mitch_1211 said:
yea exactly, pushing a block to the left and performing work on it is the same as pushing it to the right
This is not really a good analogy. It implies that the sign of a scalar is never important. The sign of scalars are important. In the case of work, the work represents the change in internal energy of whatever system is doing the work. Positive work represents gaining energy and negative work represents losing internal energy.
Consider a block initially moving leftward. Suppose a spring is located to the right of the block.
If the spring pushes the block, the force of the spring is leftward. The work is positive. The block speeds up, gaining kinetic energy. The spring loses tension, losing potential energy.
If the spring pulls the block, the force of the spring is rightward. The work is negative. The block slows down, losing kinetic energy. The spring gets more tense, gaining potential energy.
Technically, a scalar has to transform like a vector. In other words, the sign of the scalar is important. The are single numbers that aren't scalars.
The speed of an object is not a true scalar. Speed is the magnitude of the velocity. Speed is never negative. So technically, it is not a scalar. Similarly, length is also a magnitude of displacement. It is never negative, either.
I think that what you mean is that quantities are the sign is unimportant to quantities which vary with the magnitude of a scalar. The magnitude of a scalar is different from the scalar.
One should not confuse the magnitude of a scalar for the scalar. The scalar varies with sign. The magnitude has one and only one unvarying sign.