EDIT: FFS why does this subject always get people frothing at the mouth before they even read the main point stated, only to go on and accidentally agree with it eventually? Pls read first before getting mad at stuff that I explicitly argued against.

EDIT 2: OK apparently there's still miscommunication, and I think the 1st edit somehow made it worse. When I say "useful" I put it in scare quotes on purpose and as I clarify in the 1st, 4th and 5th paragraps, it is NOT about value but about practical/technological utility.

I originally posted this on R*ddit to an audience of math nerds (so be warned that it is written with reddit STEMlords in mind) because there was a relevant convo going on and it would be fun to also have it here.

Sure, there is a lot of modern math that is practically useful, but the majority of pure math really isn't "useful' in any way, shape or form for now, and probably won't be any time soon, possibly forever. Like, even areas which are apparently "useful", like computer science, is full of things that have absolutely 0 practical utility and are solely of academic interest. Whether P does or doesn't equal NP doesn't really matter to anyone doing practical work. People wouldn't get upset about their discipline getting slighted or whatever if this stupid idea that scientific research should have "practical application" (which generally means "someone can sell it for money") hadn't proliferated, starting from schools.

Even when someone finds an "application" through some kind of far fetched (or not so far fetched) reasoning, it's some application to, like, highly theoretical physics that may or may not actually have something to do with the real world, and even if it does, it is only relevant in extremely niche experimental circumstances to the extent that it can't ever conceivably lead to technological progress. And even IF it does, sometimes it's just progress relevant only to more research about more stuff without application.

So even then you have to resort to saying something like "the result is not useful but maybe one of the methods used to prove it can be used for something else", and then that something else turns out to also not be useful but again "maybe one of the methods used to find that something else is useful for another something else and that other something else is useful for another other something else and then that other other something else has a practical application that is only relevant to research, but then maybe that relates to some other other other...", etc and it gets kind of silly. That or someone says something abstract like "it's useless now but it may be useful some time!". Maybe. Or maybe not.

In the end of the day the same arguments could be used to justify anything being useful via some contrived butterfly effect style conjecture. This of course is usually done because otherwise people can't get grant money otherwise, governments demand that research will produce results they can use to blow up people or sell stuff. Also the result of a bad educational system that emphasizes this kind of "usefulness", which therefore renders it unable to convince students that something is worth learning unless it is "useful". Of course "why should I learn this if it's not useful to me" is a very valid concern of students, but the problem is somewhere else. First, schools DON'T really teach any of the stuff that is useful and interesting to most people. If they did, then math would get a lot less attacks on that front. Schools teach with 30% of the students in mind, the ones who will really apply the things they learned. The other 70% can just go to prison or whatever as far as the educational system is concerned. Second, schools are very boring and antagonistic towards kids and since kids are miserable learning stuff, they need extra justification to learn them. Third, the schools themselves teach kids to think like that so it's no surprise that they do. Fourth, school math mostly sucks and is super boring for most people.

So yes, most modern pure math is indeed "useless". That is not the issue. The issue is, why does this matter? Why is it bad? Should it be bad? I don't think so. It's a false idea that gets perpetuated at many levels starting from school. But then there is the issue of mathematics being very exclusionary and distant from most people, which makes it harder for them to care, which brings us to the issue of outreach but whatever, that's a different matter.

      • a_dog [any,he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        it’s true man. art is boring and meaningless, and music is totally overrated.

          • a_dog [any,he/him]
            ·
            4 years ago

            I don’t engage with art or listen to music. Finally left that shit in 2020.

            It’s weird how people pretend to enjoy art/music and find deep meaning in them. Like art is pretty pictures (or not even that), and music is neat sounds. But people pretend they can just sit and enjoy them and find deep meaning in them, like they were on LSD all the time.

            They’re fine as background decoration, but they’re powerfully boring as a primary activity. And you can’t go look at Starry Night or listen to some Bob Dylan and honestly tell me that it’s meaningful.

            • Septbear [love/loves]
              ·
              4 years ago

              You need to accept other people have different experiences from you mate. They are not pretending.

              • garbology [he/him]
                ·
                edit-2
                4 years ago

                He's been doing this for at least a month. Either he's 100% committed to the bit or he will never be convinced because he thinks literally the ENTIRE world is lying about this.

                Also you can't deny how effective a troll this is. Look at all the replies!

                • a_dog [any,he/him]
                  ·
                  edit-2
                  4 years ago

                  the entire world is lying

                  yeah it’s kinda like people who pretend to get something out of prayer

                  • Pezevenk [he/him]
                    hexagon
                    ·
                    4 years ago

                    Have you considered that perhaps they do get some kind of feeling out of prayer?

                    Also lmao

                • Septbear [love/loves]
                  ·
                  edit-2
                  4 years ago

                  Could be. Could be a depressed teenager who needs to learn empathy and realise not having emotions is not healthy. I remember thinking similar things in my youth.

                  • a_dog [any,he/him]
                    ·
                    4 years ago

                    I have empathy and emotions, I just don’t pretend to be on LSD all the time.

              • a_dog [any,he/him]
                ·
                4 years ago

                lmbo I’m not mentally ill just because I don’t pretend to enjoy boring stuff

            • TrumanShow_IRL [none/use name]
              ·
              edit-2
              4 years ago

              find deep meaning in them

              https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/12031212/Scientists-find-link-between-people-impressed-by-wise-sounding-profound-quotes-and-low-intelligence.html

              like they were on LSD all the time.

              Schizophrenia is not unnatural, it's actually the norm of human cognition. Neural connections between the lobes go bzzzzzz

            • sysgen [none/use name,they/them]
              ·
              4 years ago

              You're describing amusia/anesthetia.

              I experienced it a few times as aurae for migraines. Neither you nor them are delusional.