Posted: May 05, 2019 9:05 am
by tuco
This is the essay:

The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences - http://www.dartmouth.edu/~matc/MathDram ... igner.html

It opens with:

THERE IS A story about two friends, who were classmates in high school, talking about their jobs. One of them became a statistician and was working on population trends. He showed a reprint to his former classmate. The reprint started, as usual, with the Gaussian distribution and the statistician explained to his former classmate the meaning of the symbols for the actual population, for the average population, and so on. His classmate was a bit incredulous and was not quite sure whether the statistician was pulling his leg. "How can you know that?" was his query. "And what is this symbol here?" "Oh," said the statistician, "this is pi." "What is that?" "The ratio of the circumference of the circle to its diameter." "Well, now you are pushing your joke too far," said the classmate, "surely the population has nothing to do with the circumference of the circle."



and follows later with this:


Most of what will be said on these questions will not be new; it has probably occurred to most scientists in one form or another. My principal aim is to illuminate it from several sides. The first point is that the enormous usefulness of mathematics in the natural sciences is something bordering on the mysterious and that there is no rational explanation for it. Second, it is just this uncanny usefulness of mathematical concepts that raises the question of the uniqueness of our physical theories. In order to establish the first point, that mathematics plays an unreasonably important role in physics, it will be useful to say a few words on the question, "What is mathematics?", then, "What is physics?", then, how mathematics enters physical theories, and last, why the success of mathematics in its role in physics appears so baffling. Much less will be said on the second point: the uniqueness of the theories of physics. A proper answer to this question would require elaborate experimental and theoretical work which has not been undertaken to date.


for those who are not willing to read further, Ctrl+F "why" = 2 hits:

.. why the success of mathematics in its role in physics appears so baffling.
.. we do not know why our theories work so well.


Now, can we imagine a universe where pi wasn't like the pi we know? Of course, we can. Would our math work in such a universe and why?

Does anyone know the story of integral? Why and how it was invented or discovered? Or Pythagoras theorem?