WarPhalange
Crosson said:I think mathematical research should be guided by physical applications, and I think that most people would be surprised by the large number of mathematicians who admit that they don't care if their work ever has any applications. Of course it is fun to prove theorems, and the body of pure mathematics is an amazing accomplishment for humankind. I am aware of all the standard examples e.g. Gauss' work on geometry that was not applied by Einstein until 50 years later etc. But I would ask everyone who defends the existence of pure mathematicians on these grounds to justify studying something like super edge magic graph labelings. How could that ever be useful?
We're using maggots to clean human wounds of rotten flesh. Never say that something will never be useful. Just because you can't think of a use for it, doesn't mean that nobody ever will. That's really arrogant of you.
Also, there's two ways of solving a problem:
1) Trying to make a tool for solving the problem.
2) Looking at tools that already exist to see if one of them will solve your problem.
It often happens that people use tools for purposes that they weren't built for, and still get what they want done. People might never stumble upon an answer to a question because of the mindset the question inherently invokes. Someone trying to solve something else might stumble upon it, though, because they are trying to do something with a different approach.