Well. When you first use equations, you learn them like this. I had some number x, I multiplied by 3 and added to, this makes 8. Like a puzzle.
3x+2=8, therefore you solve to find x by doing the inverse of what was done to x.
But how does expressing each side of the puzzle as a function solve this. When I then graph 3x+2, I now have an infinite amount of possible co-ordinates that are on this line. So why does making this line, equal to a line y=8, which also has an infinite amount of co-ordinates, do the same thing as the doing the inverse of the puzzle above.
Or, is it simply because we have modelled the puzzle as a function. Where y=8 and y=3x+2 they both = y, share the same y, thus must be equal to each other.