Motivated by Why Is Intuition so Important to Mathematicians but Missing from Mathematics Education? $^{1}$ by Leona Burton, I would like to learn about specific ideas or strategies to attain mathematical intuition, which I exemplify in my Answer below. Many textbooks only present definitions, theorems, and proofs, without any explanation of the intuition or motivation behind a definition or theorem, or the idea of the proof. I illustrate by examples the meaning of "intuition":
● $\{\emptyset\} $ can be intuited as a box containing nothing a box containing an empty box.
● The Fundamenal Theorem of Calculus can be intuited, via a geometric picture, by interpreting the interpretation of $g(x) = \int_a^{x} f(t) \, dt$ as the area under the graph of $f$ and $g(x)$ as the "area so far" function from $a$ to $x$
● The Jacobian Determinant for a transformation can be intuited by approximating the image region of the new variable with a parallelogram determined by secant vectors.
Despite the quote by Henri Poincaré ("It is by logic that we prove, but by intuition that we discover.") on the averred significance of intuition in math, the aforesaid article astounds me:
"None of the mathematicians talked about working on their intuitions to improve their frequency or reliability..."
"Intuition, insight or instinct was seen by most of the seventy mathematicians whom I interviewed as a necessary component for developing knowing. Yet none of them offered any comments on whether, and how, they themselves had had their intuitions nurtured as part of their learning process."
"These practising research mathematicians speak with such enthusiasm and joy of their practices. However, with the notable exception of the work of Fischbein, accounts of the deliberate nurturing of intuition and insight is absent from the mathematics education literature, even from process-based research, and, despite the claim for the centrality of it to mathematical work, it is equally absent from practices with students..."
I haven't read the whole article that are are referencing.I
alsodon't know the philosophical definition(s) of intuition. As mentioned in the comments, the concept of intuition can probably be debated. And so, giving an answer runs the risk of someone disagreeing simply because they understand the concept differently than you do.That said, maybe the answer to the question (the title of the article)
has an easy answer. Maybe it is simply because intuition can't be taught directly. How would you teach it? Intuition is (in my understanding) something that is dependent on the subject. And I don't just mean depending on whether it is mathematics or physics, but also dependent on what type of mathematics or physics that you do.
I believe that intuition comes from doing. The reason that a veteran carpenter is doesn't need a ruler for everything is because he/she has a good feeling (intuition if you will) about what he/she is making. Where did he/she get that feeling? Answer: From having done carpentry for a very long time.
Likewise, if you want your students to have good insight into how to do integrals, you can simply make them do a lot of integrals. That way they build up their database of integrals that they can compare a new unfamiliar integral to.
One of the people interviewed in the article says:
Now, one can of course choose specific types of programs to practice with. The choices made will depend on what skills/techniques that you are trying to teach the students. So in that sense you can teach intuition by exposing students to a great variety of problems. You can also try to dissect the solutions and explain why in hindsight the problem was solved the way it was.
Another thing: Another person quoted in the article says:
So maybe if you want to cultivate intuition, you could try to cultivate an enjoyment of doing math? Might that be a connection?