let’s look at the second definition: an infinite series of terms, getting smaller and smaller. What could this be?

After noodling this over using the theme of “interest” we see this definitions shows the components of compound interest. Now, insights don’t come instantly — this insight might strike after brainstorming “What could 1 + 1 + 1/2 + 1/6 + …” represent when talking about growth?”
Well, the first term (1 = 1/0!, remembering that 0! is 1) is your principal, the original amount. The next term (1 = 1/1!) is the “direct” interest you earned — 100% of 1. The next term (0.5 = 1/2!) is the amount of money your interest made (”2nd level interest”). The following term (.1666 = 1/3!) is your “3rd-level interest” — how much money your interest’s interest earned!
Money earns money, which earns money, which earns money, and so on — the sequence separates out these contributions (read the article on e to see how Mr. Blue, Mr. Green & Mr. Red grow independently). There’s much more to say, but that’s the “growth-focused” understanding of that idea.
- Definition 2: Define e by the contributions each piece of interest makes
Neato.
Now to the 3rd, and shortest definition. What does it mean? Instead of thinking “derivative” (which turns your brain into equation-crunching mode), think about what it means. The feeling of the equation. Make it your friend.

It’s the calculus way of saying “Your rate of growth is equal to your current amount”. Well, growing at your current amount would be a 100% interest rate, right? And by always growing it means you are always calculating interest — it’s another way of describing continuously compound interest!
- Definition 3: Define e by as a function always growing by 100% of your current value
Nice — e is the number where you’re always growing by exactly your current amount (100%), not 1% or 200%.
Time for the last definition — it’s a tricky one. Here’s my interpretation: Instead of describing how much you grew, why not say how long it took?
If you’re at 1 and growing at 100%, it takes 1 unit of time to get from 1 to 2. But once you’re at 2, and growing 100%, it means you’re growing at 2 units per unit time! So it only takes 1/2 unit of time to go from 2 to 3. Going from 3 to 4 only takes 1/3 unit of time, and so on.
The time needed to grom from 1 to A is the time from 1 to 2, 2 to 3, 3 to 4… and so on, until you get to A. The first definition defines the natural log (ln) as shorthand for this “time to grow” computation.
ln(a) is simply the time to grow from 1 to a. We then say that “e” is the number that takes exactly 1 unit of time to grow to. Said another way, e is is the amount of growth after waiting exactly 1 unit of time!
- Definition 4: Define the time needed to grow continuously from 1 to as ln(a). e is the amount of growth you have after 1 unit of time.
Whablamo! These are four different ways to describe the mysterious e. Once we have the core idea (”e is about 100% continuous growth”), the crazy equations snap into place — it’s “possible” to translate calculus into English. Math is about ideas!
What’s the Moral?
In math class, we often start with the last, most complex idea. It’s no wonder we’re confused — we’re showing DNA and expecting students to see the cat.
I’ve learned a few lessons from this approach, and it underlies how I understand and explain math:
- Search for insights and apply them. That first intuitive insight can help everything else snap into place. Start with a definition that makes sense and “walk around the circle” to find others.
- Develop mental toughness. Banging your head against an idea is no fun. If it doesn’t click, come at it from different angles. There’s another book, another article, another person who explains it in a way that makes sense to you.
- It’s ok to be visual. We think of math as rigid and analytic — but visual interpretations are ok! Do what develops your understanding. Imaginary numbers were puzzling until their geometric interpretation came to light, decades after their initial discovery. Looking at equations all day didn’t help mathematicians “get” what they were about.
Math becomes difficult and discouraging when we focus on definitions over understanding. Remember that the modern definition is the most advanced step of thought, not necessarily the starting point. Don’t be afraid to approach a concept from a funny angle — figure out the plain-English sentence behind the equation. Happy math.
URL to article: http://betterexplained.com/articles/developing-your-intuition-for-math/
6 Responses to “最近的最近”
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跟你的留言没有关系。
博客不是关了,只是没有公开发表。
也不是你想的那些原因,我从来没有觉得写博客影响自己好好学习天天向上了。
还有,你喜欢聪明认真懂事并不代表我就是这样的人,要我时时刻刻装成这样我很累。
小涛,你博客我看不到,很郁闷。
我也有看你博客的习惯。。。。
我说…我喜欢你的那一面, 我只是说喜欢你的某方面, 我就这么说了而已!!! 时时刻刻装成这样??
只有一件事我要求你做, 其他的你做回你自己, 你也一定要做回你自己. 这件事就是别挖掘我说话时(包括动作)本没有的潜语义. 这会弄得我不敢说话.
OK, 不管什么原因, 我和sky对你博客不对外公开表示难过.(注意: 这里我并没有想你,希望你,要求你把博客公开. 纯粹是一件事发生了,引起了某人产生某种情绪, 就这么件简单的事情.)
筱筱,我也有看你博客的习惯,看不到你的博客我也很郁闷,甚至连留言的地方也没有了,我就跑这里留言了。不管怎么样,开博吧开博吧,把话都说出来就好了。
记录心情很好的