I'm sure that sentiment is stretching the bounds of believability for many people here too. Sounds like you've been sniffing the chalk too long.
You get math all wrong. Math is not based on faith. Math is essentially a bunch of conveniently chosen postulates and another buch of theorems, which are deductions from those postulates, deductions which are based on another set of postules themselves.
I don't think the math itself is a system of belief, just what is "believed" about it.
At high school and for engineering it is approached as if it is something that must be accepted, shoulders of giants etc. If someone is unwilling or incapable of really getting into the nitty gritty of the proofs and philosophy, or simply doesn't have the time to satisfy all questions they might ever dream of, then they are taking it on faith. Being expected to trust in intellectual authorities with absolutely nil room for deviation is pretty much the definition of faith. All this talk of theorems, deductions and postulates is the setting up of a system to engender belief.
I'm not saying it is irrational, unreasonable or wrong. Just that in practical application it is faith.
What is a postulate? Essentially a provisory truth. Let me give you a crude example.
1. All Australians eat kangaroo meat.
2. Adx is Australian.
3. Therefore, adx eats kangaroo meat.
In the deduction above, I'm not asking you to believe in the first or the second postulates. I'm asking you to accept them as a provisory truths, i.e., if those are true, the conclusion (3) will be true.
That may be true, but I don't quite get it - because it is a trick to get me (or perhaps you) to accept the postulates, your logic, and the conclusion. Where is my freedom to reject any of it? That could range from calling it all "rubbish" to simply saying I am not entirely convinced. Why is the latter so completely objectionable? What if my job relies on accepting it?
Or in the real case:
1 I don't eat kangaroo meat (that I remember).
2 I'm not Australian.
3 Therefore, I don't care (apart from the concept and ethics of eating zoo animals).
Why (in principle) should I accept a provisory truth if the reasoning that is brought to bear on them is irrelevant and the conclusion is uncertain?
What if I am the only Australian? A fact I discover after accepting the conclusion on the basis of what I thought was both sound and meaningful logic?
I choose not to believe in the process or the outcome. Not necessarily because of a philosophical objection, but because I don't enjoy it (while others seem to be having the time of their lives) - if you like call it spite. Science students are told to believe and they had better enjoy it. Applied mathematics seems there to be endured and never questioned from the outset.
Also my comment was about believably of the
sentiment of you saying I think 1 is not a complex number. There is more to logic than logic, as I have alluded to above.
But if someone has a firm view that complex numbers
are the fundamental 'quantity' which describes the world at large, then I'm sure it would seem like any deviation from that view is the wrong one.
But what happens if I eventually find out that adx is IRL a vegetarian? Well, that doesn't invalidate my reasoning, but certainly my choice of postulates doesn't help me model, describe or predict reality, does it?
So, the postulates upon which math theories are constructed have allowed these theories to have a wide range of applications and have stood the test of time. Should they be revised tomorrow because we find out that they are incomplete or that they do not cut the mustard anymore, they'll be abandoned, or updated.
It kind of does invalidate the postulates and casts the reasoning into doubt. If it were taught that way, half the students would go away believing there is wiggle room. The alternative is to lead them into false belief in provisory truths. It's an unwinnable argument based on a sleight of hand.
I'm not against provisional belief, but unless you're a mathematics specialist, it is mostly acceptance and faith. Going against that causes friction, science suffers a similar problem but is somewhat manageable.
Complex numbers can exist as a mathland fiction all they want, as a fundamental 'quantity' of nature if you like (I'm just not 100% convinced - it feels like a broken reality the way it has been put), but fundamental to electrical engineering?
Fundamental in the sense that you'll have to deal with them one way or another.
Where? Because it is popular and convenient? That's not fundamental, it's a circular argument. When something is as optional as it seems to be, arguments in support are expected to collapse into various logical fallacies.
An idea I kept forgetting to suggest, is a 'cheat sheet' of example(s) to demonstrate the fundamental (necessary) applicability (whatever that is) of sqrt(-1) to engineering, then that could help multitude(s) of 'disbelievers'. I'm not suggesting you or anyone here do it, it's just an idea that might work better than pointing to nonexistent proofs for bringing more hapless victims into the fold.
Real-valued measures of sines and cosines are not sqrt(-1), that idea is so ridiculous I shouldn't have continued arguing about it amidst the conflation with mathland fictions and quantum mechanical possibilities.
You shouldn't have skipped the classes on complex numbers.
$$\cos{x}=\frac{e^{ix}+e^{-ix}}{2}$$
$$\sin{x}=\frac{e^{ix}-e^{-ix}}{2i}$$
I didn't. I might have slept through them, perhaps forgot it all or blocked it out. Who knows. Actually there is a story I'll mostly spare you where I did accidentally (due to injury) miss all the lectures of one of the maths classes of one type (I think linear algebra - had I gone I might have a better idea). I am usually pretty good at panicked cramming, but in that case it worked neither well nor at all.
But sines are not sqrt(-1). They are real-valued. I and Q representation doesn't require any sort of 'imaginary'. Despite an idea of complex frequency domain representation being supposedly embedded, it's not necessary. I'll just have to stick to my "that idea is so ridiculous I shouldn't have continued arguing about it".
Is there anything fundamentally unknowable about the quadrature signal in engineering?