chiro said:
Well if you are a Sci-Fi fan, the answer would be 42:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrases_from_The_Hitchhiker's_Guide_to_the_Galaxy
If you were a Bill and Ted fan (or extremely fascinated with sexual innuendo) the answer would be 69:
If were some obscure Indian mathematician you answer would be 1729:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1729_(number)
But since I'm none of those people I am going to go with the advice of Leopold Kronecker which states: "God made the integers, all else is the work of man". We can create anything else with the integers (even if we can't actually evaluate it), so based on this the first number should be 0 or nothing at all.
1729, that famous taxi-cab number. it's not a very interesting number, you know :)
my point isn't to "re-invent" or "re-define" what the first number should be.
my point is...ok, there was another thread somewhere else on these forums, about whether the complex plane was "all the numbers". before one answers that question, one would do well to think about what a number might be. my answer would be that what a number is, depends on what you plan to do with it. I'm a big believer in "contextual truth" not absolutes. use the right tools for the job at hand, whether it be accounting, slicing and dicing, patterning, or just having fun.
i believe the best way for people to learn anything, is to think about what they are learning. this requires striking out blind, sometimes. some things work better than others, isn't it better to see for yourself, than to just take someone else's word for it?
i saw a video once about a guy who said that a textbook is just about the worst thing you can use to teach math. the best way is to try to solve a problem, and use what little you know, to find out more. often, there are several paths to solving a problem. the person who knows that, from experience, is going to be the more skilled problem-solver. the same guy also said homework was a bad idea. if you don't teach when you teach, what are you there for? the book will always be around, but...it's just words on paper. ideas...those things are alive, if one doesn't have the skill to make the ideas BEHIND the words dance, perhaps another line of employment would be better for all concerned.
there is a quote spivak used in his calculus book which i adore:
"a man ought to read just as his inclination leads him. for what he learns as a task will do him little good."