Here's the most concise logical explanation I can muster:The answer is that it doesn't matter that -5 is an integer or not, the negative sign is a direction that modifies the value of 5. Five exists, negative five does not. Negative five is only Five in a specific direction. The negative sign is an operator on the value of five. As it's an operator, it's subject to the order of operations, and comes UNDER the priority of exponents, unless parentheses say otherwise.
roly has provided the only argument so far which has any chance of swaying me.
I've been convinced, largely on rolyaTy's discussion. I read your stuff too Smoo. Interesting debate.
This answer convinced me, too because I'm picturing a graph, with -5, then -25, then -125 - it should all go in the downward direction like 5, 25, 125. It isn't intuitive for it to go -5, 25, -125 on a graph.
BUT
A negative times a negative is a positive, so the graph should jump above and below the x line.
I can't see how you can factor out the - as in:
-5^2
-1(5*5)
-1(25)
-25
But not then have to apply this to all negative multiplied by negatives as in:
-3*-2
-1(3*2)
-1(6)
-6
Does this not follow the same logic?
No, you cannot factor multiplication out from other multiplication. The bolded section is wrong. Using your process, then the following would be true:
8*4
2(4*2)
Obviously you get 2 different answers.
A proper way of factoring out -1 would be:
3 - 2
-1(-3 + 2)
Exactly!
I knew the logic was flawed, but I'm asserting the logic in the first part is the same as the 2nd. You're taking -1 out of (5*5) when you say the -5^2 is really -1 * 5^2. 5^2 is 5x5. 5^2 is really just shorthand for 5*5, is it not? So, why can you factor multiplication out of a multiplication problem written in shorthand but not one that is written out explicitly?
No, we're not taking the -1 out. If we were to write:
-1*5^2
I don't think anyone here would disagree that the answer is -25. But, since the expression was written:
-5^2
and
there are no parenthesis, the 5^2 is computed first before the "inherent" -1 is applied.
wrong. the correct reading is negative 5 squared, since there is no operative assumed when -5 appears at the beginning of the string. If however the writer had said 1-5^2, then you would know that the - in the sentence is an operative. Since this was not the case, the purposely ambiguous question is moot. The real question should be why would anyone assume that - at the beginning of the sentence is assumed to be an operative rather than a primary indicator of the value of the number to be squared. Without any indicator by the asker, the question is void.
I posted this a long time ago but now looks like a good time to do so again. You are actually hurting your case with the
1-5^2 comment. Addition is commutative, meaning that a + b = b + a. So, you can look at the original equation and remove all "ambiguity" by using this property of addition:
-5² + 4 x 2³ = 4 x 2³ + -5²
Also most people appear to be in aggreement that 1 + -1 = 1 - 1 so:
4 x 2³ + -5² = 4 x 2³ - 5²
Thus, no ambiguity. For you to claim that it is "negative 5, squared" you are inserting parenthisis around -5 which do not exist in the problem as presented. Likewise,:
-5² = 0 + -5² = 0 - 5² = -25
There is no way to prove any other answer except to introduce the idea of an implied set of parenthesis.