*What other unsung heroes in science or math do you think deserve more recognition?* Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription! Correction: @0:24 locator for Chennai is slightly off, should be coastal. My bad!
Carl Friedrich GAUS PLEASE. Thanks for Ramanujan Highly awaited video for me. Some muslim scientists would be cool too. If you wish to go for some rather MORE unkown ones I think Emmy Noether should be one
The world was robbed of Ramanujan's genius much too early. Had Ramanujan lived another 32 years, just imagine the additional wealth of Mathematical knowledge & insight he would have left us. It's amazing that his genius has benefited, not just Mathematica, but Physics and Science as a whole.
Srinivasa Ramanujan was a self-taught genius who made substantial contributions to mathematics. His work continues to inspire and challenge mathematicians around the world. It’s amazing how much he accomplished in his short life.. i feel proud as a Indian.
interesting thing is he never went to school because of colonial loot and scarcity. Still his interest in Mathematics developed and he achieved a great milestone in the history of mathematics.
@@bigdaddy7729He is not taking his credit. He is just acknowledging his roots that they both belong to the same country. However people who suffer from identity crisis often show their Jealousy. Just like you are doing.
(The title was changed after this comment) .. original comment: “Unlikely”-ness 😂 is not at all ignorant or racist idea. A country that invented decimal numbers, zero, algebra, calculus, .. knew the circumference of a spherical earth 1500 years ago .. is an “unlikely” place of origin for a math genius.
Ramanujan DID know how to prove results. The main reason he did not include proofs in letters was simple and sad: he was too poor to afford postal paper.
Okay that's actually depressing wtf, but I guess that makes sense, because if Ramanujan wasn't able to write proofs he wouldn't have been able to collaborate with Hardy so well
this might be true for his work back in india, but once he came to england he still couldn't prove a lot of his assertions. This is probably because of the way he taught himself mathematics, he learnt it intuitively using books using books with no full solutions
Ramanujan's story shows why eliminating poverty and giving everyone the opportunity develop their potential (not to mention universal healthcare) is so important. We are extremely lucky he managed to share his brilliance with the world at all.
It's crazy sad to imagine now 12:59 how many untapped minds like Ramanujan's exist/existed out there in history, and never got their chances to a breakthrough, to be "discovered". Because of no support system, no way to reach out, the recipients not believing them, losing interest etc. And than you got western kids who say "oh when am I ever ganna use any of this?" "I can retake the class, who cares" 🤡🤡
@@IntrinsicPalomides He was on a crazy tear when he died, he was coming up with ground breaking formulas almost at will. If had lived a long life chances are we would be many decades ahead in many areas of mathematics compared to today.
"Ramanujan's story shows why eliminating poverty and giving everyone the opportunity develop their potential (not to mention universal healthcare) is so important. " You are drawing the opposite conclusion from what the facts show. The facts are that even the poor can achieve a lot. OTOH, Trump grew up rich and accomplished little in mathematics or elsewhere.
"An Equation For Me Has No Meaning Unless It Expresses A Thought Of God." -Srinivasa Ramanujan This is written at the entrance of Ramanujan College named after him, from which I had the honour to complete my undergrad.
He was one of the greatest mathematicians of all time. And as an Indian, I can bet that there are many underground mathematics genius here in India who are still undiscovered or unknown.
@@CountingStars333after all, brilliance won't feed them. And there are no Hardy walking around nowadays to look after them, either. Necessity of earning takes you out of yourself, it kills geniuses
Why are they unknown? If a person has exceptional talent, it's immediately apparent at school. Indians in general aren't terribly bright. Don't seek to extrapolate from a single exceptional case.
Just imagine the billions of people who live in poverty today. How many of them are geniuses or potential geniuses whose light will never shine due the constraints brought about by poverty
I am deeply humbled by Srinivasa Ramanujan's tenacity and burning desire to leave our world with such a treasure trove of Mathematics despite his unpromising life and survival. He truly was a self made Math prodigy. Mr. Hardy by just being there and have his work recognized saved the world from a 1000 years or more of Mathematical deprivation.
@@Eizengoldt why do you think Aliens fed Ramanujan Sir Mathematical knowledge? It's Goddess herself.Devotees seek Lord Ganesha,Devi Divine Mother, Lord Shiva, Lord Vishnu, Mother Namagiri Thayyar blessings when acquiring knowledge
This is an excellent presentation. Clear and complete Let us appreciate the unsung hero here, Hardy who had an open mind and gave everyone their chance
India's Profound Influence on the Field of Mathematics 3000 BCE: Introduction of the Ruler 1200 BCE: Pioneering the Concept of Infinity 700 BCE: Early Development of the Pythagorean Theorem 700 BCE: Invention of Chess 600 BCE: Insights into Earth's Orbit 200 BCE: Advancements in Fibonacci Numbers 300 CE: Groundbreaking Contributions to Algebra, Trigonometry, and the Fundamentals of Calculus 500 BCE-500 CE: Invention of Modern Numerals 500 CE: Creation of the Decimal System and the Revolutionary Idea of Zero 1895: Breakthrough in Wireless Communication Additionally, India's mathematical heritage extends further with noteworthy contributions such as: The Bakhshali Manuscript (circa 3rd century CE): This ancient text contains early examples of algebraic and geometric methods for solving mathematical problems. Madhava's Infinite Series (14th century CE): Madhava, a Kerala school mathematician, developed infinite series expansions for trigonometric functions, paving the way for later developments in calculus. Kerala School of Mathematics (14th-16th centuries CE): This school made significant contributions to the study of calculus, including methods for computing derivatives and integrals. Aryabhata's Aryabhatiya (499 CE): This influential work contains mathematical ideas, including spherical trigonometry and the concept of π (pi). Bhaskara I's Lilavati (12th century CE): Lilavati covers various mathematical topics, including arithmetic, algebra, and geometry, and is known for its engaging problem-solving examples. Bhaskara II's Siddhanta Shiromani (12th century CE): This text includes sections on algebra, trigonometry, and astronomy and provides valuable insights into Indian mathematical achievements. Indian Astronomy: India's mathematical prowess extended into astronomy, with scholars like Brahmagupta (7th century CE) contributing to the understanding of celestial movements and calculations.
I was extremely amazed and impressed by one of his theorems, it seemed to be impossible at first, but it was proved just by using simple calculations and other stuff, he was a true genius, discovered such theorems no one else thought possible. P/S: I wonder if you could make a video about John Nash Jr., I want to find out more about his life and his contributions to mathematics and economics
1729 hardy ramanujan number should have been a great addition I think. It was a beautiful coincidence story of how much he loved numbers, but loved to see this video of Ramanujan 👍
Sometimes I just wonder what if God gifted Talents like Ramanujan a longer life just how much of more would they have achieved is beyond imagination, well somewhere someone might be preparing to continue his work we never know...
But just think about our school and college syllabus They must have doubled even if some great people like him lived an extra 4- 5 years But I honestly wonder how most of these great people were just born weaker and their life spans were so small
@@Nisha.lilac9 well speaking for the case of Ramanujan he could have lived a long life if he stayed in india as by going to england made his body prone to many things biologically his body wasnt immune to also as he was stirictly veg he found it hard to have a good meal which was vegetarians well alas if he stayed in india we might never talked about him anyways i guess by looking at the opportunities available in India at that time
There is also a genius mathematician named Vashishtha Narayan Singh who worked at NASA,he helped NASA's to solve malfunctioning of APOLLO but we don't know much about him.😔😔
I had read that Hardy wasn't too impressed by the first work that Rami sent him, since it had already discovered and published prior (although Rami didn't know it was already published). Hardy's response was something like "What's the big deal, we all already know this?" Then he turned to the next page and saw that Rami kept going, into brand new discoveries...and the rest was history.
This reminds me of a blade runner quote: "The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long". Humanity was greatly gifted by his contributions and definitely felt the loss.
I knew of him already but I like that at the end you highlight the importance of nurturing talent. It is so difficult as a parent sometimes to know when to let them have free slack line and when they need to be reeled in. Kind of like fishing ;-) Parenting is the most important job in the universe.
@@Straight_Talk His life itself is a proof that he is the best! He was not a mathematician but maths itself. Think Hard for a second. Read about his life in detail... compare it to every other mathematician who has ever lived. No one achieved what he did in his 32 years of lifetime even with his circumstances. Think about what he could have achieved in another 50 years.
@@anirudhchamoli8102 How is his life proof that he is the best? How does it prove that he is a greater mathematician than Newton, Euler, Gauss, von Neumann, and other greats. I fail to see your logic. Possibly that’s because your thinking is guided by nationalism rather than logic.
@@Straight_Talk Just because you failed to see my logic doesn't mean that whatever I wrote was out of nationalism. Newton discovered gravity at the age of 23 and continued for decades, But if you measure it upto 32 years of his life ... he was just starting, same goes for all. My logic is simple as Hardy and other professors of that time shared that ramanujan was giving theorems that couldn't be understood and discovered. They key behind my logic is that He was doing something impossible so quick and fast, he died at 32 but his contributions is compared to the greatest of science masters like newton, einstein etc. I said that he is the greatest for his fast paced achievement in he shortest time possible and that too in the worst circumstances. Moreover, Saying someone is the greatest is one's personal opinion as everyone's opinion differs so for you it might be someone else but for me the greatest mathematician will be Shrinivasa Ramanujan.
@@anirudhchamoli8102 Your post is garbled and incoherent. On the issue of contibutions at a young age, Newton discovered calculus, among other great discoveries, while in his 20s. Einstein likewise made fundamental contributions to physics, such as relativity, in his 20s.
Not only Srinivas Ramanujan India has produced many great mathematician🇮🇳. And it is true that Goddess (Devi) used to explain Maths to Ramanujan in his Dream. Ramanujan Said ~ *"An equation for me has no meaning unless it expresses a thought of God"*
@@Straight_Talk True, thats because the Indian era has long ended. Advanced calculus was already in use when Newton wasn't even born. The 9 planets (+ pluto) were already known and were worshipped daily, pythagoras theorem, the preparation of dry battery, every field of science was being mastered in India till Islamic Invasions happened and the rest is history. But whenever I say this, westerns start crying about how Indians claim everything that has been discovered. No need to trust me... Just google it up.... and since everyone trust western source only.... there are plenty of western videos that has way way more than I have written! , not even as an Indian but as a human it feels bad that so much has been lost and so much time has been wasted in rediscovering things that had already been discovered somewhere else.
People like him are prevalent, probably not to the point of his caliber but close (which is still super impressive) because they want to focus on that one thing that intrigues them. Yet we have a school system that wants us to diverse our expertise and subject it to a GPA and it leads to many people losing confidence and missing out on their potential. One day I hope we can combat this.
Are you as intelligent as Ramanujan. Actually, would be you be able to work as hard as Ramanujan? Lol. Yet people like you, probably out of laziness, has a lot of criticism about grades. Of course, why wouldn’t you want to abolish grades/CGPA when you can laze around while other work likes dogs yet get the same recognition.
That's India... Dumb people with power. People like Ramanujan starving for light. Who knows how many Ramanujans we have lost. Some bitten by Scorpios cause he couldn't afford footwear. Some starved to death. Some working in a restaurant because of being poor. The light isn't falling on the people it should fall on.
The mean value theorem (today derived from #Rolle's theorem) was found by #Parameshvara in the fifteenth century in the "Lilavati Bhasya", a commentary on Bhaskara's #Lilavati. Madhava (1340-1425) and the Kerala School mathematicians. In this result, there are traces of the general mean value theorem, one of the most important theorems in analysis, which today is usually derived from #Rolle's theorem.
His knowledge came from some divine sources, considering what he did with almost nothing. People work their entire lives with all the education in the world and do nothing like what he did. The human brain is truly a mystery
Ramanujan was dirt poor but still a practitioner of the rigid caste system which divided India over the ages & caused India to be subjugated for over a 1000 years. He was at the highest end. Imagine what it could have been living as an “untouchable” carrying the excreta of people like Ramanujan scraped off the floor on their heads? Remember, no flowing toilets. This system destroyed India & Ramanujan & still to this day, countless others. Stop gloating on this ancient stupidity & try to change for the better.
@@Gengingen The varna system in India saved it from being conquered by Islam and Christianity, and it is the reason why despite all the set backs India can produce people like Ramanujan. India never had slaves like other civilizations in its 8,000 year + history. And people don't like to admit it but "untouchablity" is the product of Buddhist and Jain thought, it has nothing to do with the vedic dharma.
If someone proposes that untouchability is the product of Buddhist and Jain thoughts, he/she, then, is requested to kindly read Vedic literature, especially Dharmasastras (Baudhayana, Vashistha, Gautama, and Manu). A lot of research works have already been done on this issue and Indologists, historians, scholars of literature and sociologists agree to the proposition that Caste system and Untouchability are the Vedic product to Indian civilization. However, imagine what could have actually happened if Ramanujan were a Tamil Dalit??????????????????
@@ambedkaritesofbengal790 Vedic science deals with 4 varnas only. There are those who fall outside the varna system such as foreigners, some tribal communities and the like but that is a separate matter. Buddhism and Jainism are two darshanas which through their stance of absolute non-violence, made certain occupations such as butcher, hunter, fisherman, etc "unclean," and that laid the foundation for whole communities to become what would later be called the untouchable class.
@@calmislamly The thesis that untouchability is based on certain dirty occupations is one of the many theories of defining this system. There are other theories, such as the theory of mixed race that violated the strict Varna order. In the later Vedic period which is the extention of Vedic teachings the Dharmasastras and Dharmasastras all composed by Brahmins became more rigid and doctrinal. In this period, especially in the Bouddhayana Dharmasutra many terms such as Antyaja, Asprishya, Antevasin were used to refer to two groups of people: many indigenous groups and people of mixed race. Therefore, the practice of untouchability in ancient India was purely a Brahminical invention. If someone proposes that Buddhism being a doctrine of Non-violence terms different occupations and its practitioners as untouchable is untenable and unverified claim. Historians have dealt with it and they already exhausted the research by claim that Caste system and Untouchability were the Vedic, Brahminical invention. Compared to Brahminical Varna order, Buddhist order opened its way for people of all classes and occupations. Even if someone claims that Buddhism and Jainism created Untouchability, it sounds quite historical ignorance. One has to read Ambedkar and other Buddhist scholars for further clarification on this matter.
Hey Cindy, I hope You will make a small doc on Dr. SN BOSE,who theorise boson,on the basis of which Peter Higgs found Higgs Boson in Large hadron collider.Peter Higgs got nobel prize but the man(Satyendranath Bose) who theorise boson never got recognition.
I just recently started believing in Bhagwan (at the age of 16) and oh my god the fact that goddess herself convinced him to go to Cambridge is really great Its one the many things that makes me wanna turn devotional
@@yashpatel261 Same! When i was kid i did not use to believe in God. But when i grow up , i started believe god, that's why I want to tell you "Grow up kid" I know, you are silly secular guy but It's time to know about our Indian culture . Please try to understand my point.
Abject poverty. Little food. Disease. Hardly any jobs. This was life for most Indians under British rule. We only hard our gods, our Dharma, our unwavering commitment to what is right. We did not steal, murder , loot , colonize other countries. And yet, we produced the basics of modern math, science, medicine and astronomy. And here we are, seen as a backward country just because we dont have enough wealth. Wealth and values are different. We know we will get wealthy in the next 2 decades. But we'd rather be known for our values. We are India.
And what was life like before British rule? Was it a peaceful utopia? What was the literacy rate? Were there any trains? How much of the economy came from foreign trade? Was the farming industry lucrative or about survival? Without the British how would Ramanujan have shared his knowledge with the world? The British helped end the slave trade. The British ended the violence between indigenous groups in North America (lookup origins of lacrosse for example). The British helped create and expand international law. Many inventions you use every day are from the British. Your watching this video and commenting in English is thanks to the British. Stop feeding division and turn to gratitude. As a Brit I am grateful to India for many things, beginning with yoga. I have met Indian friends who have changed my world view for the better. The hate on the west needs to end because our world has never been so divided both within countries and between them and continents. It won't end well if you pour fuel on the fire instead of helping to collect rain.
I also don't view India as a backward country. I don't know why you think people in the West view it that way, we aren't a monolith just like India isnt. My biggest concern about India is the religious extremism that has increased under Modi, his human rights record, and increased tensions with Pakistan. I don't like the Khalistan and Punjab situation, racism and the caste system that Indian immigrants have brought with them to the west. Also, I have a hard time believing the British didn't try to reduce disease in India and improve healthcare, sanitation, etc. I am against missionaries proselytizing but I'm sure missionaries from the UK worked in India to improve healthcare too. None of the Brits involved in colonization are alive today. The overwhelming majority of Brits alive during it did not personally benefit from it. There was rampant poverty and inequality in Britain too.
Wonderful session or video... I really admire the talent and growth of the genius Ramanujan.. a self taught mathematician whose work made many naive students to tranform into greats and other expert mathematicians to think and prove his theorems for the betterment of the world 🌎
On an unrelated note. INDIA became the fourth country to land on the moon. **And FIRST country to land on the south pole of moon in the budget of 74 million dollars.**
All that money could have been spent on poverty and educational initiatives. They had nothing new to learn from the moon. It was just about ego, power and national pride.
@@MsBhappy Reserve your sadness and jealousy for 2025 when India will send humans to space. And it will also inaurgurate world's largest renewable energy Park of the size of Singapore with capacity of 30 thousand megawatts which can serve upto 2 million homes. World's largest office building is recently been opened in India. And in 2026 bullet train. India will have bullet train before so called developed AMERICA. .Now take aspirin, you got a serious headache I know. Edit- People enjoying WHITE privilege will not understand the level of hardwork India is doing Their countries are busy finding new genders every year. They are more interested in parts between the legs rather than part behind the eyes.
How many wonderful young minds were and still are overlooked. I hope he rests well knowing he encouraged a great deal of discovery, wonder and a touch of magic.
Great topic and video ! The only thing throwing me off it for me is the pronunciation and the markings the Indian cities on the map. Chennai is a coastal metropolis ...
Wonderful vedio, well scripted, beautiful visuals, amazing rendering. But could have added 1729 story too. During school time, we had a lesson in English named RAMANUJAN, about his mathematical abilities. But most of us are scared maths and math teacher.
Being an Indian, I am just sad. Tearing up and wishing what if he didn’t die of tuberculosis. He would have discovered the secrets of universe. He could have been the greatest scientist/ mathematician of all time. Just amazed His works are yet to deciphered. Believing in Krishna, I guess his destiny was determined and he was supposed to leave after his work was done for the humanity. But just sad.
Thanks Cindy for the revealing video. I first heard of Ramanujan in the taxi cab number story . Thanks to all Indian Mathematicians. I am proud of you.
@@dummy9517shit at this point bihar should start doing it too we have valid reasons we are discriminated all over india cuz of poverty like the world discriminates india for poverty how ironic
India has alot from zero , decimals , algebra chess , plastic surgery, button, shampoo thousands of invention done by indians Just this world is racist specially white westerns and take our credit shamelessly
@@calicoesblue4703neither Africa nor India are an ancient civilization in and of itself. It requires further defining. Yes we all came out of Africa but innovation was not possible in Africa to the same extent as in other places partly due to the environment. No civilization in sub-Saharan Africa had a written language for example.
@@MsBhappy That is absolutely false. The Ancient Greek Historians like Herodotus and others said themselves they were taught everything from Africa, Kemet/Egypt. If there was no innovation in Africa, how could King Mansa Musa be the richest man in history??? etc.... smh
Actually, two or three other maths. wizards' names some intellects take in India have explained five subjects each, say, but with "very little" area + depth wise. BUT our dear Srinivasa Iyengar Ramanujan (Cantab. Prof. Hardy's dream) died at age 33yrs. due to TB. By then, as per his lost 4 diaries he had covered only three subjects, with "infinite" area and depth,- wish the Maestro had survived for 25yrs. more. Babu, salute! Mrs. Janki Ammal Ramanujan (expired, 1997) dedicated. Kolkata, India, & share globally plz., infinitely.❤
I guess connecting everything to each other with the internet would help amazing people but that still doesn’t address cost/tuition and being able to support basic life necessities. I guess if I had to solve this problem it would be to write a rebuttal of a published paper in the field of studies. However, still have a problem with sustainment and having access to clean environments. Life does find a way though so I guess I would trust our spiritual connection
It is very motivating for me as I love maths and I am a indian on the other side it makes me sad that even now many young and talented children are dying and suffering from hunger and diseases which are treatable but the poverty is getting in the way, you don't have control where u born but I wish that atleast the children of the poor should get atleast one chance at education to turn their life around
Shrinivasa Ramanujan said that "mathamatical equations are nothing to to him than a thought of god"....infact he said that he didnt know how he was doing the math.. why or how he wrote these equations...he was a stong beliver of a hindu goddess who he worshiped all the time and meditate upon her grace...he said it was her who told him to write these equations down to help the world and that he had no other explaination of how he did it.
i belive that this is an extremely important aspect of his life and must be talked about more often for a Genius like him, every acpect of his life must be as important, brilliant, inspiring, exciting..and helpful in further understanding the true nature of the world and life. just because something relates to religious aspects doesn't mean it should be shrugged off as unvaluable or false immediately.
The Indian accent voice over wouldn’t have been of a Tamil speaker, such as Ramanujan. Probably a modern Hindi native speaker would have such an accent. India is rather a linguistically and ethnically diverse one cannot claim the Indian dialect of English is spoken with just one accent.
*What other unsung heroes in science or math do you think deserve more recognition?*
Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium subscription!
Correction: @0:24 locator for Chennai is slightly off, should be coastal. My bad!
Carl Friedrich GAUS PLEASE. Thanks for Ramanujan Highly awaited video for me. Some muslim scientists would be cool too. If you wish to go for some rather MORE unkown ones I think Emmy Noether should be one
Aryabhatt the Indian genius who created 0
How about zeno?
I was going to name him too very cool man imo@@vedantmungre1702
yes, the man who gave zero to the world @@vedantmungre1702
The world was robbed of Ramanujan's genius much too early. Had Ramanujan lived another 32 years, just imagine the additional wealth of Mathematical knowledge & insight he would have left us. It's amazing that his genius has benefited, not just Mathematica, but Physics and Science as a whole.
The Mathematics Legendary Maestro 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Love him from🇧🇩🖐
Not world , but morale of Ideology without involving a Humanism
Srinivasa Ramanujan was a self-taught genius who made substantial contributions to mathematics. His work continues to inspire and challenge mathematicians around the world. It’s amazing how much he accomplished in his short life.. i feel proud as a Indian.
Indeed, India has a fine heritage and still produces many world class academics.
interesting thing is he never went to school because of colonial loot and scarcity. Still his interest in Mathematics developed and he achieved a great milestone in the history of mathematics.
What the "elite" are hiding? The shocking story of your enslavement 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
Yea he did it , Not u
@@bigdaddy7729He is not taking his credit. He is just acknowledging his roots that they both belong to the same country. However people who suffer from identity crisis often show their Jealousy. Just like you are doing.
The Man Who Knew Infinity is a great movie for anyone who is interested in learning more
ikr
Amen! I love the movie! Show it in my high school math classes.
It is also a good book by Robert Kanigel that explains and goes more in detail of Ramanujan's life.
What the "elite" are hiding? The shocking story of your enslavement 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
Great film yaar
(The title was changed after this comment) .. original comment: “Unlikely”-ness 😂 is not at all ignorant or racist idea. A country that invented decimal numbers, zero, algebra, calculus, .. knew the circumference of a spherical earth 1500 years ago .. is an “unlikely” place of origin for a math genius.
This.
Should be liked more and should be top comment
Couldn't agree more👏
Let them be , ignorant can't be taught, without india they wouldn't even know how to count😂
Let others be as racist as they can. Our achievements will be our comebacks to them.
Newton was the one who invented calculus..
Ramanujan DID know how to prove results. The main reason he did not include proofs in letters was simple and sad: he was too poor to afford postal paper.
Okay that's actually depressing wtf, but I guess that makes sense, because if Ramanujan wasn't able to write proofs he wouldn't have been able to collaborate with Hardy so well
this might be true for his work back in india, but once he came to england he still couldn't prove a lot of his assertions. This is probably because of the way he taught himself mathematics, he learnt it intuitively using books using books with no full solutions
No he didn't prove them because he thought those were obvious 😂. And for a genius like him this is a common trait.
@@bornmad not to say im a genius obviously but i do this a lot 😭
Ramanujan's story shows why eliminating poverty and giving everyone the opportunity develop their potential (not to mention universal healthcare) is so important. We are extremely lucky he managed to share his brilliance with the world at all.
It's crazy sad to imagine now 12:59 how many untapped minds like Ramanujan's exist/existed out there in history, and never got their chances to a breakthrough, to be "discovered". Because of no support system, no way to reach out, the recipients not believing them, losing interest etc. And than you got western kids who say "oh when am I ever ganna use any of this?" "I can retake the class, who cares" 🤡🤡
And who knows what he could have accomplished had he not died so young.
@@IntrinsicPalomides He was on a crazy tear when he died, he was coming up with ground breaking formulas almost at will. If had lived a long life chances are we would be many decades ahead in many areas of mathematics compared to today.
❤absolutely CORRECT and true well said and well OBSERVED
"Ramanujan's story shows why eliminating poverty and giving everyone the opportunity develop their potential (not to mention universal healthcare) is so important. " You are drawing the opposite conclusion from what the facts show. The facts are that even the poor can achieve a lot. OTOH, Trump grew up rich and accomplished little in mathematics or elsewhere.
I visited his house in Kumbakonam, which is preserved as a memorial now.
Humbling experience..
"An Equation For Me Has No Meaning Unless It Expresses A Thought Of God." -Srinivasa Ramanujan
This is written at the entrance of Ramanujan College named after him, from which I had the honour to complete my undergrad.
Which god ??
@@Aman-wt9ivMany gods , hindu gods
@@Aman-wt9ivIt's just a hyperbole, don't think too much about it.
@@Aman-wt9iv Goddess Namagari, the divine Feminine. An avatar of Maa Parvati.
It's a fact.Not a hyperbole.
He was one of the greatest mathematicians of all time. And as an Indian, I can bet that there are many underground mathematics genius here in India who are still undiscovered or unknown.
definitely
What the "elite" are hiding? The shocking story of your enslavement 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
They are too busy giving iit jee coaching
@@CountingStars333after all, brilliance won't feed them. And there are no Hardy walking around nowadays to look after them, either.
Necessity of earning takes you out of yourself, it kills geniuses
Why are they unknown? If a person has exceptional talent, it's immediately apparent at school.
Indians in general aren't terribly bright. Don't seek to extrapolate from a single exceptional case.
Just imagine the billions of people who live in poverty today. How many of them are geniuses or potential geniuses whose light will never shine due the constraints brought about by poverty
Sadly that's true
Me 😢🙁
Bruh you have a smartphone which internet access. You definitely NOT one of them@@Snow-w7o
I don't think a man who is that brilliant can be hidden.
Absolutely incredible human being. Imagine what else he'd solve and contribute to humanity if he lived much longer.
Bro dropped 4,000 equations before the age of 21. An incredible mathematician and a man of unshakeable faith.
Lies again? Tushy Vigrx Plus
Srinivasa Ramanujan Sir is actually a higher dimensional being who incarnated as a human being to show how we can approach Mathematics
Lol @@akshaylenin7166
I am deeply humbled by Srinivasa Ramanujan's tenacity and burning desire to leave our world with such a treasure trove of Mathematics despite his unpromising life and survival. He truly was a self made Math prodigy. Mr. Hardy by just being there and have his work recognized saved the world from a 1000 years or more of Mathematical deprivation.
I think ufos gave him this knowledge
@@EizengoldtGoddess Namagiri Thayyar is his real Mathematics Teacher
@@akshaylenin7166 I think it's aliens bro
@@Eizengoldt why do you think Aliens fed Ramanujan Sir Mathematical knowledge? It's Goddess herself.Devotees seek Lord Ganesha,Devi Divine Mother, Lord Shiva, Lord Vishnu, Mother Namagiri Thayyar blessings when acquiring knowledge
When I was in school each year on his birth anniversary -22 Dec we would celebrate his remarkable short and very inspiring life.
This is an excellent presentation. Clear and complete
Let us appreciate the unsung hero here, Hardy who had an open mind and gave everyone their chance
Ramanujan is the main protagonist of this story but the real hero is Hardy.
@@dummy9517like a narrator
That's indeed true and important to take note of.
They deserve a recognition, good you made a video on him
India's Profound Influence on the Field of Mathematics
3000 BCE: Introduction of the Ruler
1200 BCE: Pioneering the Concept of Infinity
700 BCE: Early Development of the Pythagorean Theorem
700 BCE: Invention of Chess
600 BCE: Insights into Earth's Orbit
200 BCE: Advancements in Fibonacci Numbers
300 CE: Groundbreaking Contributions to Algebra, Trigonometry, and the Fundamentals of Calculus
500 BCE-500 CE: Invention of Modern Numerals
500 CE: Creation of the Decimal System and the Revolutionary Idea of Zero
1895: Breakthrough in Wireless Communication
Additionally, India's mathematical heritage extends further with noteworthy contributions such as:
The Bakhshali Manuscript (circa 3rd century CE): This ancient text contains early examples of algebraic and geometric methods for solving mathematical problems.
Madhava's Infinite Series (14th century CE): Madhava, a Kerala school mathematician, developed infinite series expansions for trigonometric functions, paving the way for later developments in calculus.
Kerala School of Mathematics (14th-16th centuries CE): This school made significant contributions to the study of calculus, including methods for computing derivatives and integrals.
Aryabhata's Aryabhatiya (499 CE): This influential work contains mathematical ideas, including spherical trigonometry and the concept of π (pi).
Bhaskara I's Lilavati (12th century CE): Lilavati covers various mathematical topics, including arithmetic, algebra, and geometry, and is known for its engaging problem-solving examples.
Bhaskara II's Siddhanta Shiromani (12th century CE): This text includes sections on algebra, trigonometry, and astronomy and provides valuable insights into Indian mathematical achievements.
Indian Astronomy: India's mathematical prowess extended into astronomy, with scholars like Brahmagupta (7th century CE) contributing to the understanding of celestial movements and calculations.
+1
my ass
Bla bla bla bla bla bla bla 😂 stop it man
@@Aman-wt9iv cry more this what ur people say when learning “ blah blah blah” 😂😂
Bro everything you said is heresay, everything being inception and shit
I was extremely amazed and impressed by one of his theorems, it seemed to be impossible at first, but it was proved just by using simple calculations and other stuff, he was a true genius, discovered such theorems no one else thought possible.
P/S: I wonder if you could make a video about John Nash Jr., I want to find out more about his life and his contributions to mathematics and economics
Fun fact : There is a reputed College in Delhi University called Ramanujan College which was officially established as a full time college in 2010
1729 hardy ramanujan number should have been a great addition I think. It was a beautiful coincidence story of how much he loved numbers, but loved to see this video of Ramanujan 👍
Interesting fact: ramanujan actually created the mathematics for black holes.
Fact: ramanujan worked out the math that happened to be useful in blackhole analysis.
Ah, but I never said it was specifically for black holes, did I? It's remarkable how one statement provides such a grammatical loophole.
Einstein created Mathematics for blackholes.
@@cmn14 read again
@@VY-zt3ph If we're being technical, Karl Schwarzchild created the first modern solution to relativity that would explain a black hole.
Sometimes I just wonder what if God gifted Talents like Ramanujan a longer life just how much of more would they have achieved is beyond imagination, well somewhere someone might be preparing to continue his work we never know...
But just think about our school and college syllabus
They must have doubled even if some great people like him
lived an extra 4- 5 years
But I honestly wonder how most of these great people were just born weaker and their life spans were so small
@@Nisha.lilac9 well speaking for the case of Ramanujan he could have lived a long life if he stayed in india as by going to england made his body prone to many things biologically his body wasnt immune to also as he was stirictly veg he found it hard to have a good meal which was vegetarians well alas if he stayed in india we might never talked about him anyways i guess by looking at the opportunities available in India at that time
What the "elite" are hiding? The shocking story of your enslavement 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
There is also a genius mathematician named Vashishtha Narayan Singh who worked at NASA,he helped NASA's to solve malfunctioning of APOLLO but we don't know much about him.😔😔
Was * he recently expired in 2019
@@serene.hozier1 🤣🤣🤣
??@@antetesija3033
I had read that Hardy wasn't too impressed by the first work that Rami sent him, since it had already discovered and published prior (although Rami didn't know it was already published). Hardy's response was something like "What's the big deal, we all already know this?" Then he turned to the next page and saw that Rami kept going, into brand new discoveries...and the rest was history.
"Great knowledge comes from the humblest of origins"
ரொம்ப நன்றி சார் ராமானுஜன் பற்றிய பதிவிற்கு 🙏
[Thank you so much for making video for Sir Ramanujan]
This reminds me of a blade runner quote:
"The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long". Humanity was greatly gifted by his contributions and definitely felt the loss.
13:02 what a beautiful quote
I knew of him already but I like that at the end you highlight the importance of nurturing talent. It is so difficult as a parent sometimes to know when to let them have free slack line and when they need to be reeled in. Kind of like fishing ;-) Parenting is the most important job in the universe.
Madhava (1340-1425) had a concept of #Taylor series, and his name now adorns what used to be known as the Leibniz series.
Ramanujan was probably the greatest mathematician that ever lived , considering the age at which he united with god
What maths qualifications do you have to make such a bold statement?
@@Straight_Talk His life itself is a proof that he is the best! He was not a mathematician but maths itself. Think Hard for a second. Read about his life in detail... compare it to every other mathematician who has ever lived. No one achieved what he did in his 32 years of lifetime even with his circumstances. Think about what he could have achieved in another 50 years.
@@anirudhchamoli8102 How is his life proof that he is the best? How does it prove that he is a greater mathematician than Newton, Euler, Gauss, von Neumann, and other greats. I fail to see your logic. Possibly that’s because your thinking is guided by nationalism rather than logic.
@@Straight_Talk Just because you failed to see my logic doesn't mean that whatever I wrote was out of nationalism. Newton discovered gravity at the age of 23 and continued for decades, But if you measure it upto 32 years of his life ... he was just starting, same goes for all. My logic is simple as Hardy and other professors of that time shared that ramanujan was giving theorems that couldn't be understood and discovered. They key behind my logic is that He was doing something impossible so quick and fast, he died at 32 but his contributions is compared to the greatest of science masters like newton, einstein etc. I said that he is the greatest for his fast paced achievement in he shortest time possible and that too in the worst circumstances. Moreover, Saying someone is the greatest is one's personal opinion as everyone's opinion differs so for you it might be someone else but for me the greatest mathematician will be Shrinivasa Ramanujan.
@@anirudhchamoli8102 Your post is garbled and incoherent. On the issue of contibutions at a young age, Newton discovered calculus, among other great discoveries, while in his 20s. Einstein likewise made fundamental contributions to physics, such as relativity, in his 20s.
Not only Srinivas Ramanujan India has produced many great mathematician🇮🇳. And it is true that Goddess (Devi) used to explain Maths to Ramanujan in his Dream.
Ramanujan Said ~
*"An equation for me has no meaning unless it expresses a thought of God"*
India has produced extremely few great mathematicians. Over the past 500 years, at least 95% of truly great mathematicians have been Western.
@@Straight_Talk True, thats because the Indian era has long ended. Advanced calculus was already in use when Newton wasn't even born. The 9 planets (+ pluto) were already known and were worshipped daily, pythagoras theorem, the preparation of dry battery, every field of science was being mastered in India till Islamic Invasions happened and the rest is history. But whenever I say this, westerns start crying about how Indians claim everything that has been discovered.
No need to trust me... Just google it up.... and since everyone trust western source only.... there are plenty of western videos that has way way more than I have written! , not even as an Indian but as a human it feels bad that so much has been lost and so much time has been wasted in rediscovering things that had already been discovered somewhere else.
This is fake propaganda run by people who earns money from temple and politicise community or region votes in the name of religion so called hindus
@@Straight_Talkwe were busy freeing ourselves that's why. But we have discovered a lot in maths from zero, to infinity.
@@Straight_Talk😂😂 ramanjun alone is equivalent for every western mathematician from past 500 yrs
People like him are prevalent, probably not to the point of his caliber but close (which is still super impressive) because they want to focus on that one thing that intrigues them. Yet we have a school system that wants us to diverse our expertise and subject it to a GPA and it leads to many people losing confidence and missing out on their potential. One day I hope we can combat this.
Are you as intelligent as Ramanujan.
Actually, would be you be able to work as hard as Ramanujan? Lol.
Yet people like you, probably out of laziness, has a lot of criticism about grades.
Of course, why wouldn’t you want to abolish grades/CGPA when you can laze around while other work likes dogs yet get the same recognition.
Personalized Ai tutors
There are many other Ramanujans in India rotting away in sheer poverty struggling to make minimum wages. Many go undiscovered
🧢
@@calicoesblue4703 it's true, though
Genuinely speaking not really
Like me
sadly everywhere in the world...
I have never heard of such a Godlike Genius who completely built himself from scratch. Too strange tl believe in this era.
A rather sad thing is the way He's been kinda sidelined in the modern mainstream affairs of India while the Hollywood made a feature film on Him.
That's India... Dumb people with power. People like Ramanujan starving for light.
Who knows how many Ramanujans we have lost. Some bitten by Scorpios cause he couldn't afford footwear.
Some starved to death.
Some working in a restaurant because of being poor.
The light isn't falling on the people it should fall on.
yes we need bollywood ramanujan movie with bollywood actors
@@killer414 As long as they dance i would see it
Ramanujan was a gift for all humanity.
The mean value theorem (today derived from #Rolle's theorem) was found by #Parameshvara in the fifteenth century in the "Lilavati Bhasya", a commentary on Bhaskara's #Lilavati.
Madhava (1340-1425) and the Kerala School mathematicians.
In this result, there are traces of the general mean value theorem, one of the most important theorems in analysis, which today is usually derived from #Rolle's theorem.
Can you show me the proofs? If it's true you wouldn't say "go search it yourself" right?
His knowledge came from some divine sources, considering what he did with almost nothing. People work their entire lives with all the education in the world and do nothing like what he did. The human brain is truly a mystery
People always say Brahmins are rich and oppressive and this guy could barely feed himself. The lies need to stop.
Ramanujan was dirt poor but still a practitioner of the rigid caste system which divided India over the ages & caused India to be subjugated for over a 1000 years. He was at the highest end. Imagine what it could have been living as an “untouchable” carrying the excreta of people like Ramanujan scraped off the floor on their heads? Remember, no flowing toilets. This system destroyed India & Ramanujan & still to this day, countless others. Stop gloating on this ancient stupidity & try to change for the better.
@@Gengingen The varna system in India saved it from being conquered by Islam and Christianity, and it is the reason why despite all the set backs India can produce people like Ramanujan. India never had slaves like other civilizations in its 8,000 year + history. And people don't like to admit it but "untouchablity" is the product of Buddhist and Jain thought, it has nothing to do with the vedic dharma.
If someone proposes that untouchability is the product of Buddhist and Jain thoughts, he/she, then, is requested to kindly read Vedic literature, especially Dharmasastras (Baudhayana, Vashistha, Gautama, and Manu).
A lot of research works have already been done on this issue and Indologists, historians, scholars of literature and sociologists agree to the proposition that Caste system and Untouchability are the Vedic product to Indian civilization.
However, imagine what could have actually happened if Ramanujan were a Tamil Dalit??????????????????
@@ambedkaritesofbengal790 Vedic science deals with 4 varnas only. There are those who fall outside the varna system such as foreigners, some tribal communities and the like but that is a separate matter.
Buddhism and Jainism are two darshanas which through their stance of absolute non-violence, made certain occupations such as butcher, hunter, fisherman, etc "unclean," and that laid the foundation for whole communities to become what would later be called the untouchable class.
@@calmislamly
The thesis that untouchability is based on certain dirty occupations is one of the many theories of defining this system. There are other theories, such as the theory of mixed race that violated the strict Varna order. In the later Vedic period which is the extention of Vedic teachings the Dharmasastras and Dharmasastras all composed by Brahmins became more rigid and doctrinal. In this period, especially in the Bouddhayana Dharmasutra many terms such as Antyaja, Asprishya, Antevasin were used to refer to two groups of people: many indigenous groups and people of mixed race. Therefore, the practice of untouchability in ancient India was purely a Brahminical invention.
If someone proposes that Buddhism being a doctrine of Non-violence terms different occupations and its practitioners as untouchable is untenable and unverified claim. Historians have dealt with it and they already exhausted the research by claim that Caste system and Untouchability were the Vedic, Brahminical invention.
Compared to Brahminical Varna order, Buddhist order opened its way for people of all classes and occupations.
Even if someone claims that Buddhism and Jainism created Untouchability, it sounds quite historical ignorance. One has to read Ambedkar and other Buddhist scholars for further clarification on this matter.
One of the the Greatest Mathematician of all Time - Srinivasa Ramanujan
I don't think it was unusual. India that is bharat has a rich history of mathematics with great mathematics contributing to it.
Hey Cindy, I hope You will make a small doc on Dr. SN BOSE,who theorise boson,on the basis of which Peter Higgs found Higgs Boson in Large hadron collider.Peter Higgs got nobel prize but the man(Satyendranath Bose) who theorise boson never got recognition.
What else. Unlikely Sundar Pichai, unlikely Satya, Unlikely Arvind Krishna, Unlikely Shantanu, Unlikely Indira , Unlikely Srinivas Ramnmujan, Unlikely Chandrayan , Unlikely mars orbiter
If he could live a little longer, he would have discovered more about the universe.
His life will continue to inspire millions.
I just recently started believing in Bhagwan (at the age of 16) and oh my god the fact that goddess herself convinced him to go to Cambridge is really great
Its one the many things that makes me wanna turn devotional
It was his own mind that told him to go to Cambridge. There are no gods or goddesses.
@@yashpatel261it's a phase you'll get over it 😂
@@yashpatel261 Same! When i was kid i did not use to believe in God. But when i grow up , i started believe god, that's why I want to tell you "Grow up kid"
I know, you are silly secular guy but It's time to know about our Indian culture . Please try to understand my point.
@@yashpatel261the ramanujan himself said its the goddess who taught him. What you are talking about is fantasy. Grow up and know the reality.
@@yashpatel261God is not separate from you. He lives inside you, sometimes talking also, if you care to listen.
Thank you for highlighting his life, and as an Indian, I believe there are hundreds of Ramanujans facing similar struggles as he did in the past.
He is the self taught genius. ❤ Really a God gift ❤🕉️🙏
This guy was a real Mathemagician
Woah .. great word👍
Hey thank you for covering him.He is India's pride.
Great narration, voice, and storytelling. I'm grateful to have learned about Ramanujan's life and gifts.
I haven't even started watching the video, but thanks for making this
Abject poverty. Little food. Disease. Hardly any jobs. This was life for most Indians under British rule.
We only hard our gods, our Dharma, our unwavering commitment to what is right.
We did not steal, murder , loot , colonize other countries.
And yet, we produced the basics of modern math, science, medicine and astronomy.
And here we are, seen as a backward country just because we dont have enough wealth.
Wealth and values are different. We know we will get wealthy in the next 2 decades. But we'd rather be known for our values.
We are India.
Cry harder
lmao what basics?You did shit nothing,just try to take credit for everything
Stop it man it's embarrassing
And what was life like before British rule? Was it a peaceful utopia? What was the literacy rate? Were there any trains? How much of the economy came from foreign trade? Was the farming industry lucrative or about survival? Without the British how would Ramanujan have shared his knowledge with the world?
The British helped end the slave trade. The British ended the violence between indigenous groups in North America (lookup origins of lacrosse for example). The British helped create and expand international law. Many inventions you use every day are from the British. Your watching this video and commenting in English is thanks to the British. Stop feeding division and turn to gratitude.
As a Brit I am grateful to India for many things, beginning with yoga. I have met Indian friends who have changed my world view for the better. The hate on the west needs to end because our world has never been so divided both within countries and between them and continents. It won't end well if you pour fuel on the fire instead of helping to collect rain.
I also don't view India as a backward country. I don't know why you think people in the West view it that way, we aren't a monolith just like India isnt. My biggest concern about India is the religious extremism that has increased under Modi, his human rights record, and increased tensions with Pakistan. I don't like the Khalistan and Punjab situation, racism and the caste system that Indian immigrants have brought with them to the west.
Also, I have a hard time believing the British didn't try to reduce disease in India and improve healthcare, sanitation, etc. I am against missionaries proselytizing but I'm sure missionaries from the UK worked in India to improve healthcare too.
None of the Brits involved in colonization are alive today. The overwhelming majority of Brits alive during it did not personally benefit from it. There was rampant poverty and inequality in Britain too.
Its so beautiful and distinctive in your videos that you described real life examples of these complex math problems.
Kudos!!
Hi. After watching many videos on your channel, I just subscribed.
Please, release more videos about scientists, inventors etc. Your "Wright brothers story" video is my favourite.
What the "elite" are hiding? The shocking story of your enslavement 👉The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 💖
Wonderful session or video...
I really admire the talent and growth of the genius Ramanujan.. a self taught mathematician whose work made many naive students to tranform into greats and other expert mathematicians to think and prove his theorems for the betterment of the world 🌎
People😢didnt do mathematics "for the betterment of the world," but to satisfy their own curiosity. The prerequisite is FREEDOM.
Ramanujan provided the equation 1+2+3+...=-1/12 which is now used in string theor
yea sure,all positive integers will totally add up to *fractional negative rational number*
There is a good movie about him, "The Man Who Knew Infinity"
Thanks to Hardy introducing Ramanujam to world.
On an unrelated note.
INDIA became the fourth country to land on the moon.
**And FIRST country to land on the south pole of moon in the budget of 74 million dollars.**
@@ananymouse3988 how?
@@Boldtruthshow?
@@ananymouse3988 Well, the Indian comment section isn't known for sarcasm that much so i thought you were serious
All that money could have been spent on poverty and educational initiatives. They had nothing new to learn from the moon. It was just about ego, power and national pride.
@@MsBhappy Reserve your sadness and jealousy for 2025 when India will send humans to space.
And it will also inaurgurate world's largest renewable energy Park of the size of Singapore with capacity of 30 thousand megawatts which can serve upto 2 million homes.
World's largest office building is recently been opened in India.
And in 2026 bullet train.
India will have bullet train before so called developed AMERICA.
.Now take aspirin, you got a serious headache I know.
Edit- People enjoying WHITE privilege will not understand the level of hardwork India is doing
Their countries are busy finding new genders every year.
They are more interested in parts between the legs rather than part behind the eyes.
I believe that he also knew how to access the Akashic Records.
How many wonderful young minds were and still are overlooked. I hope he rests well knowing he encouraged a great deal of discovery, wonder and a touch of magic.
Unlikely? Are you kidding me? India is THE MOST LIKELY place for advancements in mathematics.
Great video. I am from Tamil Nadu so this makes me proud. And by the way Erode is spelled- ee-row-d.
respect to hardy for not trying to steal his thunder
These british people were very nice to him and enabled him, thats great and somewhat surprising
i guess he faced racism there but it was not mentioned in the video
Great topic and video ! The only thing throwing me off it for me is the pronunciation and the markings the Indian cities on the map. Chennai is a coastal metropolis ...
Sorry, I didn't catch the error. You're right locator should have been by the coast
@@Newsthink Thank you for replying ! Overall great video on a really remarkable person !!
@@NewsthinkDo one on Gregory Perlman
They all piggybacked on his intuition. They stole from him and slowly poisoned him.
Not the indian voice reading the letter 💀💀
Wonderful vedio, well scripted, beautiful visuals, amazing rendering.
But could have added 1729 story too.
During school time, we had a lesson in English named RAMANUJAN, about his mathematical abilities. But most of us are scared maths and math teacher.
Lot to come from india, and will stay in india⛳🇮🇳 and its now officially the mother of cities♥️
Kashmir is also coming from India
Hope so
Being an Indian, I am just sad. Tearing up and wishing what if he didn’t die of tuberculosis. He would have discovered the secrets of universe. He could have been the greatest scientist/ mathematician of all time. Just amazed His works are yet to deciphered. Believing in Krishna, I guess his destiny was determined and he was supposed to leave after his work was done for the humanity. But just sad.
finally ramanujan is finally being acknowledged
Thanks Cindy for the revealing video. I first heard of Ramanujan in the taxi cab number story . Thanks to all Indian Mathematicians. I am proud of you.
“Unlikely” - why? Coz he was from India!?
Yup here people value cow as a fricking god !!!😂
Maybe cuz he wasn't educated in a university
@@Aman-wt9iv ok, clown 🤡🤡
Thanks for covering the lives of great scientists.
One of my favorite mathematicians. Cool episode.
He was a Tamilian, I'm proud to be Tamil, Ramanujan is my biggest inspiration
Not proud as an indian?
@@educationcorner2268these guys, and us Bengalis have a truly trash mentality. I hate being a Bengali in today's India
@@dummy9517but here we are bakayaro. 😁
@@dummy9517shit at this point bihar should start doing it too we have valid reasons we are discriminated all over india cuz of poverty like the world discriminates india for poverty how ironic
I never knew Indians had such hidden gems 😊
India has alot from zero , decimals , algebra chess , plastic surgery, button, shampoo thousands of invention done by indians
Just this world is racist specially white westerns and take our credit shamelessly
Can't imagine mathematics without Ramanujan. Legend!
Indian civilisation is the oldest surviving, with great gifts given to the world. Ramanujan was one such great one
Actually that title belongs to Africa
@@calicoesblue4703 what a stupid
He is taking about civilization
@@calicoesblue4703neither Africa nor India are an ancient civilization in and of itself. It requires further defining. Yes we all came out of Africa but innovation was not possible in Africa to the same extent as in other places partly due to the environment. No civilization in sub-Saharan Africa had a written language for example.
@@MsBhappy That is absolutely false. The Ancient Greek Historians like Herodotus and others said themselves they were taught everything from Africa, Kemet/Egypt. If there was no innovation in Africa, how could King Mansa Musa be the richest man in history??? etc.... smh
South Asia is one of the 4 ancient birth places of civilization
Actually, two or three other maths. wizards' names some intellects take in India have explained five subjects each, say, but with "very little" area + depth wise. BUT our dear Srinivasa Iyengar Ramanujan (Cantab. Prof. Hardy's dream) died at age 33yrs. due to TB. By then, as per his lost 4 diaries he had covered only three subjects, with "infinite" area and depth,- wish the Maestro had survived for 25yrs. more. Babu, salute! Mrs. Janki Ammal Ramanujan (expired, 1997) dedicated. Kolkata, India, & share globally plz., infinitely.❤
I guess connecting everything to each other with the internet would help amazing people but that still doesn’t address cost/tuition and being able to support basic life necessities. I guess if I had to solve this problem it would be to write a rebuttal of a published paper in the field of studies. However, still have a problem with sustainment and having access to clean environments. Life does find a way though so I guess I would trust our spiritual connection
It is very motivating for me as I love maths and I am a indian on the other side it makes me sad that even now many young and talented children are dying and suffering from hunger and diseases which are treatable but the poverty is getting in the way, you don't have control where u born but I wish that atleast the children of the poor should get atleast one chance at education to turn their life around
I saw the movie the man who knew infinity i enjoyed it this man was brilliant he was a autodidact
Education should be free for everyone, just as the air we breath in and out.
Genius has no pattern it comes in varieties
It often depends in their age + environment + experience + hard-work
Mind is a terrible thing to waste. Each and every brain allowed to flourish, humanity would have been in paradise already. Will we open our eyes ever?
Shrinivasa Ramanujan said that "mathamatical equations are nothing to to him than a thought of god"....infact he said that he didnt know how he was doing the math.. why or how he wrote these equations...he was a stong beliver of a hindu goddess who he worshiped all the time and meditate upon her grace...he said it was her who told him to write these equations down to help the world and that he had no other explaination of how he did it.
i belive that this is an extremely important aspect of his life and must be talked about more often for a Genius like him, every acpect of his life must be as important, brilliant, inspiring, exciting..and helpful in further understanding the true nature of the world and life. just because something relates to religious aspects doesn't mean it should be shrugged off as unvaluable or false immediately.
I’m proud to share the same birth town with this once in a century genius
Pure genius.
After Oppenheimer the movie, I've been more and more fascinated with these brilliant mind's biography
I heard that he was of the Brahmin caste. I thought that was a blessed caste. I am surprised by his poverty despite being in such a caste.
Brahmins were considered high in status as the priestly class. But not because of their wealth.
Man I’m from Pakistan and I feel very proud watching this documentary. Kudos to him for making Brown people into relevance
pure genius!!
wow.... i've been reading about him for 30+ years and this clip taught me several KEY things i never knew before!!!
Massive respect to tamilians who make this country always proud
* Indians
He was a tamil brahmin. Tamil hate brahmin and doesn't consider them as their own. But in taking credit always first
So true@@SarcasticSaar
Probably the smartest person that ever lived
The Indian accent voice over wouldn’t have been of a Tamil speaker, such as Ramanujan. Probably a modern Hindi native speaker would have such an accent. India is rather a linguistically and ethnically diverse one cannot claim the Indian dialect of English is spoken with just one accent.