I've found it's hard to teach myself math without an objective. If I don't have a specific question I'm trying to answer, my eyes just start to skip over equations, trying to get to the "good part". Pretty soon I've left the boring parts I know far behind. I've also skipped the less boring parts that i sorta know, and now I'm skipping forward even faster because I only understand half of what I'm reading. I wind up skimming the whole book, but not really absorbing much of it. I think I'd do better if I was planning on discussing what I'm reading with others.
So here's my idea: a math club. We pick a book, and we read it together. Every (week | two weeks | month) we read the next chapter in the book, and then we meet up and discuss it. Anything we can't figure out on our own, we discuss with the other members of the math club until we get it. The impending deadline of having to actually explain the material to other humans servs to focus and motive the reading.
Anybody interested?
Possible topics:
- Probability Theory.
- Lecture Notes on the Curry Howard Isomorphism
- Proof Theory: The First Step into Impredicativity
- The Geometry of Ordinary Variational Equations
- or anything else. math is fun!
EDIT: Benito made a facebook group so we can get organized and do this! see: http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/h5y/lw_study_group_facebook_page/
Yeah, I agree.
I think that we should make a list of everyone who wants to join, split them into groups of not more than 10 based on age, and every mini-group will decide what they want to learn and go at a pace that matches their background and ability.