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I found that the sooner you ditch 'human intuition' in learning maths/physiscs the better you will be at it


I've generally found the opposite. Polemically, a true mathematician can write theorems where every single proof is riddled with errors (actual errors, not just "typos") but all results, building upon each other, are still true; a true physicist can tell you what the result of a calculation will be even if they are unable to actually do the calculation.

Maybe you would call that "a mathematician's/physicist's intuition", rather than "human"?


Related, Terry Tao's blogpost on the development of mathematical intuition: https://terrytao.wordpress.com/career-advice/theres-more-to-...


I think intuition is not something you’re born with, it’s something you build through experience.

The best physicists I know don’t sit down and calculate that often. They rather play with “cartoon pictures” to figure out what problems are interesting and what their solution might look like, and only throw math at the most promising of these problems.




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