To all the people complaining about his clothes and his accent: If you cannot focus on the message because you're too busy judging the mannerisms and appearances of the person delivering it, you're going to miss out on a lot in life. I get that his job includes sounding and looking as pleasing as possible, but not everyone with important things to say will appeal to you. If you're able to get rid of your prejudices and keep an open mind to what they're trying to say, you may just pick up something you did not know.
Ajeet Minhas He's actually not. He's a mathematician who's just delivering one public speech. Whether you take something away from what he's sharing or not, it doesn't really affect his career. If you miss out on the message it's purely your loss.
I highly recommend Numberphile. He's been in a few videos there, but they're all filled with incredible mathematicians who are super enthusiastic about what they do.
It's a shame that english people find it so entertaining to mock french people speaking in English with an accent when their english is probably worse than this man. His words are well structured, it sounds appealing and even when he speaks in French, the way he uses his words.... It's beautiful.
I am an English speaker who has translated the words of this brilliant mathematician from French into English. You are wrong. The man is a genius and a wonderful speaker to boot and it was a complete pleasure to work on his text... British people are not entirely as ignorant as you imagine. But feel free to generalise wildly...
I like it when you work on a problem like a physics problem which obviously involves a lot of math as well, calculus, geometry, trig, algebra of course. And you get complicated with it, pages upon pages, and you need to keep track of everything, not to make a careless mistake, you go back and forward, look for things to substitute with other things, find relationships, manipulate equations until you solve for a thing, but you have too many unknowns so you manipulate this and that and substitute thins into that and all kinds of convoluted things, it's ugly. But then you feel like you're close to an answer, and boom, you get a simple, beautiful answer. Maybe you get an equation that makes everything make sense, and that you got from all this convoluted weirdness, the logical ideas you've learned in math, but once you applied them and were very careful all of the sudden it makes you understand a concept that otherwise would not make sense to you, it makes concepts in nature have intuitive sense, which you would otherwise not understand. This is why I like math, this is why I like physics. One advice I have to people who wanna learn math, physics, chemistry, or other sciences involving math, do not learn the formulas like poetry, understand the formulas, then you can make your own formulas. Mathematics is a way of thinking rather than formulas, sure, it's nice to have a formula worked by someone else, they did all the hard work, and here you have a simple thing you can apply and get your answer, like the quadratic formula, but if you actually derive it yourself, not only you get the satisfaction, but you get the understanding of it, an intuition, the logic behind it, math is all about logic, don't memorize formulas without understanding them, deriving and looking at proofs
Good words of advice. The quadratic formula is a fine example. I was surprised when I first saw how it comes about, surprised but also it made perfect sense. The Japanese word "naruhodo" is what I'd have said (were it explained to me by a Japanese person, not a book). It's kind of like "ahh, I see. Of course." =) Even years, and qualifications later, I sometimes write out the derivation of the quadratic formula.
Yes! Sometimes the things in math we take most for granted are hard to prove and understand; simple facts like the angles of a triangle add to 180 degrees, or the circumference over the diameter of a circle, pi, really is a constant. I hope to be a teacher one day, and I would make the proofs of these simple statements an exercise to test how much they really know, as opposed to how much the think they know. We are all guilty of it ourselves, taking simple and "obvious" principles for granted without truly understanding them. Recently, I set out to prove the second derivative test for multivariate functions, a theorem whose statement is unsightly and seemingly incomprehensible, but as I set about proving it, each piece became more and more clear, and now, I fully understand the theorem and it's implications, and I see that it is truly beautiful. Mathematics is a wonderful thing.
Ali I think the first time I felt that is with the quadratic formula applied in collision physics, you use the conservation of energy and conservation of momentum, first way is for you to substitute your values with the conservation of energy and momentum, and then you arrive to two answers in parallel each with two unknowns, same unknowns, you substitute one into the other, but then you have one unknown appearing two times, it's basically in the form that asks for the quadratic formula, and then you can derive the quadratic formula and do it that way, it takes pretty long the whole exercise, but the point of it is to understand the step by step logical process. Because after this first way of solving it, instead of using values, you use constants, and then you arrive at a simple formula that works for everything, no longer requiring the quadratic formula. And one more thing, I can't remember the exact formulas and whatnot (might've made a mistake explaining) since I haven't used it for a while now, but I know for sure I can derive everything using conservation of energy and momentum, anytime I want it, and that's the beauty of it. Because I didn't just memorize the final simple formula, I understood the process.
À quel moment vous vous permettez de critiquer son accent alors que son Anglais, sa prononciation et sa fluidité est vraiment très bonne. Respectez cette grande personne.
Plus qu’un mathématicien ou qu’un maître de conférence, un génie d’une modestie incroyable, Monsieur Villani est capable de transmettre une passion, de transmettre l’amour pour les mathématiques. C’est ce qui fait de lui mon idole
This guy is awesome. He's interesting, smart and has interesting things to say. This is the second video I have seen from him. Math is very pleasurable, and has offered me a lot of joy over the years. It's work though. You have to think, to spend time at it. I am not very good at math. I got a minor in it at college, and was probably a B student at best. But I have loved it most of my life. As a kid, I was once put into remedial math - true story. Because I am bad at arithmetic. I am slow at it, and make mistakes. But I found the concepts of math comparatively easy compared to my class mates. So don't let a bit of weakness stop you from studying and enjoying math.
i loves how people talks about something they loves. you can see in her/his ways of talking enthusiastically, also in her/his burning eyes :) it reminds me that there are still good and positivity in this world and forget about negativity at a moment :)
I remember when i was in school ,i solved a difficult problem i was proud of my self for a long time ,i will give evry thing to have this feeling again
Charisma, intelligence, dedication, passion for what he is doing even in his sleep, dresses in an eccentric way (which is far better than to have a common imposed personality) and is able to speak understandable English sooo much inspiring.
This man is amazing, and his speech equally so! He showed us that mathematics are at the core of everything we do, and it's not so useless as we thought in school!
Actually, there are some reasons. In fact, after the French revolution in 1789, the world start to count in base 10. Before, French people used to count in base 12 and long before, in base 20. English language also carries this very legacy : you say "twelve" which makes absolutely no sense currently. Base 12 then base 10. Same in German "zwölf", "dreizhen". Base 12 then base 10. French has kept both base 10 and base 20. Belgium and French-Swiss say "nonante" (ninety) whereas we say "quatre-vingt-dix" (4*20+10) in France.
It's a bit old-fashioned, but it's completely possible to say "four score and ten" in English. Abraham Lincoln began his famous Gettysburg Address, in 1863, with the phrase "Four score and seven years ago", which means "87 years ago" (he was referring to 1776, of course).
I usually have problems following a person if his accent is way too weird for me to understand his words. But I never had any problems with this guy. He is an absolute delight to listen - the popular math lectures as well the technical lectures. especially his technical lectures
J'adore ce mec, il parle peut être anglais avec un fort accent mais j'admire sa passion et son travail. Par contre je déteste voir tous les commentaires des ces américains arrogants qui ne parlent que de son accent et de ses fringues. On croirait que les américains ne supportent pas de voir que la splendeur française existe bel et bien.
Love Cédric. At my own Mickey-mouse level, I've had this experience: solving pages and pages of math in my dreams, saying to myself "when you wake up, write it all down right away", waking up, grabbing pen and paper and writing frantically, managing to recreate the first page from my dreams, getting stuck, going back to sleep and being able to resume the calculations in my sleep. Pretty unbelievable. That ended up being one of the chapters of my thesis. The day humanity discovers how to harvest the power of our dreams, great discoveries will be made!
hé ho ça ose se foutre de la gueule de Villani mais en attendent la plus part de ceux qui critiquent ne seraient même pas résoudre une équation du second degré.
Mdr j'en ai rien à foutre. J'adore notre accent français quand on parle anglais, ça nous rend différent même si c'est pas forcément agréable à entendre ahaha. De toute façon il serait même pas capable de faire mieux en français.
Not only he is one of the best mathematicians in the world. He is such a great teacher that any learner would be fortunate to get him as teacher. Respect villani sir. 🙏🙏
Sleep, rest and walking away from problems is sometimes the best way to solve stuff. I have solved problems from the day before getting ready in the morning, or on the morning drive to work. If you are stuck on a problem, sometimes a break is the best thing
Driving and walking the dog are two of my best times for solving things I've spent ages with pencil and paper trying to work out. It's a bit scary though, having to dash home with a confused dog wondering what's going on, because I am worried I'll forget before I get it written down. =)
I honestly think part of the attraction is the beauty of the symbols themselves. The feeling of seeing a cursive Laplace transform L or a line integral symbol, to me, induces a very similar aesthetic compulsion to do math that seeing elegantly printed sheet music does to practicing Chopin.
Most of people complaining are french ... As always they would make fun of those trying to speak English. You speak it badly, they make fun of you, you speak it perfectly, they call you a douche ... Serious his English is perfect if you don't pay attention on his accent.
The comment on working on a problem during sleep and finding the solution while suddenly waking up, cfr. the video just after 14:12, is typically what many computer programmers experience when they are trying to find a solution for a bug or a method to solve a programming problem. I suppose it must be the case for every knowledge worker who is motivated and driven by his study domain.
A person whom I would like to meet and talk about his work....a passionate and dedicated man. Men like him made this world the way it looks today. Mathematics is sexy and tough to establish romantic a relation with but once it starts remains with you your whole life. It added another appreciable thing about the French in a long list. Love the French way!
English is my second language and when I heard French accent I was surprised, cause I've never faced it before. So I've watched the video and I must say it was amazing! It was such pleasure to observe some mathemetical thoughts. It wan''t informative enought, but I really enjoyed this video despite difficult understanding. And I had to listen carefully only because my poor skills in English. But I'll work on it. And thanks to all people who involved in creating this marvelous video!
Math is a difficult subject therefore, someone who is smart and works hard is good at Math. It gets you high paying and in demand jobs therefore, someone who has a nice car, home, and is financially stable is good at Math. The whole universe is built on Math and Physics therefore, someone who builds the latest technology is good at Math. All of this equates to a highly attractive person. That is if intelligence defines sexy to you.
edderiofer first is gaussian, second you may be right, but he didn't had enough marbles and time (obviously) to demonstrate it's a gaussian; it relates to his first graph, you will always get a gaussian out of chaos; see also chaos theory
Alexandru Gheorghe Nope, the first is definitely the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution; some particles may move over twice the average speed, but no particle can possibly have negative speed. Google "Maxwell-Boltzmann" or "air molecules speed distribution" to confirm this for yourself. As for the second one, that's definitely a binomial distribution. It approximates the Gaussian distribution with more troughs, but 12 troughs is simply not close enough. Again, Google "Galton board" or "binomial distribution" and you can verify this for yourself. Furthermore, a Gaussian distribution extends infinitely on both sides, which neither of these distributions do.
14:00 It's now understood in the sleep literature than during sleep the brain permits itself to associate over wider regions. It's probably too dangerous to allow this during consciousness, because if a dangerous animal approached, you might innovate fatally. Sleep is therefore the safest time to stretch as far as you can on your tip-toes for the peanut butter at the back of the top shelf. It doesn't always work out. Dreams that you're falling are not uncommon. But you live to try again, another night.
Like with Feynman, there is a little eccentricity and showmanship at work, but behind that, there is deep thinking and passion for knowledge and understanding. He certainly knows how to communicate this passion. We need more people like him and less tight-assed politicians and bureaucrats. I am quite happy he himself became an elected member of Parliament, bringing with him both fantasy and intellectual rigor!
To all the people complaining about his clothes and his accent: If you cannot focus on the message because you're too busy judging the mannerisms and appearances of the person delivering it, you're going to miss out on a lot in life. I get that his job includes sounding and looking as pleasing as possible, but not everyone with important things to say will appeal to you. If you're able to get rid of your prejudices and keep an open mind to what they're trying to say, you may just pick up something you did not know.
If I could I'll give you a cookie and a medal for that comment.
You are conscious. :)
He's a PUBLIC SPEAKER. A large part of his job is TO DRESS WELL AND SPEAK CLEARLY TO THE AUDIENCE.
Ajeet Minhas He's actually not. He's a mathematician who's just delivering one public speech. Whether you take something away from what he's sharing or not, it doesn't really affect his career. If you miss out on the message it's purely your loss.
I was hoping to see some comments on his talk, not a paragraph advising others!
He tells them he got the fields metal and no one claps. Jeez, that's one tough crowd.
Orin Pemulus They should be bowing down but they're too trivial.
Nah, they are Skeptics who do not bow to authority but to substance.
I doubt they even know what the Fields medal is.
They don’t know what it is lol
tough a crowd but actually average joe who came in hear more stories about french wine and Moulin Rouge rather than Pointcarre and mathematics
I love watching people like this talk. So much passion
+Yung Omoishi 😂😂😂
+Yung Omoishi Sup m8
I highly recommend Numberphile. He's been in a few videos there, but they're all filled with incredible mathematicians who are super enthusiastic about what they do.
It's a shame that english people find it so entertaining to mock french people speaking in English with an accent when their english is probably worse than this man. His words are well structured, it sounds appealing and even when he speaks in French, the way he uses his words.... It's beautiful.
A trilingual can speak 3 languages. A bilingual can speak 2 languages. Someone who speaks only one language is British.
I am an English speaker who has translated the words of this brilliant mathematician from French into English. You are wrong. The man is a genius and a wonderful speaker to boot and it was a complete pleasure to work on his text... British people are not entirely as ignorant as you imagine. But feel free to generalise wildly...
C'est donc vous qui avez vécu l'enfer de la traduction de son ouvrage Théorème vivant ?
@@kronenburg4728 Ha ha this is so true!
@@kronenburg4728 You must mean American.
11:46 "1973 - obviously alive"
i love him so much
I almost die of laugher XD
Hope this wont age to early
Just love Cedric... he's old school. An authentic renaissance dude.
Probably one of the most incredible mathematicians of this century
I like it when you work on a problem like a physics problem which obviously involves a lot of math as well, calculus, geometry, trig, algebra of course. And you get complicated with it, pages upon pages, and you need to keep track of everything, not to make a careless mistake, you go back and forward, look for things to substitute with other things, find relationships, manipulate equations until you solve for a thing, but you have too many unknowns so you manipulate this and that and substitute thins into that and all kinds of convoluted things, it's ugly. But then you feel like you're close to an answer, and boom, you get a simple, beautiful answer. Maybe you get an equation that makes everything make sense, and that you got from all this convoluted weirdness, the logical ideas you've learned in math, but once you applied them and were very careful all of the sudden it makes you understand a concept that otherwise would not make sense to you, it makes concepts in nature have intuitive sense, which you would otherwise not understand.
This is why I like math, this is why I like physics.
One advice I have to people who wanna learn math, physics, chemistry, or other sciences involving math, do not learn the formulas like poetry, understand the formulas, then you can make your own formulas. Mathematics is a way of thinking rather than formulas, sure, it's nice to have a formula worked by someone else, they did all the hard work, and here you have a simple thing you can apply and get your answer, like the quadratic formula, but if you actually derive it yourself, not only you get the satisfaction, but you get the understanding of it, an intuition, the logic behind it, math is all about logic, don't memorize formulas without understanding them, deriving and looking at proofs
Good words of advice.
The quadratic formula is a fine example. I was surprised when I first saw how it comes about, surprised but also it made perfect sense. The Japanese word "naruhodo" is what I'd have said (were it explained to me by a Japanese person, not a book). It's kind of like "ahh, I see. Of course." =)
Even years, and qualifications later, I sometimes write out the derivation of the quadratic formula.
Yes!
Sometimes the things in math we take most for granted are hard to prove and understand; simple facts like the angles of a triangle add to 180 degrees, or the circumference over the diameter of a circle, pi, really is a constant.
I hope to be a teacher one day, and I would make the proofs of these simple statements an exercise to test how much they really know, as opposed to how much the think they know. We are all guilty of it ourselves, taking simple and "obvious" principles for granted without truly understanding them.
Recently, I set out to prove the second derivative test for multivariate functions, a theorem whose statement is unsightly and seemingly incomprehensible, but as I set about proving it, each piece became more and more clear, and now, I fully understand the theorem and it's implications, and I see that it is truly beautiful.
Mathematics is a wonderful thing.
Beautiful comment, brilliantly sums up my journey with mathematics. Please write more!
Ali I think the first time I felt that is with the quadratic formula applied in collision physics, you use the conservation of energy and conservation of momentum, first way is for you to substitute your values with the conservation of energy and momentum, and then you arrive to two answers in parallel each with two unknowns, same unknowns, you substitute one into the other, but then you have one unknown appearing two times, it's basically in the form that asks for the quadratic formula, and then you can derive the quadratic formula and do it that way, it takes pretty long the whole exercise, but the point of it is to understand the step by step logical process. Because after this first way of solving it, instead of using values, you use constants, and then you arrive at a simple formula that works for everything, no longer requiring the quadratic formula.
And one more thing, I can't remember the exact formulas and whatnot (might've made a mistake explaining) since I haven't used it for a while now, but I know for sure I can derive everything using conservation of energy and momentum, anytime I want it, and that's the beauty of it. Because I didn't just memorize the final simple formula, I understood the process.
Villani had got to be the most inspirational mathematician around today, not to mention one of the absolute best.
À quel moment vous vous permettez de critiquer son accent alors que son Anglais, sa prononciation et sa fluidité est vraiment très bonne.
Respectez cette grande personne.
My heart beat accelerated and I became emotional at the hearing of "Take the second term to the other side, Fourier transform and invert in L2"...
Plus qu’un mathématicien ou qu’un maître de conférence, un génie d’une modestie incroyable, Monsieur Villani est capable de transmettre une passion, de transmettre l’amour pour les mathématiques. C’est ce qui fait de lui mon idole
This is the most French man ever seen.
a real french man would not speak english: source : i'm french
Gary, n'est-ce pas un énoncé contradictoire ?
+Monkeyshouts touché
if you speak english then you speak french at 30%
Frenchiest person to ever French
Excellent talk , my greatest regret is failing to understand that mathematics is about concepts and not calculations when I was younger
Poor soul
- What's so sexy about math?
- Cedric Villani!
- What's so sexy about math?
Dr. Clio Creswell.. Look up her TedTalk..
That's right 👏👏
This guy is awesome. He's interesting, smart and has interesting things to say. This is the second video I have seen from him. Math is very pleasurable, and has offered me a lot of joy over the years. It's work though. You have to think, to spend time at it. I am not very good at math. I got a minor in it at college, and was probably a B student at best. But I have loved it most of my life. As a kid, I was once put into remedial math - true story. Because I am bad at arithmetic. I am slow at it, and make mistakes. But I found the concepts of math comparatively easy compared to my class mates. So don't let a bit of weakness stop you from studying and enjoying math.
Does your current career use a lot of math?
You should continue your studies more formally. After all your years of self-study, you are probably much better than your school days.
Well said, Michael. I dont even have minor in math, but apart from that your description is more or less me :)
Its cool how much passion this guy has
when you hear that voice in your head "take the second term to the other side, Fourier transform and invert in L2"
seriously.... outside of human knowledge being claimed
Every fucking morning
this is the only source of 'discovery'... better aligned people staple on this ...
Yes
Glad im not the only one who hears that every morning
I love this guy. It's like learning from a chill Bond villain.
rareroe305 Exactly what i thought XD
i loves how people talks about something they loves. you can see in her/his ways of talking enthusiastically, also in her/his burning eyes :) it reminds me that there are still good and positivity in this world and forget about negativity at a moment :)
don't read the comment section if you still want to feel positive about the world
He's such a good lecturer, clean and interesting thoughts with enthuasism, I wish he was my Maths lecturer.
I remember when i was in school ,i solved a difficult problem i was proud of my self for a long time ,i will give evry thing to have this feeling again
Cedric Villani : un pur symbole du genie humain ! Thanks for this amazing video TED !!
Charisma, intelligence, dedication, passion for what he is doing even in his sleep, dresses in an eccentric way (which is far better than to have a common imposed personality) and is able to speak understandable English sooo much inspiring.
Beautiful TED talk ;) Thanks Mr. Villani!
This man is amazing, and his speech equally so!
He showed us that mathematics are at the core of everything we do, and it's not so useless as we thought in school!
I'm not surprised many French are good at math, their word for 90 is basically "4 twenties-ten"
Which does not make any sense, even for the french person I am :D
Actually, there are some reasons.
In fact, after the French revolution in 1789, the world start to count in base 10.
Before, French people used to count in base 12 and long before, in base 20.
English language also carries this very legacy : you say "twelve" which makes absolutely no sense currently. Base 12 then base 10.
Same in German "zwölf", "dreizhen". Base 12 then base 10.
French has kept both base 10 and base 20.
Belgium and French-Swiss say "nonante" (ninety) whereas we say "quatre-vingt-dix" (4*20+10) in France.
It's a bit old-fashioned, but it's completely possible to say "four score and ten" in English. Abraham Lincoln began his famous Gettysburg Address, in 1863, with the phrase "Four score and seven years ago", which means "87 years ago" (he was referring to 1776, of course).
@Bastien Thibaud Thank you for this enlightening comment.
In fact it makes sense, 4*20+10=90 so
80% of comment talking about his accent, race, and dressing, seriously youtube?
you realize that 80% of people are dickheads just now ? Really ? :p
Seph Geodynamics
Maybe its 40% but they comment 500% more
Don't ever expect to see intelligent people on youtube.
That's one of the rules.
Smart people on youtube just switch To another video when it's over. No time To lose writing comments... ( how To admit i'm not smart )
@@arthurbernardocoopi6540 exactly
The tie so nice he wore it twice.
It's actually a Lavallière ;) And I agree, this kind of ties is nice :3
Mr. Grine
I figured it wasn't a tie tie. I just like to rhyme.
lol
So do I, everything is fine ;)
It's a cravat. Bastardised French fashion.
That reference to Dream from the Sandman series was so apt.
Well played, sir.
this is an ad for the new Assassin Creed movie
lmao😂😂😂😂😂😂
must be a very vey long ad
Stupid idiot u are
I saw you on Numberphile. You won a Field's Medal. You're amazing.
This guy looks like Rene Descartes hopped in a time machine and decided to come to the present to give a ted talk
I was thinking the same thing!
I usually have problems following a person if his accent is way too weird for me to understand his words. But I never had any problems with this guy.
He is an absolute delight to listen - the popular math lectures as well the technical lectures. especially his technical lectures
This guy is so ingenious, I love his pure scientific mindset!
Fun fact: This guy is now a French politician, as he got elected as a member of the Parliament for the party of the presidential majority.
SimplyHugo SERIOUSLY?
yes
he wants to be mayor of Paris now x)
@@yuanfrank8075 he is macronist, so he is more liberal ... That he continues to do maths, not politics x)
@@yuanfrank8075 Anne Hildago is not Liberal at all, she is from the socialist party so she is quite the opposite of a Liberal
J'adore ce mec, il parle peut être anglais avec un fort accent mais j'admire sa passion et son travail. Par contre je déteste voir tous les commentaires des ces américains arrogants qui ne parlent que de son accent et de ses fringues. On croirait que les américains ne supportent pas de voir que la splendeur française existe bel et bien.
c'est pas parce que les gens écrivent des commentaires en anglais qu'ils sont américains.... -_-
Beaucoup d'entre eux sont américains.
La plupart sont français si vous faites attention.
C'est des français qui critiquent ... Comme toujours ...
De plus son anglais est parfait, c'est juste une histoire d'accent
I adore how happy this chap is talking about maths. Your passion for your craft is marvelous. Bravo sir.
Hey Cedric! Numberphile fans says Hi! :)
yesss
Wohuu
Love Cédric. At my own Mickey-mouse level, I've had this experience: solving pages and pages of math in my dreams, saying to myself "when you wake up, write it all down right away", waking up, grabbing pen and paper and writing frantically, managing to recreate the first page from my dreams, getting stuck, going back to sleep and being able to resume the calculations in my sleep. Pretty unbelievable. That ended up being one of the chapters of my thesis. The day humanity discovers how to harvest the power of our dreams, great discoveries will be made!
He looks like he teaches Arithmacy in Hogwarts.
LMAO XDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
true
Ahahaha best comment ever
80% of comments talking about comments about his accent, clothing...
0% of comments talking about his accent or clothing
Saw this guys on Numberphile. He's awesome.
this guy is a truly remarkable mathematic communicater from now on his voice will be my internal monologue
4:35. This guy quoted Sandman, a mid-1980s comic book.
A wonderful mid-1980s comic book by a wonderful writer.
But it was unexpected.
Cooool
The French love comics
John Trauger
Why unexpected ?
He taught me more about statistics in 5 minutes with that example than I learned in a year at university.
Tengo una increíble admiración por Cédric Villani, gran motivación para mí
i really loves this great professor - he has the least insulting arrogance of a genius.
C É D R I C
This is the Carl Sagan of maths, no exaggaration
DeoMachina true....only if he made more videos
Math version of "cosmos"
Carl Sagan was the Cédric Villani of cosmology.
I'm a Masters degree student of Mathematics from India...i admire this gentleman a lot !!!
hé ho ça ose se foutre de la gueule de Villani mais en attendent la plus part de ceux qui critiquent ne seraient même pas résoudre une équation du second degré.
Brising Conan pire ils ne saurait même pas comment appliqué le théorème de Pythagore ou faire une étude de fonction
Ça me fend le cœur de voir tous ces cons d'anglophones se foutre de notre gueule c'est révoltant.
Mdr j'en ai rien à foutre. J'adore notre accent français quand on parle anglais, ça nous rend différent même si c'est pas forcément agréable à entendre ahaha. De toute façon il serait même pas capable de faire mieux en français.
@@lantenoy965 soyez en fier...ses anglophones a part Paris, froooomaage et bagueete ils savent pas grand chose autre en francais
La plus part ne savent meme pas ce qu est une equation et vont se coincer a 7 x 6=
I can do everything to be a student for this big person !! Even if i sleep in streets he makes me cry
I'd like to hear some people of the comments speak french just to witness their PERFECT accent.
Not only he is one of the best mathematicians in the world. He is such a great teacher that any learner would be fortunate to get him as teacher. Respect villani sir. 🙏🙏
Remember: Archimedes's "Eureka" moment would not have been nearly as profound without the confusion, perplexity and frustration leading up to it.
Sleep, rest and walking away from problems is sometimes the best way to solve stuff. I have solved problems from the day before getting ready in the morning, or on the morning drive to work. If you are stuck on a problem, sometimes a break is the best thing
Driving and walking the dog are two of my best times for solving things I've spent ages with pencil and paper trying to work out.
It's a bit scary though, having to dash home with a confused dog wondering what's going on, because I am worried I'll forget before I get it written down. =)
What a fantastic human being this is!
4:35 Why it can't be another curve? [...] Replacing a beautiful coincidence by a beautifull explaination. That is science !!
Was this guy on a numberphile video? He looks familiar...
Yes, has was on a few of them.
yep he was
yes he was
yes he was
Rohan Pandey yes he was
I really like to hear Cecil speak, he always speaks right and well, what a great man he is :)
Which regeneration of the doctor is he ?
Pi
I love his weird way of being, elegant & different. ❤️
I love the comment on 15:10 "a day that I will remember until I live" :D
god i love Cédric Villani his passion for math is amazing
Ese es el tipo de comprensión del mundo que quiero tener! Por eso voy a estudiar matemáticas!
Love this man. Charming, genuine and bright.
What is it that French people do better than any other? Speaking French
they took lead of England for decades and better than english ppl
Is there somebody to contest that?
The Quebecois. They're probably Frenchier than the French
jmiquelmb
Except their accent, maybe :)
denjam The Quebecois accent is its own beast. So difficult to understand Source: French student
I love the comment he made that "mathematics can make us go beyond our intuition."
This Ted Talk deserves more views!
Villani is such an inspiration. I love his vids with Numberphile. It's people like him that help us understand our beautiful universe :)
I honestly think part of the attraction is the beauty of the symbols themselves. The feeling of seeing a cursive Laplace transform L or a line integral symbol, to me, induces a very similar aesthetic compulsion to do math that seeing elegantly printed sheet music does to practicing Chopin.
fabulous communicator and great ambassador for mathematics
Que palestra sensacional! Matemática é arte! 🇧🇷🏜️
He is peculiar but cool and charming after all, refreshing my view of mathematics and also mathematicians.
who saw him on numberphile before this video? :p
Impressive, the title answered its own question.
I guess people who complain about his accent don't really talk to people from non-English speaking countries.
Most of people complaining are french ... As always they would make fun of those trying to speak English. You speak it badly, they make fun of you, you speak it perfectly, they call you a douche ...
Serious his English is perfect if you don't pay attention on his accent.
Exactly, I'd invite those people to try listening to a chinese xD
Professor Villani is amazing. His talks he has done on Numberphile are equally interesting, entertaining and compelling.
Yes he is absolutely French!
6:50 What a beautiful line to ponder over.
For a moment I thought it was a new Numberphile video....
The comment on working on a problem during sleep and finding the solution while suddenly waking up, cfr. the video just after 14:12, is typically what many computer programmers experience when they are trying to find a solution for a bug or a method to solve a programming problem. I suppose it must be the case for every knowledge worker who is motivated and driven by his study domain.
This person is amazing
A person whom I would like to meet and talk about his work....a passionate and dedicated man. Men like him made this world the way it looks today. Mathematics is sexy and tough to establish romantic a relation with but once it starts remains with you your whole life. It added another appreciable thing about the French in a long list. Love the French way!
I wish I could have the understanding of mathematics like this guy, I am so dumb
At least you appreciate mathematics not like the large crowd here focusing on his tie and accent rather than what he was saying
English is my second language and when I heard French accent I was surprised, cause I've never faced it before. So I've watched the video and I must say it was amazing! It was such pleasure to observe some mathemetical thoughts. It wan''t informative enought, but I really enjoyed this video despite difficult understanding. And I had to listen carefully only because my poor skills in English. But I'll work on it. And thanks to all people who involved in creating this marvelous video!
I can imagine him playing some super evil villain in James Bond genre. Especially under his own name. And with his pet spider. :)
Binge-watching Cédric Villani. Il est excellent!
Math is a difficult subject therefore, someone who is smart and works hard is good at Math. It gets you high paying and in demand jobs therefore, someone who has a nice car, home, and is financially stable is good at Math. The whole universe is built on Math and Physics therefore, someone who builds the latest technology is good at Math. All of this equates to a highly attractive person. That is if intelligence defines sexy to you.
+johnmburt1960 math has no God
ranch up
Someone who is dumb & lazy is also good at math. Perspective.
inheritence ...
I think he is the best among ALL field medalists. Fantastic lecture!
The title made me click this
I WANT HIS SPIDER BROOCH
Monsieur Villani makes maths really interesting. An incredible feat for me, I am a mathematical moron.
Did he say, "A day I will remember until I live?"
Lmaooooooooooooo
I first saw this guy on numberphile. He's so fun to watch.
there's a royal institution video with him too, it's amazing! must watch
2:27: It's not a Gaussian distribution, it's a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution.
3:30: That's not Gaussian either; that's a binomial distribution.
wtf are you talking about? it's gaussian dude!
Alexandru Gheorghe Which one are you referring to?
edderiofer
first is gaussian, second you may be right, but he didn't had enough marbles and time (obviously) to demonstrate it's a gaussian; it relates to his first graph, you will always get a gaussian out of chaos; see also chaos theory
Alexandru Gheorghe Nope, the first is definitely the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution; some particles may move over twice the average speed, but no particle can possibly have negative speed. Google "Maxwell-Boltzmann" or "air molecules speed distribution" to confirm this for yourself.
As for the second one, that's definitely a binomial distribution. It approximates the Gaussian distribution with more troughs, but 12 troughs is simply not close enough. Again, Google "Galton board" or "binomial distribution" and you can verify this for yourself.
Furthermore, a Gaussian distribution extends infinitely on both sides, which neither of these distributions do.
edderiofer Let me get back to you. Thank you for the references, I will surely look them up.
Guys, despite the title and all the other bias, it's actually a good talk.
Great talk
14:00 It's now understood in the sleep literature than during sleep the brain permits itself to associate over wider regions. It's probably too dangerous to allow this during consciousness, because if a dangerous animal approached, you might innovate fatally. Sleep is therefore the safest time to stretch as far as you can on your tip-toes for the peanut butter at the back of the top shelf. It doesn't always work out. Dreams that you're falling are not uncommon. But you live to try again, another night.
I think I'm in love ♥
Yes, with me.
Like with Feynman, there is a little eccentricity and showmanship at work, but behind that, there is deep thinking and passion for knowledge and understanding. He certainly knows how to communicate this passion. We need more people like him and less tight-assed politicians and bureaucrats. I am quite happy he himself became an elected member of Parliament, bringing with him both fantasy and intellectual rigor!