Not too long ago I had asked my mathematics teacher how he would define the subject; he replied (if I recall correctly) by saying "the study of patterns." Alternatively, the New Oxford American Dictionary defines it as "the abstract science of number, quantity, and space."
I have to agree with these definitions, but I wish to draw special attention to the term "abstract," for it is the reason for why (like you say) mathematics is a perfect world.
zombyrus wrote:The world of math is the perfect world of precision and beauty that we, in the real world, will never come close to attaining. We know that in everything we do we are living with an acceptable margin of error. In math alone is anything ever truly exact, and its exactness is almost beyond imagining.
While that is true, I believe, however, that behind what seems to be a world full of imperfections, there is underlying ordered base. I believe that this not only applies to science, but also extends to events and their seemingly random occurrence. This, however, is nothing more than a belief.
Balance is imperative; without it, total collapse and destruction is imminent.