MATH IS ABSOLUTE
But is it really? I struggle with the simplest math, and I wonder why my brain cannot grasp equations. Yet, I love shows and documentaries on Algorithms, calculating outcomes, the process of processes. Which all makes sense, until I have to try and figure something out. I have horrible math anxiety. Yet there are parts that fascinate me.
I have always struggled with anything that wasn't basic math. College Algebra is the reason I never stuck with college. No matter how hard I tried I just could not do it.
Did you by any chance go through school when then good old fashioned times tables were unpopular? My son suffered that problem, loves maths and science, wanted to study Physics at university, but the fact that basic grounding was missing made the maths hard work because he was spending to much effort on that simple element even though he could understand the higher concepts. Might not be your problem but worth a thought.
I went to school during that era and am now an internationally published computer scientist. I still don't know my times tables by heart, it isn't the holy grail people think it is, I mean memorising something and understanding something are not equal.
@Rufus_Maximus It isn't the be all and end all but knowing it lightens the cognitive load when you are working on complex equations, one less thing to think about. Once you get into quadratics, polynomials, etc. it makes it easier, though graphics calculators also make it a lot easier, I grew up having to rely on log tables, but I've got friends that absolutely kill me at pure maths doing things like trying to crack the million dollar proofs or universal field theory (OK that one is physics and they are playing with quaternaries),
I can only manage much more basic stuff but can wrap my head around the higher stuff. I got into difficulty when I could never remember which way was integration and which was differentiation, could do both but only remembered which way I was going on practical applications like distance speed and acceleration. The pure memory stuff got me but given the basic formulas and transforms can work most trig and first year uni calculus. Same sort of problem as I was suggesting just at a different stage.
Your not the only one, math is the language that explains structure, and all of life has some kind of structure to it, math showed us the way its put together ,I have to use a calculator to do anything anymore, but when I was an electrictain it was always used to calculate voltage ,amperage, watts resistance conduit wire size,ect ,ect, I wish I would have paid more atenchion in school when I was young! It is the universal language of structure in life.
When we think of Maths we tend to think of numbers. But number is only one aspect of things Mathematical. What is really at the heart of Maths is pattern. Both Liebniz and Newton expressed a conviction that the Ancients had a non-numerical system (still waiting to be rediscovered) that was(/is) vastly superior in its expressiveness than the calculus they offered.