Ivan92 said:
My answer isn't to be taken as fact, more it is to be an opinion based on my surroundings and experiences. When I mean "everyday lives", I mean the life of an average person (who does not deal with math or science). I know math can be applied to many different applications to improve tech/science and do agree that it has an impact on the world, but not everyone's life (especially everyday). You do not see everyday people talking about such papers, proofs, or theorems in that matter.
nor do you see "everyday people" talking about engineering issues, or "everyday people" discussing chiaroscuro techniques...unless you happen to be one of those people in YOUR "everyday".
this idea that "everyday" life or the "real world" is somehow divorced from the "theoretical world" that scientists and mathematicians inhabit is just so much poppycock. it's insulting to mathematicians, and it's insulting to "everyday people". yes, any field you care to mention has its own arcane secrets, things that "most" people do not concern themselves with, but that has nothing to do with mathematics, but just with the fact that everyone can't learn everything, all the time.
the hidden agenda behind most discussions of this kind is: "not relevant to me (or straw man substitute), therefore: not relevant". wake up and smell the coffee, limited relevance, or unknown relevance is not the same as NO relevance.
but, even granted some hypothetical "average person" (who by stipulation is not a scientist or engineer, or actuary, or banker, or accountant, or carpenter, or mathematics instructor , or...gee, i hope we have some actual people left, by the time we're done excluding all these folks), the utility of mathematics is so pervasive, we have even devised a special language for it (called arithmetic, or if you're sufficiently educated, algebra) which is deemed necessary knowledge by almost every educational institution on the planet.
and furthermore, even if you are not formally acquainted with any form of the propositional calculus, should you display a basic ignorance of its underlying principles, you will never be taken seriously by anyone who does (yes, if you make an illogical argument, people will laugh at you).
i will make the bold claim that the line between mathematical theory, and mathematical application is so vague, as to be non-existent. the fact that some people are not interested in math, does not mean it's uninteresting.
furthermore, the idea that something ought to have pragmatic value in order to have intrinsic value is such horse manure. we have an entire entertainment industry existing in direct defiance of such a notion (not to mention the world of sports). human beings are NOT tools, existing in order to "get useful stuff done". to reduce the worth of an endeavor to its utility, is to take a shallow and limited view of the possibilities inherent in life. here's hoping those of you who think in such a fashion fail to breed.