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A comprehensive theory of representation for mathematics education
Affiliation:1. University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez, Puerto Rico;2. Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México, Mexico;1. Instituto de Neurociencias, Universidad de Guadalajara, Francisco de Quevedo 180, Col. Arcos Vallarta, Guadalajara, Jalisco 44130, Mexico;2. O.P.D. Hospital Civil de Guadalajara, Calle Coronel Calderón #777, El Retiro, 44280 Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico;1. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, San Diego State University, United States;2. Mathematics and Science Education, San Diego State University, San Diego, United States;3. University of California, San Diego, United States;1. Department of Psychology, LMU Munich, Germany;2. Faculty of Behavioural and Social Sciences, University of Groningen, the Netherlands;3. Mathematics Institute, LMU Munich, Germany
Abstract:Representation is a difficult concept. Behaviorists wanted to get rid of it; many researchers prefer other terms like “conception” or “reasoning” or even “encoding;” and many cognitive science resarchers have tried to avoid the problem by reducing thinking to production rules.There are at least two simple and naive reasons for considering representation as an important subject for scientific study. The first one is that we all experience representation as a stream of internal images, gestures and words. The second one is that the words and symbols we use to communicate do not refer directly to reality but to represented entities: objects, properties, relationships, processes, actions, and constructs, about which there is no automatic agreement between two persons. It is the purpose of this paper to analyse this problem, and to try to connect it with an original analysis of the role of action in representation. The issue is important for mathematics education and even for the epistemology of mathematics, as mathematical concepts have their first roots in the action on, and in the representation of, the physical and social world; even though there may be a great distance today between that pragmatical and empirical source, and the sophisticated concepts of contemporary mathematics.
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