komponisto comments on The Truth About Mathematical Ability - LessWrong
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Indeed, the mathematical profession itself relies on this for the training of its members, because it doesn't know how to train conceptual understanding directly -- as described candidly by Ravi Vakil:
I seem to be unusual (among people attracted to advanced mathematics, but perhaps not so much in the LW cluster) in being mostly unable to tolerate such an approach.
My inability to deal with this approach is a good part of why I switched away from number theory after about three semesters of graduate school (I got my PhD in another area of math). The expectation that students would learn the advanced material via "fake it till you make it" was endlessly frustrating to me and actively bad for my learning and mental health.
To be sure, there's some of this in most areas of math, but my admittedly limited impression is that the situation is worse in number theory and algebraic geometry than in some other fields.
This is a really good quote, thank you.
"Young man, in mathematics you don't understand things, you just get used to them!" -- John von Neumann
In synthetic approaches to mathematical subjects, it's not necessarily meaningful to ask what a mathematical object "is", or "what's going on". It's not about things being less than rigorous - rather, all that matters is the axioms and rules of inference you get to use in that particular area. ISTM that extending "tendrils of knowledge" can be modeled as making such 'synthetic' inferences, whereas backfilling involves finding different models of the same theories, to make conceptual understanding more feasible.