Why was the following question closed:
I ask because I cannot find any discussion about this, and yet it was am immensely popular question (196 upvotes (3 downvotes) and 97 favourites). Was it just getting too big?
Why was the following question closed:
I ask because I cannot find any discussion about this, and yet it was am immensely popular question (196 upvotes (3 downvotes) and 97 favourites). Was it just getting too big?
I did vote for closing with the following reasons:
At first I think that this kind of question didn't really fit on this site, as it says in the faq, which questions can I ask here:
- Understanding mathematical concepts and theorems
- Hints on mathematical problems (but please read our FAQ about homework questions)
- History and development of mathematics
- Solving mathematical puzzles
- Software that mathematicians use
Although it might be a nice question (at least a very popular one), I can't see that it fits in one of those categories.
In special it says at what questions shall I not ask here:
You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site and push other questions off the front page.
Your questions should be reasonably scoped. If you can imagine an entire book that answers your question, you’re asking too much.
And I think (and the 100 answers support this) that this totally fits.
I vote to close because I feel the good answers have already been given.
It is unsafe to assume that a question has no more good answers. Keeping things open allows some access to the "long tail" of rare answers.
Personally I vote to close because I feel the good answers have already been given.
The answers from Devdatta Tengshe, LaceySnr, and poke were quite nice, but I've seen angles in a triangle add to 180, the visual Pythagorean theorem proof, and especially $e^{i\pi}=-1$ and $0.9999\ldots = 1$ on this site so many times it gives me headaches. (Just look at this.) I don't criticize the users for posting these answers - they were valid responses to that question, which itself is not a duplicate - but I don't think we need to repeat ourselves anymore, and I don't predict anyone posting new, useful answers. In other words, I voted to close because I think the question ran its course, and we should move on to other things.
I cast one of the five votes to close. Here was my reason:
To me, the question, "What was the first bit of mathematics that made you realize that math is beautiful?" is really similar to the question, "What do you like about math?" or perhaps "What is your favorite concept / proof / aspect of math?"
In my opinion, this level of breadth is too much for this site.