With this in mind, to what do you attribute your success?
Well, looking back I have to attribute a lot of my perception of success with blindness, in the sense that 5-6 year old me thought he was a hot math talent because he knew about integers when the teacher was teaching the class about natural numbers. (I still remember raging against the claim that the right answer was "you can't subtract 3 from 2!" instead of "negative 1!") From what I can tell from looking at curriculum online, that's ~5 years ahead of schedule but I'd interpret that as the curriculum putting it late (though, on reflection, that could be Dunning-Kruger).
I remember jumping ahead of (well, deeper than- below?) the curriculum frequently, and suspect that it had different causes in different circumstances. Rapid calculation is probably just high g, but rapid perception of concepts and connections probably has something to do with intuition or vision that I find difficult to articulate.
I've also never been particularly good at explaining why I know what I know with regards to math- from refusing the step through the algebra when I could solve a problem in my head, to avoiding college classes which were primarily about proving that methods worked (i.e. calculus the second time around) rather than introducing new methods. I have, through deliberate practice, gotten better at writing proofs in the last year or two, but still regularly come across simple theorems where I say "I know X is true, but don't know how to show X is true."
I do think I would have been more successful in a Moore method environment which is designed to teach a deep understanding of mathematics- it seems likely to me_now that me_past would have learned/wanted to care about rigor much earlier in that sort of environment, and would have kept pushing my math boundaries much more uniformly.
I've been wondering how useful it is for the typical academically strong high schooler to learn math deeply. Here by "learn deeply" I mean "understanding the concepts and their interrelations" as opposed to learning narrow technical procedures exclusively.
My experience learning math deeply
When I started high school, I wasn't interested in math and I wasn't good at my math coursework. I even got a D in high school geometry, and had to repeat a semester of math.
I subsequently became interested in chemistry, and I thought that I might become a chemist, and so figured that I should learn math better. During my junior year of high school, I supplemented the classes that I was taking by studying calculus on my own, and auditing a course on analytic geometry. I also took physics concurrently.
Through my studies, I started seeing the same concepts over and over again in different contexts, and I became versatile with them, capable of fluently applying them in conjunction with one another. This awakened a new sense of awareness in me, of the type that Bill Thurston described in his essay Mathematics Education:
I understood the physical world, the human world, and myself in a way that I had never before. Reality seemed full of limitless possibilities. Those months were the happiest of my life to date.
More prosaically, my academic performance improved a lot, and I found it much easier to understand technical content (physics, economics, statistics etc.) ever after.
So in my own case, learning math deeply had very high returns.
How generalizable is this?
I have an intuition that many other people would benefit a great deal from learning math deeply, but I know that I'm unusual, and I'm aware of the human tendency to implicitly assume that others are similar to us. So I would like to test my beliefs by soliciting feedback from others.
Some ways in which learning math deeply can help are:
Some arguments against learning math deeply being useful are:
I'd be grateful to anyone who's able to expand on these three considerations, or who offers additional considerations against the utility of learning math deeply. I would also be interested in any anecdotal evidence about benefits (or lack thereof) that readers have received from learning math deeply.