The Chinese Room Argument
was first published in a 1980 article by American philosopher John Searle. He imagines himself alone in a room following a computer program for responding to Chinese characters slipped under the door. Searle understands nothing of Chinese, and yet, by following the program for manipulating symbols and numerals just as a computer does, he sends appropriate strings of Chinese characters back out under the door, and this leads those outside to mistakenly suppose there is a Chinese speaker in the room.
So it was with me and math as an undergraduate due to a history dating back to age 10. I hit college being very good at manipulating symbols whose meaning I was never given to understand. I grew up 45 miles from the nearest synagogue. My fanatically religious grandfather thought it was better not to attend services at all than to drive up there on the Sabbath. My father was a young lawyer building a practice, and couldn’t close his office on Friday. So my he taught me how to read Hebrew letters and reproduce how they sound, so I could read from the Torah at my Bar Mitzvah (which I did comprehending nothing). Since I’m musical, learning the cantillations under the letters wasn’t a problem.
I’ve always loved math and solving problems of the plug and chug variety was no problem. I’d become adept years earlier at this type of thing thanks to my religiously rigid grandfather. It was the imposter syndrome writ large. I’ve never felt like this about organic chemistry and it made a good deal of intuitive sense the first time I ran into it. For why have a look at — https://luysii.wordpress.com/2012/09/11/why-math-is-hard-for-me-and-organic-chemistry-is-easy/
If there is anything in math full of arcane symbols calling for lots of mechanical manipulation, it is the differential geometry and tensors needed to understand General relativity. So I’ve plowed through a lot of it, but still don’t see what’s really going on.
Enter Tristan Needham’s book “Visual Differential Geometry and Forms”. I’ve written about it several times
and Here — https://luysii.wordpress.com/2022/03/07/visual-differential-geometry-and-forms-q-take-3/
If you’ve studied any math, his approach will take getting used to as it’s purely visual and very UNalgebraic. But what is curvature but a geometric concept.
So at present I’m about 80 pages away from completing Needham’s discussion of general relativity. I now have an intuitive understanding of curvature, torsion, holonomy, geodesics and the Gauss map that I never had before. It is very slow going, but very clear. Hopefully I’ll make it to p. 333. Wish me luck.