Sunday Morning Greek Blog

August 4, 2025

Stocking’s Reciprocation©: Another Definitive Proof 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) = 1

Stocking’s Reciprocation :: “Inverting the dividend of a division problem and multiplying by the divisor yields the reciprocal of inverting the divisor of a division problem and multiplying by the dividend.”

Oh no, here he goes again, off on one of his wild math/PEMDAS/Order of Operations tangents. But you know, I’m really not doing anything different in this area than I would do in exegeting a biblical passage. I’m looking for patterns in language and logic, grammar and syntax, that reveals clues to the meaning and intent of the words or figures on a page. I’m applying a scientific method to all this as well, forming new or related hypotheses and testing them out to see whether they can be more than just a harebrained rambling.

That is what’s been happening to me with this whole PEMDAS/Order of Operations obsession I’ve found myself pursuing. Every time I think I’ve got the definitive solution, proof, or argument, I get whacked upside the head by another even more convincing argument. Initially those were coming fast and furious, and I couldn’t keep up with myself, as you might discern if read my regularly updated original article, 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) = 1: Why PEMDAS Alone Is Not Enough | Sunday Morning Greek Blog or any of the other several articles I’ve written on the subject. But as I feel like I’ve addressed most of the obvious weaknesses of the ignorance of the priority of juxtapositional binding over extant operational signs, those moments of inspiration (dare I say “genius”?) are getting farther apart.

But this new concept I’ve described (I’m not sure how “new” it is, but I know I was never taught anything like this in math) as it turns out is really another way of double checking your division homework. I had gotten close to this when I demonstrated that the PEMDAS crowd’s way of interpreting 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) was equivalent to the expression 8 ÷ [2/(2 + 2)], the latter of which is subject to “invert and multiply” to solve and therefore more naturally solved without needing to remember or manipulate PEMDAS. [Note: Copilot called this concept “dual symmetry” in division.]

What Stocking’s Reciprocation does is move the emphasis from the divisor to the dividend, thus eliminating the argument about juxtaposition all together, because the answer you get when you double-check with Stocking’s Reciprocation agrees with the answer you get when you consider the juxtaposed divisor to be a single, unbreakable unit or monomial. You can’t get to the PEMDAS crowd’s answer of 16 using Stocking’s Reciprocation, so that proves the answer 16 is not correct and that the PEMDAS crowd’s method of working that expression is greatly flawed.

Here’s how Stocking’s Reciprocation works. Instead of inverting and multiplying the divisor (especially in this case where the divisor is disputed), we invert the dividend and multiply. This will yield the reciprocal of what the correct answer should be.

8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) becomes (1/8) x 2(2 +2).

You can already see how this is going to go then. Now, you have eliminated the obelus and are left with a fraction (which is NOT an explicit division problem) multiplied by a number multiplied by a value in parentheses. With all three factors of the expression multiplied now, it doesn’t matter what order you multiply them (Commutative Property)!

At this point, we can still apply undisputed PEMDAS principles by calculating the value in parentheses first and then multiplying straight across.

(1/8) x 2(4) becomes (1/8) x 8 (remember, order doesn’t matter at this point because it’s all multiplication), so the product is 1. Then you take the reciprocal of the product to compensate for the initial reciprocal conversion, and of course you get 1.

Just to demonstrate this isn’t an anomaly because the answer was 1, let’s do a couple more complicated expressions, as I did on my Facebook response today with one of these expressions:

8 ÷ 4(6 + 8) would be incorrectly calculated by the PEMDAS crowd as 28. But using Stocking’s Reciprocation, you get:

(1/8) x 4(6 + 8) = (1/2)(14) = 7. The reciprocal of that (and the answer to the original expression using Stocking’s Order, i.e., juxtaposed multiplication takes priority) is 1/7. If the 4(6 + 8) is inseparable in that expression, as I have claimed all along, you solve the 4(6 + 8) first, yielding 56, so in the original expression, you would get 8/56 = 1/7. Voila!

So let’s apply it to this expression.

48 ÷ 2(9 + 3) = (1/48) x 2(12) = 24/48 = 1/2, and the reciprocal of that is 2.

Working the problems backwards like this (or is it sideways?) and demonstrating there is no confusion about what the answer is demonstrates that the more sophisticated take on Order of Operations that engineers, physicists, and other math-heavy professionals use daily is 100% correct. They understand instinctively that the juxtaposition means you don’t separate the terms by an extant operational sign. After all, they passed arithmetic and moved on to algebra where that principle is prominent (i.e., 8 ÷ 2a = 4/a, NOT 4a).

If you want to see my other articles discussing various aspects of this debate, please see my summary page that has links to all of these articles: The PEMDAS Chronicles: Confronting Social Media Ignorance of PEMDAS’s Theoretical Foundation | Sunday Morning Greek Blog

I’m going to brag on myself a bit too here. When I posed this concept to Copilot (Microsoft’s AI), I got the following response: “It’s not commonly taught, but it’s mathematically sound and elegant.” Copilot even used my own Facebook post that I’d just put up less than a half-hour earlier, as a source for its analysis.

Until my next inspiration,

Scott Stocking

My thoughts are my own.

February 23, 2025

Stocking’s Order: Implicit Constructions Correct the Misapplication of Order of Operations

In the English language, words are rarely “inflected” like they are in other languages. The most we do with our regular verbs, for example, is to add an -s in the third person singular, -ed in past tense or past participles, and -ing in gerunds and present participles or present continuous. Occasionally we need to add helping verbs to indicate more nuanced uses, like a form of the “to be” verb for passive voice or a form of “have” for perfective forms of the verb.

In the classical languages like Greek and Latin, such inflections are typically built in to a singular word form. For example, here are the various first-person indicative mood forms of the Latin verb porto with all tense and voice combinations:

TenseActive VoicePassive Voice
Present:porto (I carry)portor (I am carried)
Future:portabo (I will carry)portabor (I will be carried)
Pluperfect:portaveram (I had carried)portatus eram (I had been carried)
Imperfect:portabam (I was carrying)portabar (I was being carried)
Perfect:portavi (I have carried)portatus sum (I have been carried)
Future Perfect:portavero (I will have carried)portatus ero (I will have been carried)

Source: Copilot request for first-person Latin verb forms.

Notice that in some cases, one word form in Latin requires up to four English words to translate depending on the ending. Greek is the same way, except inflecting verbs involves not just endings, but could also involve prefixes, infixes, and initial reduplications along with the loss of aspiration for aspirated consonants. The words are intended to be one singular form in most cases, and when we translate them, we treat the original word as a single lexemic unit.

We have a similar “inflection” of mathematical values or “terms” that do not have an extant operational sign (+ – × ÷) or that have such signs enclosed within or under a grouping symbol. These values or terms are (or should be) treated as a unit. Just as we don’t separate the root from the ending of a word in Latin and add the root to the end of the preceding word, neither do we (or should we) separate numbers that are “inflected,” so to speak, to represent a certain method of calculation that should be given priority over signed operations. The latter I am calling “implicit constructions,” because they imply a certain way of calculating based on syntax (position and orientation) that reflects a form of grouping and should be treated as a priority element of any expression.

One of the main functions of this kind of inflection is to indicate formulas for common measurements and values. The circumference of a circle is 2πr; the area of a circle is πr2; velocity is distance over time, v = d/t; etc. The juxtaposition of elements of the formula indicates that you’re working with what should be considered a unified value. This juxtaposition carries over into general mathematics as well. Juxtaposition is a form of grouping, but juxtaposition, like the inflection of the verb, is not a monolithic concept of simply being “side by side” with something else. Implicit constructions in mathematics use juxtaposition combined with orientation of the elements (including grouping symbols when necessary) to show the operational relationship of the individual elements.

At the very basic level, any real number, at least in the Indo-Arabic paradigm[1], is a simple juxtaposition of the powers of the base. A whole number (base 10) is, from right to left, a representation of how many 10n (n >= 0) in order right to left with implied addition of the place value (i.e., 10n) multiplied by the number holding the place. If you remember back to basic grade school math, that is how children are taught to understand our number system (ones’ place, tens’ place, hundreds’ place, etc.). In other words, juxtaposition is a foundational element of our number system and should not simply be discarded or replaced when it is used in other ways.

A fraction is a value that is formed by vertical or offset juxtaposition of one number to another with an intervening grouping symbol (vinculum or fraction bar; solidus or slash, respectively) that represents division or ratio but does not necessarily demand that such division be immediately carried out. I give examples of these in this implicit constructions table. Fractions should be considered as a single value first and foremost (because they are grouped) and NOT as a division problem in which the vinculum or solidus is considered equivalent to the obelus (÷) in function and implication. Rational fractions are necessary for precision, especially when the conversion to a decimal involves a nonterminating decimal and you’re working with very large numbers that would not be as precise as needed if we used a two-decimal approximation. For purposes of this paper, I’m working on the assumption that fractions should not be converted to decimal equivalent since this essay is theoretical.

A mixed number is the juxtaposition of a whole number to a fraction, and like a whole number, the side-by-side juxtaposition without any other symbol implies addition. Mixed numbers are considered unique, inseparable values as well when it comes to operations performed on them, but they often must be converted to an improper fraction to work with them more effectively.

Exponents also use juxtaposition to imply their operation. A power is superscripted and juxtaposed to the right of the base, and such superscription implies that the base should be multiplied the number of times indicated by the power. Of course, there are special rules when the power is a fraction, but those aren’t relevant to the discussion as the point is the implication of juxtaposition.

Since division is the opposite of multiplication, the question arises as to what is the opposite of a grouped fraction that implies multiplication? I would call this a “collection” because such a construction implies n sets of a quantity A. By way of example, 2(2 + 2) or 6(1 + 2) are collections if A = (2 + 2) or A = (1 + 2). The 2 (number of sets) is juxtaposed to (2 + 2) or (1 + 2) with the parentheses establishing the boundaries of quantity A.

Here is where many make a critical mistake in interpreting the collection: they fail to recognize the otherwise universal application of juxtaposition in real numbers, fractions, mixed numbers, and exponents that demands those forms be treated as single values. By suggesting one can just willy-nilly replace the juxtapositional relationship with a multiplication symbol and “ungroup” the collection, one violates the sacred bond that juxtaposition has in all other basic number forms. Just as fractions should be treated as a single value, so should collections.

By now you should see how this applies to the viral math expressions that some use to troll the Internet and pounce on the unsuspecting with their flawed view of Order of Operations or PEMDAS. An expression like 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) should NOT require the undoing of a juxtaposed construction. The juxtaposition demands the “collection” 2(2 + 2) be treated as having a single value and should not be undone by an obelus that does not have grouping (or ungrouping) powers. Otherwise, an expression like 8 ÷ ¾ would be seen as 8 ÷ 3 ÷ 4 rather than inverting the fraction and multiplying (the latter being the official way students are taught to work the problem) if that same principle were applied. The expression 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) = 8 ÷ 8 = 1, pure and simple. Yet some are so locked into a false concept of Order of Operations that fails to recognize the power of juxtaposition as a form of grouping that they can’t see the forest for the trees.

I have written elsewhere about the other issues that arise with the flawed understanding of juxtaposition. I believe this treatise provides a firmer theoretical basis for the concept of grouping and its proper place in the order of operations than the juvenile charts one finds in many textbooks.

Answering an Objection

One of the objections I often hear about juxtapositional grouping is that it violates the place of the exponent in such an order. That objection, however, is based on a flawed understanding of the role of juxtaposition. One example cited is:

8 ÷ 2(2 + 2)2.

Opponents say my theory would interpret the expression as follows:

8 ÷ 2(4)2 becomes 8 ÷ 82 (i.e., multiplication first, then exponent), which becomes 8 ÷ 64 or ⅛.

That is not accurate. If you understand that the exponent is also a form of juxtaposed grouping, then there is no issue with performing the exponent operation first and then performing the implicit multiplication, which complies with a standard view of the Order of Operations. Juxtaposed grouping does NOT supersede regular Order of Operations. The problem correctly interpreted then would be

8 ÷ 2(4)2 becomes 8 ÷ 2(16) (exponent first, then multiplication), which becomes 8 ÷ 32 or ¼.

To date, no one has ever been able to explain why implicit multiplication is treated differently from other implicit constructions in all my discussions and debates.

The bottom line here is that the juxtaposition itself is grouping, not just the symbols used. A fraction is a combination of the vertical juxtaposition of the numerator with a fraction symbol (vinculum, solidus, slash) grouping the denominator below it. A collection is the horizontal position of a cofactor or coefficient with the other cofactor or coefficient grouped within the parentheses. The concept of dealing with what is in the parentheses first without factoring in juxtaposition of other elements ignores the reality of juxtaposition in every other type of implicit construction and represents an imperfect and immature application of the grouping principle.

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[1] Languages that use letters to represent numbers often do not have a letter to represent the value “0” and are not based solely on a base with powers. In Hebrew and Greek, for example, the respective alphabets represent 1–9, 10–90 (by 10), and 100–900 (by 100) and then repeat for the next three powers of ten using special symbols above the letters. You need 27 symbols/letters for these values instead of 10, and for numbers >=1,000, you need special symbols over (usually) the letters to indicate multiplication by 1,000 for each of the 27 symbols. If there is no value for one of the powers of 10, they simply do not use a letter to represent that.

May 29, 2023

Toward an “Active” PEMDAS: Strengthening Its Theoretical Foundation

If you like this article, you may also like 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) = 1: Why PEMDAS Alone Is Not Enough or 8 ÷ 2(2 + 2) = 1, Part 2: A Defense of the Linguistic Argument.

I’ve gotten caught up in the PEMDAS/Order of Operations (Parentheses/Brackets, etc.; Exponents; Multiplication & Division [left-to-right]; Addition & Subtraction [left-to-right]) discussions on social media. I must admit it is frustrating to see how religiously some people cling to an imperfect and almost thoughtless understanding of PEMDAS. It is a convention that, as currently practiced, has no theoretical soundness and is clearly NOT intuitive. In linguistic terms, I would describe the current application of PEMDAS as passive, that is, it doesn’t seek to recognize certain theoretical and intuitive constructs in mathematics, and even undermines them, and as such represents a primitive view of mathematics.

By “primitive,” I mean that some of the proponents of a strict PEMDAS are childlike in its defense, resorting to emotion and circular arguments based on their assumptions. No one has offered any proof that what they believe about its inner workings is in fact how people have historically interpreted some of these expressions. Nor have they offered anything to counter the various arguments and peer-reviewed documentation I have offered except by returning to their assumption and repeatedly showing us how they think the target expression should be worked even as we question their premise. PEMDAS pays too much attention to the individual signs and symbols, but it lacks the sophistication to understand the “syntax” or intention of certain conventions of expression we have developed over the centuries.

PEMDAS as practiced today is like reading the synoptic gospels of the New Testament without reading the gospel of John, or like reading the New Testament without also reading the Old Testament to understand its foundations. If you’re not biblically minded, it’s like reading Shakespeare without a 16th century dictionary at hand. I aim to fill that void here and make PEMDAS something so theoretically reliable that we won’t need to have wasteful discussions in social media about who’s right and who needs to go back to elementary school. My purpose is to propose such a theoretical structure whereby we can agree on one rule to address the issue of these viral problems.

Properties

I want to begin with a discussion about the basic mathematical properties we all had to learn at the beginning of the semester in Algebra. Properties are demonstrable principles in mathematics that will help lay the foundation for what some have begun categorizing as “grouping.” But more on that later.

Associative and commutative properties are intuitive. By that I mean that it’s obvious to most that if we have the expression

a * b * c

it does not matter how we “group” the terms, that is, how we “associate” them within parentheses or how we “commute” terms in the order of presentation, we get the same result. Every permutation of the variables multiplied together yields the same result. They’re all cofactors of the product, after all, so you get the same result every time. As such the following expressions are ALL literal identities of each other.

(a * b) * c ≡ (a * b)c ≡ (ab)ca * (b * c) ≡ a(b * c) ≡ a(bc) ≡ c * (a * b) ≡ c(a * b) ≡ c(ab) ≡ b * (c * a) ≡ b(c * a) ≡ b(ca), etc.

Distributive property is intuitive as well because it’s the undoing of factoring:

a(b+c) ≡ (ab+ac)

That expression represents implied (or implicit) multiplication, and the result demonstrates that the distributive property is a form of grouping equivalent to putting parentheses or brackets around the entire expression. As a type of grouping, then, it belongs to the P in PEMDAS. In addition, I would argue that even when there is an explicit multiplication sign used for the distributive property:

a * (b+c) ≡ (ab + ac)

this does NOT negate or override the application of the distributive property, and the expression thus written is also considered grouped and should be treated as if it has parentheses or brackets around it. Why? Because we know that if two expressions are equal or identical to a third expression, the other two expressions are identical as well:

a(b+c) ≡ a * (b+c).

Since both expressions are identical, it is necessary to consider both as grouped, as implied multiplication by the action of the distributive property at least, and in the case of the first one, by the syntax of implied multiplication. As such, my first proposal to strengthen PEMDAS and place it on a sounder theoretical ground is this:

Proposition 1: Mathematical properties should be considered at the same level of grouping as parentheses in PEMDAS, and when so recognized, the human person working such expressions has both the responsibility and authority, by virtue of any applicable mathematical properties, to place such expressions within the appropriate form of brackets to indicate priority given to the calculation. In doing so, the human person working the expression should ensure that any units of measurement or counting associated with the expression are not affected by so organizing.

The Trouble With Computers and Calculators. Most calculators do not recognize grouping characterized by this implicit syntax (I know syntax is primarily a linguistic concept, but for math, it refers to the arrangement of the signs and symbols, including the numbers, of an expression and how those influence the interpretation of the expression). You typically must apply the parentheses or brackets around the expression to force it to do so. Without parentheses, calculators assume all else in the syntax of an expression is explicit.

Implicit Multiplication Generally

Having trouble accepting implied multiplication is a form of grouping? What is a number with an exponent if not implied multiplication? The term 33, or in calculator language, 3^3 is 3 * 3 * 3, but we don’t undo the exponent notation if a division sign comes before it. Why? Because we’ve given this form of implied multiplication priority over signed multiplication in PEMDAS. The implied multiplication is grouped into the simple expression, algebraically speaking, of an. If you do deconstruct the implicit multiplication of an exponent, you’ve obviously taken PEMDAS to an unacceptable extreme.

PEMDAS does not address what to do with a factorial expression.

4! = 4 * 3 * 2 * 1

Algebraically, this is expressed as

n! = nPr =n(n – 1)(n – 2)…(nr + 1])

where nPr is the number of permutations (P) of n things taken r at a time and n = r.

The factorial is also considered a form of implied multiplication, then. However, since PEMDAS doesn’t explicitly deal with factorials in the order of operations, how should we treat it? Algebraically, the first term in the grouping doesn’t have parentheses around it, so if we come across a ÷ n!, are we going to treat that as (a/n) * (n – 1)! then? Absolutely not! I’ve already hinted at why. It’s considered a grouping of factors implicitly multiplied. Because it’s a grouping, then, we would also treat it as if it were either an exponent or within parentheses. If these two types of implicit multiplication (powers and factorials) are generally treated at the E level in PEMDAS, why shouldn’t the implicitly multiplied expressions a(b + c) or even ab for that matter, or any variation thereof as described above, be treated at least at the E level, if not the P level of PEMDAS?

This leads me to my second proposition and a subsequent corollary to strengthen PEMDAS and place it on a more solid theoretical ground:

Proposition 2: In the absence of properties, any terms or expressions using implied multiplication should be considered at the grouping level of Parentheses in PEMDAS, and when so recognized, the human person working such expressions has both the responsibility and authority, by virtue of the implied multiplication, to place such expressions within the appropriate form of brackets to indicate priority given to the calculation. In doing so, the human person working the expression should ensure that any units of measurement or counting associated with the expression are not affected by so organizing. [Added 7/6/23] Within the grouping level, exponents and factorials should be processed first, then any implied multiplication would follow. So 3x^2 (without parentheses) should be evaluated as 3(x^2) and NOT (3x)^2.

Corollary 1: Any expression using explicit or implicit grouping markers (parentheses, brackets, juxtaposition, etc.) should NOT be rearranged in such a way as to undo the intention of the syntax or to fit certain elements into the framework of a property. For example, an expression in the form a/(bc) (explicit grouping) or a/bc (implicit grouping) should not be undone and reworked to become (a/b) * c or (ac)/b. NOTE: Some on social media tried to say the distributive property worked as follows:

b ÷ a(x+y+z) = [b * (x+y+z)]/a.

It’s ridiculous to think that a coefficient (or cofactor) should become a divisor in this situation.[1]

Let me also add here a call to return to standards. If the ISO standards don’t recognize the obelus anymore, then let’s just stop using it altogether. We can retain references to it for historical purposes, but in formal education (including textbooks), edit it out. People have tried saying the obelus is different from the vinculum, but again, I’ve never seen any formal explanation as to why this is, because the obelus isn’t a standard! I’m using it in this article because that’s how the expressions appear in the social media threads.

Excursus on Implicit FunctionsAdded 08/29/23 (from a post I made on Facebook), and lightly edited on 04/01/24.

Exponential terms don’t require a standard operator sign (+-x÷/) but rely on juxtaposition of the exponent.

Roots do not require a standard operator sign but the juxtaposition of the superscripted power and value in relation to the radical or of a fractional exponent. In some settings, the radical is NOT fully evaluated unless the answer can be expressed as a rational number. If the not-fully-evaluated radical is in the denominator of a fraction, the fraction must be rewritten so the radical is only in the numerator.

Factorials don’t require a standard operator sign but rely on the juxtaposition of a punctuation mark.

Cosine, sine, tangent, etc. don’t require a standard operator sign, but rely on the position of the measurement next to an abbreviated form of the word, and in the case of inverse trig functions, the juxtaposition of a -1 “exponent.”

Logarithms don’t require a standard operator sign but rely on the juxtaposition of a subscripted base (as needed) next to the abbreviated form of the word and the position of the value after the word/base combination.

Absolute value does not require a standard operator sign but juxtaposes, or brackets, the value between two pipes.

A fraction written with a vinculum does not require a standard operator sign that typically disappears when the operation is performed. The vinculum typically only disappears when the fraction can be represented as a whole number (mixed numbers, which consist of a juxtaposed whole number and fraction [implicit addition!!], typically have to be converted to an improper fraction when working them in an expression) or when, during the evaluation of the expression, the denominator divides evenly into the numerator. The fraction is a vertical juxtaposition of the two values with the vinculum indicating the grouping in the denominator and the relationship with the numerator. This is implicit division without actually dividing the two values to create a decimal. A fraction is considered a single value and NOT necessarily a division problem in the context of an expression. [This paragraph expanded from original on 04/01/24.]

Now while some of these functions do require parentheses to group the values being evaluated, NONE of them have a standard operator sign extant outside of any values in parentheses. These are all implicit functions, that is, they essentially have an implied set of brackets (or parentheses or some other grouping symbol) around them so they’re taken as a unit, or operand if you will. We don’t break out the implied multiplication of the exponent or factorial and supply the signs when evaluating the expression. Neither do we break out the implied addition when dividing by a mixed number, except in the manipulation of the mixed number to an improper fraction. In my opinion, that belongs in the P (parentheses) step of PEMDAS.

In the same way, an expression such as 2(2+2) is an implicit notation (no operational sign outside of the parentheses), so it belongs in the category of implicit functions. Operator signs break up an expression into operands. All this talk about “terms” that some have promulgated in the social media pages is meaningless, especially since the given expression above is technically one term by their own definition. We can debunk the contention 8 ÷ 2 should be treated as a fractional coefficient to what’s in parentheses. The obelus indicates we have two operands: 8 and 2(2+2). As an implicit function, with presumed parentheses around it, the 2(2+2) stands alone as the divisor in the expression. It should NOT be separated.

By the way, here’s how Wolfram defines “operand”: “A mathematical object upon which an operator acts. For example, in the expression 1×2, the multiplication operator acts upon the operands 1 and 2.” Implicit functions should have priority over explicitly signed operations and would need to have its own priority in PEMDAS for the functions included in that category.

End excursus.

Creating the Theoretical Foundation for PEMDAS.

Are you following me so far? Because I’m about to make it even more interesting. PEMDAS is neither intuitive nor theoretical (at least as applied) because there’s no proof to show why any one operation should be given preference over another. It is a convention that has rather haphazardly come into being historically without, as far as I can tell, any serious discussion about its theoretical or practical validity. As such, it does NOT mathematically or logically carry the same weight as properties.

The “intuitive” thing for a person to do just seeing a complex expression for the first time would be to simply work left-to-right through the symbols because we learn to read left-to-right in most languages. So such a person would treat the following as if it were in a series of brackets:

2 * 3 + 4 ÷ 5 – 6 = –4

becomes

{[(2 * 3) + 4] ÷ 5} – 6 = –4.

We used to play a game like that in 5th & 6th grade math class, where the teacher would give a string of numbers and operators (occasionally they’d put some operation in parentheses to see if we were paying attention) and we’d have to keep up with the math by taking the total as each new operator-number combination was announced and perform that operation on the running total. There was no going back through the string and figuring out PEMDAS or whether the distributive property applied. Whoever spit out the correct answer first got to advance toward the front of the class.

When we’re talking about PEMDAS, then, we’re talking about pedagogical construct that, historically speaking, seems to have been formulated rather hastily and loosely without much theoretical forethought. First, PEMDAS doesn’t account for everything that could be happening in an expression. I used the example of the factorial expression above. I’ve never seen anything in any explanation of PEMDAS that suggests where such an expression would fall. The factorial is important, for example, for calculating permutations. Treating a factorial in the wrong level of PEMDAS can potentially create false expectations about the probability of some event, like drawing winning lottery numbers. Exponents seems to be the most logical place because the factorial is a form of grouping by implied multiplication just like exponents are.

Second, in practice, PEMDAS is decidedly passive. It leaves too much room for interpretation, especially when historically, people have considered terms with implied multiplication to be grouped, bound, and inseparable. The PEMDAS absolutists in the social media threads on such problems have no respect for that historical reality. They suggest that the older generation’s understanding of PEMDAS is outdated when the real problem is their methodology and lack of critical thinking skills. This lack of critical thinking is becoming increasingly prevalent in American education today. Instead of a passive PEMDAS, we need an active, robust PEMDAS that focuses more on intentional grouping and a more sophisticated definition of grouping based on the assumptions made in the syntax of algebra.

Third, strict PEMDAS, at least as practiced by the absolutists, is no better than a calculator, because it fails to consider the implications of implicit multiplication. A calculator may be able to perform calculations quickly, but it doesn’t have a “mind” like you and I do to analyze the syntax and context of an expression.

The Priority of Operational Signs. Now that we have addressed the grouping issue and the weak nature of PEMDAS as currently practiced (if the absolutists are to be believed, anyway), it’s time to address the basic functions of mathematics: multiplication and addition. Since multiplication and addition are the primary operations mathematics, division and subtraction are respectively subordinate to them. We all can agree, I suppose, that division is multiplication by the inverse of the divisor, and subtraction is addition performed on a negative number. So while we’re beefing up the order of operations with a more active and robust use of parentheses to ensure any expression is solved the way its creator intended, let’s get rid of the obelus and the slash (solidus) as well and make everything about multiplication and addition. After all, isn’t that what we do when we divide by a fraction? We manipulate the expression (invert and multiply) to perform multiplication first, so wouldn’t that argue for the priority of multiplication in that instance? Let’s use only the vinculum to indicate “division,” and let’s put parentheses around a fraction with a vinculum so there’s no question that the vinculum is grouped. Fractions are, after all, more accurate than decimals if the decimal equivalent is not finite.

Let’s change all subtraction expressions to adding negative numbers expressions. Let’s keep all expressions with radicals as exponent expressions as much as possible. Let’s focus more on ensuring the proper ORDER of operations using parentheses and brackets rather than assuming everyone treats every expression in a uniform way. Obviously, that’s not happening right now. We can’t have a system of math where people are coming up with two (or more) answers to the same expression because they’ve been taught different things about it or work from a different set of assumptions. We need to firm up PEMDAS so we can have a uniform understanding of what fits where and restore uniformity. Without that, we’re wasting precious time arguing about ambiguities. It’s time someone cleared those ambiguities up. That’s why I’m stepping forward here to offer a theoretical solution.

One more question: If multiplication and addition are the primary operations of mathematics with division and subtraction respectively subservient to them, what is the theoretical reason then that multiplication and division are treated equally left-to-right? Why wouldn’t multiplication and addition be given priority over division and subtraction? I’ve never seen an explanation for this. After all, there are some out there who have a multiplication-first view of PEMDAS. I’m not sure I can fault that view given that multiplication has formal properties associated with it while division does not.

Conclusion

This whole process of “thinking out loud” in the social media posts has been, in my mind, anyway, a helpful discussion. In the process, I have more firmly codified my own beliefs about PEMDAS, as I’ve done here, and have continued to do so over the past year. I am even more firmly convinced that those who haven’t gotten the same answer as me on the more popular manifestations of this PEMDAS debate have a lack of theoretical understanding that should be corrected. I hope that I have filled that gap and that I have convinced at least some of you that the answer is 1, not the square of the numbers in parentheses (see Demonstration Proofs 1 & 2 below). I offer my proofs below of the three most popular expressions as a demonstration of application to my principles.

I do think PEMDAS is a valuable pedagogical tool, when properly understood with solid theoretical underpinnings. Professor Oliver Knill has repeatedly said the only way to ensure a problem is worked the way one means to is to overuse, if necessary, parentheses and other groupings.[2] Otherwise, ambiguous problems remain open to interpretation, and we’ll never get any kind of uniformity. My attempt here is to promote a uniformity of understanding so that we only get one answer for each unique expression.

Demonstration Proofs.

Proof

Given

36 ÷ 6(2 + 2 + 2)

Grouping by distributive property and implied multiplication

36 ÷ [6(2 + 2 + 2)]

Multiplication by inverse and grouping under vinculum

                    1

36 *     —————-   

            [6(2 + 2 + 2)]

Application of distributive property

                           1

36 *     ———————–

             [6(2) + 6(2) + 6(2)]

Multiply terms in brackets

                      1

36 *     —————-

           [12 + 12 + 12]

Add terms in brackets

             1

36 *     —-

            36

Cancel common factors and simplify

1

QED

Proof

Given

8 ÷ 2(2 + 2)

Grouping by distributive property and implied multiplication

8 ÷ [2(2 + 2)]

Multiplication by inverse and grouping under vinculum

                  1

8 *       ———–

            [2(2 + 2)]

Application of distributive property

                    1

8 *       —————-

            [2(2) + 2(2)]

Multiply within brackets

               1

8 *       ——

          [4+4]

Add terms in brackets

           1

8 *       —

           8

Cancel common factors and simplify

1

QED

Proof (From Professor Oliver Knill’s “Ambiguous PEMDAS” Web page. When presented with this problem, 58 of his 60 calculus students got the following result indicated in the proof. The other two treated (3y – 1) as the expression under the vinculum. NONE got the answer promoted by the PEMDAS absolutists.)[3]

Given

2x/3y – 1; x = 9, y = 2

Group by implicit multiplication and vinculum

(2x)

——    – 1

(3y)

Substitute

[2(9)]

——-    – 1

[3(2)]

Multiply in brackets

18

—-    – 1

 6

Simplify

3 – 1

Subtract

2


[1] Professor Oliver Knill from Harvard (Ambiguous PEMDAS (harvard.edu)) cites Lennes, 1917. [No title given]: “When a mode of expression has become wide-spread, one may not change it at will. It is the business of the lexicographer and grammarian to record, not what he may think an expression should mean but what it is actually understood to mean by those who use it. The language of algebra contains certain idioms and in formulating the grammar of the language we must note them. For example that 9a2 ÷ 3a is understood to mean 3a and not 3a3 is such an idiom. The matter is not logical but historical” (emphasis in original). In scans from Lennes printed article, these statements appear: “A series of operations involving multiplication and division alone shall be performed in the order in which they occur from left to right.” However, the subheading in the very next paragraph says: “The Above Rule Contrary to Actual Usage,” and the author goes on to say: “It would, however, follow from this rule for carrying out multiplications and divisions in order from left to right, that

9a2 ÷ 3a = (9a2 ÷ 3) × a = 3a3.

But I have not been able to find a single instance where this is so interpreted. The fact is that the rule requiring the operations of multiplication and division to be carried out from left to right in all cases, is not followed by anyone. For example, in case an indicated product follows the sign ÷ the whole product is always used as divisor, except in the theoretical statement of the case” (emphasis in original).

The following section of the text has the subheading “The Established Usage” reconfirms that the obelus indeed means the entire product after it is intended to be the divisor, and not just the first term. (Who says the obelus has no grouping power!) He also goes on to say “All multiplications are to be performed first and the divisions next.”

I’ve also found similar analysis in a 1935 textbook Second-Year Algebra by Hawkes, Luby, & Touton, p. 19. That’s how I understood it the late 70s and early 80s in high school and college and in the early 2000s when I taught JH & HS math and algebra. I seriously doubt nearly 100 years of history (at least) of this understanding has changed in the past ten years or so.

[2] Ambiguous PEMDAS (harvard.edu); see also https://math.berkeley.edu/~gbergman/misc/numbers/ord_ops.html

[3] Knill, Oliver. “Ambiguous PEMDAS.” Ambiguous PEMDAS (harvard.edu), retrieved May 29, 2023.

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