Who Decided That We Should Round Up?

May 14

Who Decided That We Should Round Up?

On the heels of my question about the Order of Operations, I ask this: who decided that we should round up when something is in the middle? Why does 1.5 round up to 2? Why couldn’t it round down to 1?

While this may sound stupid, I’m looking for a mathematical rule that was arbitrary. I’m looking for a rule that’s not based in mathematics, but is instead rooted solely in a need for consistency.

Is this such a rule?


Comments

by iii,   May 14, 2007 10:49 PM  

which way do you round 0?

or, to make it more obvious:

5.0, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.4 => 5

5.9, 5.8, 5.7, 5.8 => 6

which way should 5.5 go, if you want to keep things balanced?

==========================================

i think your greater question of looking for math rules that are arbitrary bypasses something about the nature of mathematics. it's all arbitrary rules, that happen to behave interestingly when you poke at them enough. math is a thought exercise - it is an abstraction. mathematicians make up rules that allow them to manipulate those abstractions in useful ways.


by iii,   May 14, 2007 10:52 PM  

(err, that second 5.8 should have been 5.6)


by ,   May 15, 2007 12:25 AM  

Rounding up isn't a mathematical rule anyway, it's a convention - and not the only one. In commerce, sometimes folks round from everything above .4 up. In working with columns of figures, I was taught to round to the nearest even number, in order to minimize creep.

If you're looking for interesting arbitrary mathematical rules, try 0! = 1, "by definition".


by iii,   May 15, 2007 12:25 AM  

I?m looking for a mathematical rule that was arbitrary.

hah!

i've got it!

it's a notational shorthand that if you push two things together without any operators in between them, you multiply them: 3x = 3*x.

completely arbitrary, and potentially confusing two people who are learning their way around operators and notation.


by Peter,   May 15, 2007 6:45 AM  

I think rounding up came from dealing with money, where it would mean more profitable for the person setting the price.. :-) On a scale of 0.1 to 1.0 there seems to be only 5 that rounds down and 6 that rounds up. I've heard of a rule - again, arbitrary

0.0 to 0.4 rounds down 0.6 to 1.0 rounds up 0.5 rounds up if the whole part is even, and rounds down otherwise.


by Deane,   May 15, 2007 8:18 AM  

[...] bypasses something about the nature of mathematics. it?s all arbitrary rules [...]

No, I don't agree with that. The laws of mathematics are logical and universal. If you live on the planet Warblon 7 and you have one moon rock, then you get another moon rock, you now have two moon rocks. The concept of 1 + 1 is 2, no matter where you are or what you call the numbers.

But on Warblon 7, they may round 2.5 down to 2. Why? Just because that's what the Elder Warblonion Chieftain decided way back in the day.


by Anthony Mills,   May 15, 2007 8:19 AM  

Or how about:

x^0 = 1

That never made sense to me until I realized that you could define exponentiation as:

x^y = 1 * (x multiplied by itself y times)

Then x^0 = 1 made sense.

Which explains why 0^0 is also equal to 1.


by Anthony Mills,   May 15, 2007 8:23 AM  

Some forms of rounding are not strictly round-up.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rounding

There is also banker's rounding (round to the nearest even number, so 0.5 -> 0 and 1.5 -> 2) and stochastic rounding (which rounds randomly).


by Deane,   May 15, 2007 9:05 AM  

So when I round -1.5, do I round to...-1, since that's the next larger number?


by Anthony Mills,   May 15, 2007 10:33 AM  

On some rounding schemes.

Generally the common rounding scheme is to round away from zero, so you'd round to -2.


by charon,   May 16, 2007 10:44 AM  

Axioms in theories are arbitrary. You could as well select a negation of some axiom and you would get some other theory. Usually mathematicians tended to select those axioms that described their real-world experience the best, but sometimes our senses lie and sometimes non-real-world theories are very interesting.


by Peter,   May 16, 2007 1:09 PM  

You could round inward (towards zero), or round outwards (towards infinity - increase in magnitude) to the nearest integer. You can alternate these rules between odd and even integers. The possibilities are endless..... it just depends on what the data represents. Significant digits: to round or to truncate. That is the question!


by Steve,   October 7, 2009 4:47 PM  

There is a rule we are taught in applied chemical math called the even Steven rule, if you have a 5 that you are rounding with it is the odd which is rounded up and even is left as is then it is completely fairas there are 5 digits of each odd and even and it is geared so the lowerand higher ends of the spectrum are rounded accordingly However if the five is followed by digits other than zero youround up

Exalmple

1.235 is rounded to 1.24 1.225 is roundedto 1.22

Still rounding to 3 digits 1.2250 is rounded to 1.22 1.2251 is rounded to 1.23



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