coolul007 said:
-x is different than -2, a signed number. a variable is always treated as (-1)(x), my objection is that -2 is not treated as a signed number, but a negated number. there is a difference.
If you have one of the newer TI84 calculators -2^2 = -4, try it you'll see.
You are tilting against windmills, coolul007. -2^2 is almost universally interpreted as -(2^2), not (-2)^2. About the only thing that gets it wrong and calculate -2^2 as being 4 is Microsoft Excel. However, Excel would also calculate -x^2 as being equal to x^2.
With regard to your earlier comment,
coolul007 said:
Numbers should carry a sign, I believe that is part of the definition of additive inverse, nothing really to do with subtraction( which shouldn't exist).
The additive inverse and subtraction are very closely related. That 0-2=-2 is the definition of -2. The negative integers are the completion of the natural numbers under subtraction.
Look at the very phrase "negative number". It quite literally means "something that isn't a number". (Similarly, the phrases "irrational number" and "imaginary number" have a rather pejorative connotation. "Irrational" = doesn't make a bit of sense, "imaginary" = whimsical or fictional.)
We humans have been counting for tens of thousands of years (e.g., see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishango_bone). The development of zero as a number and consequently the negative integers as numbers was rather recent compared to that tens of thousands of years history of counting. The Babylonians (and others) used zero as a placeholder (e.g., 9007) but did not have a concept of zero as a number in and of itself. The *only* civilization that properly came up with the concept of zero as a number, and hence things like -1 and -9007 as numbers, was the (Asian) Indian civilization around 500 AD. While those Indian arithmeticians tried hard to hold their concepts as a religious secret, their mathematical inventions eventually did escape those religious confines to spread to Arabia and then to Europe.
The things that you think of as numbers, the reals, are a very recent invention compared to the long history of counting.