>David,
>
>We can get linguistic here and simply ask how does one write -2 squared in a math equation? I was always taught the squared means raised to the power of 2 which would be -2^2 for -2 squared and since we know that -2 squared is 4 there's the answer.
>
>To deal with the sitckier folks who might say that -2 squared is written as -1*2^2 then we ask how does one write 2 squared? I can't imagine anyone suggersting that 2 squared is written as 1*2^2, that would indicate that 2 is written as 1*2 or that -2 is written as -1*2 (which when reduced equals -2) ahem, are we sufficiently going in circles here yet?
The thing is that we don't write it as -1*2^2, but the lack of parens implies it. The correct way to write what you want to call negative 2 squared would be (-2)^2, otherwise, as I said, without the parens, the "-1*" is implied.
>
>>I was going to introduce an odd power example yesterday but it doesn't prove anything one way or the other because they'd just say the negative result was because of a negation operation applied to the exponentiation result... I was also thinking about a negative power ie 2 ^ -2 but concluded that wouldn't illustrate it either.
>>
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