@@carknower Yea he can prove it, he was amazed as how he got the answer. Many people that time was manipulative even in other inventions they took the credit, But George's Professor was indeed a great professional. Once you are a mathematician, if you encounter a first time problem, you only need to see a solution in how to get it to understand the whole things. But it's a low bar to a professor to take someone's work. A very beautiful history💓💕
@@carknower if u talking about how can the professor stealing the work. Well who ever the student was already wrote down the answer. It's just the matter of taking it back and examine it or reverse it to see how's it done
That reminds me of the time I myself was late for class. There was a problem written on the blackboard of which I thought it might be homework. So I spent a week trying to solve it. Then it hit me, that was surely an unsolvable problem! The next week I told the professor I tried hard, but failed to solve the problem, thus concluding it has to be unsolvable. Turned out, it was a normal homework assignment and I was just bad at it.
When I had a small custom printing company we had a sales woman who called on Coca Cola. We never could have taken on that account and we certainly didn't ask her to call them. But she was ambitious and we used to joke that she didn't know what she couldn't do. 😊
Success is when opportunity meets preparation. Without the years of solving geometry problems he would be sitting on his arse in class like all the other students.
It’s very true that check and balance with in our mind keeps most people away from truly discovering one self. If I don’t know what I can’t do then path for doing anything is open due to the unknown.
A similar thing happened to me, though obviously on a vastly smaller scale. I was taking my maths degree at Oxford (which was a mistake - I would have done better at a less pressured university), and had a reputation as a poor student. I hadn't left myself much time to complete my homework and did it in a rush. In my tutorial my tutor looked at me oddly, and asked if I'd read this one question. I thought I had, but she added "and did you notice the part at the bottom pointing you to the section of the book that explains how to tackle questions like this?" I think I blushed, because I'd been going too fast to notice it. But she hadn't finished. "Well, congratulations. You've come up with a much better way of solving the problem. This is far more elegant, and I'll be using it in future." Best maths moment of my life. I wish I could remember what the question was!
My parents were both school teachers. My father loved science, including math. I was more right-brained! I've often wished I had been a better student however. I remember both my parents complaining how the State of California was changing both math and reading books for the worse ( this was mid to late '60's). Since those days, one need only look around at the generations since, who can't do simple sums in their heads in order to charge you the correct amount for a cheeseburger and fries. More's the pity! The language of the universe is math. Eternal truth and truths, are absolute and eternal. They do not change from one planet to the next, from one universe to another. Nor from one plain of existence (or time) to another. It just IS. The only mysteries to us, in this mortal life, are these unsolved, mathematical problems. I guess it sounds silly, but of all that we lack and don't understand in this life, we must overcome through love. Love of self, love of others, and love of God. Really, this love is all we've got. Share it freely. All the rest will eventually fall into place. Just my 2 cents worth...!
something similar happened to me at my company. A problem that was being worked on for 25 years was assigned to me when I was first hired... 5 months later, while I was thinking I was going to be fired for not finding the answer quick enough, the answer came to me. I was on a call, and in a meeting, and wanted to run to the lab to try my new theory, and while I couldn't at the time, when I realized I solved it, I was elated! it was only after I presented my findings that I was let in on the secret that nobody had figured it out.. before I did.. Thank you for this! I love stories like this!
@@sandramcmann4720 he certainly was not. It is quite the opposite, thats the joke about. That lazy people say it cannot be done, so they don’t have to do it or don’t know how, and then there is this one person, who didn’t hear , that this problem “is” insolvable and does it. The “Idiot” is in quotes here, because he in fact makes idiots from all those, who said it can not be done.
A friend told me a story about her grandfather who was a mathematics professor. He had a student who came to one class and received a 98% as a final grade. The professor met the young man and asked him how he attained the mark he got when he only attended one class. The student’s reply, ‘Well sir, I think the first class confused me.’
@@ernestbien2346 I think he is indicating that he would have gotten 100 % if not for attending the class, and getting confused. It's a jab at the professors teaching ability I suppose
Well, in my case, I can only remember my maths professors are so bad at teaching difficult concepts in a simpler way I just tuned off after the 1st lecture. I subsequently spent my time in the library scouring the right books to self teach. I only attended the final lectures to hear from them what topics would possibly be examined. I graduated with maximum effort from myself and little understanding from the lessons taught by some of the most horrendous lecturers. You may wonder where? Well, I'm from Singapore, so you can go figure out...lol....There were times I thought I might as well attend distance learning program than go to this University.
@@Melpheos1er Agreed. I had something similar happen to me - where my professor gave us a challenge assignment to create a new molecule. Took me 5 minutes to work it out and had my experimental written up to submit by the end of the lecture. My lab partner messed up the procedure and I was unable to complete the separation. (He grabbed the wrong separating agent - a nonpolar solvent). But my professor saved the work. It took six months of rotovapping to finally dry the oily substance (which I predicted) to a purity where its structure could be confirmed. Personally I didn't care about the credit. But the professor did give me the credit due. Of course, proving my work was his effort. So he more than deserved that credit. Frankly it would have gone much faster to re-run the experiment - this time with the right separating agent. But ... I was working with uranium in an effort to find a way to reclaim it from waste or contamination.
It's generally stupid to even do so. You have to prove the method used to prove you are the correct recipient of the credit for the solution. If you don't fully understand the method used, then you cannot break down the method into simple terms and thus you cannot teach it on to the next in an easy way. Yes, math teachers and professors love to calculate stuff. But they're also lazy and will always take the easy way out. Calculating things the easy way is always to be preferred
@@Arterexius Not in my experience. Math professors love proofs, not number crunching. It is more important to work out mathematical relationships than answers. It is physicists who hate deriving equations and go begging math professors for those.
if he had taken credit , he still has to explain how exactly he had done it and fail.. the professor wouldnt get away with lies unless he can exactly explain the way he solved the problem
Nardz Arrieta Yes there was a similar situation in the early 1960,s at Cambridge . A student 👨🎓 shirked and loafed about , his lecturers wearied Of Him , and wanted to send him down . But a fair minded lecturer decided no we will allow him a Viva Voca , so they got a hard professor to come in and set him a Viva Voca . Hours seemed to go by and nothing , then suddenly the professor came rushing out more than enthusiastic , declaring he would not allow the undergraduate a Third , but a First he had such a brilliant mind . The lecturers were up in arms because they wanted to deprive the student of a Third even and ranted and resisted the First award 🥇 so after much arguing and ranting he had to detract from the First award to one lower a 2/1 as they wanted to award a First to a more sober studious Student 👨🎓. You just never know if a person is hiding their light 💡 under a bushel.
@@wisdomisawesome5934 Predators include anyone who causes harm through words or physical contact with a student. Verbal abuse for many students causes far more harm than a physical attack.
@@larryjones8848 I believe a person's ability to do something or not do something has to do with their mental aptitude. If the task exceeds your aptitude then you need to increase your aptitude up to the value needed to accomplish the task. If your aptitude exceeds the task then it is only a matter of time before you solve it.
Many people will say "ha, you just have to believe in yourself" and forget the 17 years of tough prep that George's math teacher dad gave to him growing up.
I was horrible in regular math and when I had to take Algebra I knew I'd get an "F". Not only did I get an "F" for the class, I got an "F" on every test, exam and homework assignment. I asked my teacher for help, with tutoring, willing to come to school early, stay late, skip lunch to study to no avail. His time was his time and it was up to me todo the work. The last day of school my Algebra teacher told me I would amount to nothing. I'd be a complete and utter failure in life. I graduated all right by the skin of my teeth. I joined the Army and when I got out I became a police officer. I was working traffic enforcement one day when I stopped this speeding car. It was being driven by my former Algebra teacher. I recognized him immediately and of course he had no clue who I was, other then the cop that just pulled him over. He asked for a break, one more chance, willing to do anything to get out of the ticket. He promised he would obey all traffic laws and be a better driver.I asked him, do you remember an Algebra student who got "F's' on everything and asked for help? He was willing to come to school early, skip lunch, stay late for a little tutoring. You told him he would amount to nothing and be a complete and utter failure in life. That student was me and here is your traffic ticket.
@@burchardisbasement2671 Yes, he was. Shouldn't let someone putting the public in danger go just because you need to feel like you are better than them.
He was already in his PhD program at that point but when he was ready to start his PhD and was unsure what his thesis topic should be, he went to his thesis advisor who told him to basically just pretty up those pages and hand them in as his thesis.
@@MiniAgnostic I was just wondering about that. Typically you would need some good foundations in real analysis and even complex analysis before solving any open math problem.
@@jimfowler5930 It actually depends on the particular program. Some call it the PhD thesis, although dissertation is the standard term. See, for example, dmse.mit.edu/graduate/programs/doctoral/thesis
Towards the end of my senior year in high school, I met with my HS school guidance instructor. When he asked me what I was going to do after graduation, I told him I was going to go to UT in Austin, TX. He smirked and told me to go to the local community college instead and learn a trade. Many years later, after obtaining my degree in economics and my juris doctorate, I ran into him at a grocery store. When I reminded him of our conversation many years back and that he had been completely wrong about my intellectual abilities, he replied that he was not wrong. In fact, he said, it was his intention to challenge me. He explained that by pretending to have zero faith in my abilities, I became motivated to prove him wrong. I thought it was a clever way to get out of it.
I suspect he was being disingenuous, and that he took the cowardly way out. He gave you bad advice, which speaks to his own character. What if you had taken it? He never followed up with you to make sure you hadn't pivoted because of his response did he?
I love showing up arrogant teachers. I remember my little sister, 4 years younger struggling with high school math. The teacher tried to put her on the spot by doing the home work on the blackboard. Little did he know I showed her how to do the homework faster using Calculus that would not be taught for several more years and she understood it. The teacher did not have a lot to say when other students did not understand her method yet she had the correct answer.
I have a similar story. When my son was about 16 years old, he hated asking me for homework help in his Math. I loved Math in school but had forgotten most of it, on purpose, but he was desperate one time because he really could not grasp an Algebra concept. I knew of a trick to get the right answer with a minimum of calculations. His teacher wondered what was going on since it was not something he taught and didn't even know about that 'cheat solution'. He phoned me the next day because he was impressed. Glad, since I thought I was going to be told that it was better not to show alternate ways of doing the problems.
@@islandgal500 when I was a graduate student, I moved out of town so I took one of my last classes at a different school and transferred the credit. It was an advanced biomechanics class. The Professor taught a solution to a problem that had an easier solution. I happened to learn it at the other school I attended. The students there weren't familiar with it and had a difficult time solving the problems using the more difficult way. It was a small class so I was able to show everyone in class the easier way before the exam. All he could say was "yeah, you can solve it that way too."
@@MR-fn7rw Sometimes the ego of a teacher gets in the way of being impressed by an alternative and easier method of solving. Glad at least you got to show everyone.
I mean lets all be real calculus could be taught to a mich younger audience because it isn t really a difficutl concept to grasp and once you grasp it it is all about practise
Once upon a time, I took an exam for my Chemical Structures and Bonding class and solved a problem using 2 ratios of unknown quantities which allowed me to give a quantitative answer. The prof brought up my answer later saying she was only looking for a qualitative answer and did not know it was possible to solve it quantitatively. Felt good!
I have to remind myself that when my 14 year old boy doesn't get up until noon but gathers full marks on his sciences tests... still, it is sometimes hard to live every day with a gifted minded person. I told him he would have to praise me for my patience and support if he receives a Nobel Prize. It has become a family joke everything he's "slacking" :-)
Happened to me in high school. I figured out a shortcut for geometry, because our teacher would let the first person to solve a problem, close to the end of the school day, to leave early. He asked me how I did it. He decided to pass it as his own with some college professors. He was offered a job, then came to me to explain my system, but I had found out about it and said no. His job offer disappeared since he couldn't duplicate it. I was upset because he was favorite teacher. If he had asked me first, I would have agreed.
@@carmenortiz5294 did you publish it in the end? Check if the proofs been published yet in a paper through an online search and if not, you could publish it on one of the mathematics communities online.
@@lilianzhang2789 No, I was still a minor. Plus, he couldn't figure out the formula and I did not tell him. I saw it as a betrayal. He got his punishment, when they took back the offer. I ran into him years later and he was obviously drunk.
imagine your a scientist and heard that the unsolved question you were trying to solve was just solve by a person late to class everyday and just took a few days when you took years
It happens quite often. Mathematicians have the shortest peak period than almost any other professional. The real math geniuses are in their 20s, likely just in graduate schools. The work that are approved to be revolutionary later on sometimes were just their school paperworks. After peak time, most of them do research work which is important too
@M R I was a student of math in my first university study and a teacher of math in high-school. I was not a student of math history tho. The comment came from my readings not research. Key words in the comments are geniuses and revolutionary.
Most newbies fail simply because they don't understand how the market works in general or in particular how the market relates to stock or currency pair they entering. If a retail trades doesn't grasp what the market makers are doing and when they are doing it, the greatest strategy in the world will fall. For new traders the markets are like entering an F1 race before you've passed your drivers license test. I am a beginner I never believe I made $30,000 in just 1 week from trading and with the market. an expert financial analysis and he made me learn to read and understand the language of price action. He guides me with the exact time frame to trade and now I just received me first withdrawals of $30k in my bank account today I'm very happy, my advice is for you to contact him he will guide you perfectly well, and thank me later, I guess this is a good way to show my heartfelt appreciation for literally breaking the chain of my financial debit when I needed it most (friedrichwalter533@gmail..com)
There was once a famous problem in math announced in like the 18th century, and LOTS of mathematicians took the year off just to work on it, while Leonard Euler solved it in one afternoon.
Using the simplex method to solve linear programming is such an elegant way to solve the problem. Not many steps are taken in order to reach the optimal solutions and it saves a lot of time. The inventor of this method really helped moved society towards a better future because every industry is using his techniques to solve their problems which results in a more efficient production.
Lack of competition breeds complacency. Competition breeds innovation. Simply stated, if you make a product for sale and you are the only one making it there's no reason to improve it as long as it sells but if there's 2 other companies making similar products and they come out with a better product then you are forced to improve upon the original in order to stay competitive. Competition creates progress, progress is what drives society forward.
Coming late and falling down a flight of stairs in front of the professor but hey am A on the Final, I helped my friend study the night before - he was a bit embarrassed 🙃
Read the book "The Man Who Knew Infinity", about an Indian boy who solved theorems that University math professors could not. His name was Ramanajuan. He was constantly writing equations on scrap paper, on metal with pieces of coal, whatever he could find. He died young while at Cambridge University from pneumonia in the late 1890s. His equations are still being discovered to solve modern day problems in space, etc.
Yes, Ramanajuan was an amazing genius and I believe he said that a god was telling him the equations. Another amazing guy is Tesla figuring out alternating current and applying.
@@MrCookding He credited his acumen to his family goddess, Namagiri Thayar (Goddess Mahalakshmi) of Namakkal. This godess is for wealth, not knowledge (Sarasvati ).
@@rayrwyr Thanks. It seems her salutations or sloka praises her as embodiment of knowledge as well: "... Who is Lakshmi, Who has within her all Vedas, who is learned and intelligent..."
Narrator: he's not a genius But yet still he solved something no one in the world could I don't know what you called that but it sounds pretty genius to me
One simply cannot define genius based on public performance or appearance, there are for sure many gifted people out there with extraordinary capabilities that fly under the radar.
I have shocked many with a college education who think you are stupid w/o a college degree. Don't think I don't think a college degree is important because it is VERY IMPORTANT. BUT many punish you for climbing (thinking) out of the box. This is a major flaw of collage Education. Thinking only inside the box. All walks of life think this way. Many times I have been asked what college I went to. You can see them discount you as stupid when you tell them The college of hard knocks. It's not my Problem they are STUPID.
Actually he said, “I am enough of the artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”
I feel that not believing in ourselves is the largest problem to solve. Another though is the normal human routine is, if there's a problem which is deemed too difficult, nothing ensues.
Your mind is the most powerfull think u will every have!!!! We are humans ouer brain and mind is all we got ;) You can and you will do everything if you just NEVER give up!!!!!!!!
The mind is powerful. He unlocked that hidden potential we gain with determination. He never knew it was unsolvable so that doubt obstacle never arose.
The biggest problem with the institution’s of higher learning is their population of lecturers who think that their knowledge is perfect and that they have nothing to learn. A mind works best when it is open ! Knowing methods doesn’t mean that they are the only successful methods …. I believe that the crews of Spacex and Tesla Autos are leading edge because they don’t just depend on what is, they strive to beat the rest of the market ….
Work with the tools at your disposal and allow your skills and abilities to be honed or enhanced as you adapt to the more demanding challenge. Limiting ones own ability to succeed by not believing that the possibility of success is unrealistic also works in the opposite as depicted in this story.
For those who don't have patience... Kid comes late to class and accidentally answers problems that he thought were the homework but were in reality 2 "unsolvable" math problems. Done
In math nothing is impossible untill proven. "No one solved it yet", that's different. That is exactly what you're saying, to present a hard challenge.
I once told my boss to bring me any product that the customer told him they had been told "it couldn't be printed" and I would find a way to do it. Three years later we had 20 printers working full time, all employing my tricks. The "think out of the box" "don't give up" "It can be done" attitude. is real, It can MAKE NEW THINGS HAPPEN.
The problem is in mistaking has not been done with cannot be done. There are definitely some things that can never be done but they are a very small number of things and the only thing I consider impossible is something that has been formally proven to be impossible, not simply something that simply hasn't been done as of yet. Too many times people say "it can't be done" when they really mean "I won't be doing it."
A friend of mine in high school was in AP math and solved the derivative of x on his own without it being first explain to him. in his words it just made sense. There was a test and his answer took a quarter page of work. The rest of the class including the teacher needed two pages to show their work. His Professor did not understand his method and had to go to his old college professor to get it explained to him and then my friend got to explain it to the whole class. a real genius. He worked in computer programming for a while and the last time I looked he's selling real estate. Kind of weird but how many people are working in their planned occupation?
My father, born in 1921, went to school in OK and had to drop out pick cotton, his dad was a Constable, he went back to school and was able to up even going up 6 grades higher, joined Navy, electrical Engineer and all that helping his big family as the youngest boy during depression on up! Amazing the drive people have to accomplish dreams ❤
My son wasn't listening when his math teacher told the class there wasn't enough information given to solve one of the problems so don't try. (She was wrong.) He was working the problems out. About the time she finished talking, he handed in the assignment. He then had to explain to her how. She wasn't very good at math.
This story truly is an example of "Where there is a will, there is a way," Remember: Just because someone says that something is unsolvable, does not mean that it can't be solved. All it takes is someone who is more than willing to give it a try, and keep at it and before you know it, an answer will come to you.
People say it is impossible to build a space elevator from current materials but I realized it would be possible if done in stages as we now build rockets in stages. On a space elevator the heavy lifting is done at the center where multiple tethers could be used in the first stage and gravity is virtually zero which means no weight penalty. Fewer tethers would be used on consecutive stages as you move out from center. Patents are not granted for things that are impossible. I now have a patent on this method.
Even if he had a friend , he wouldn't ask ihm or her, because he doesn't needed other helps and he believes in himself , so the cause if this reaction was to solve the Impossible problem in Mathe/ Geometrie.
I'm 48 years old and lived my whole life in the US. I have met many, many more people who overestimate their ability, their knowledge, and their expertise, full of confidence, lacking introspection or any sense of self doubt, than people who just needed to believe in themselves in order to accomplish greatness.
@Baxter James ofc one has to have the talent and work ethic needed. However if we take this example the person with the talent and work ethic would have never even attempted the question if he knew it to be impossible to solve.
Most newbies fail simply because they don't understand how the market works in general or in particular how the market relates to stock or currency pair they entering. If a retail trades doesn't grasp what the market makers are doing and when they are doing it, the greatest strategy in the world will fall. For new traders the markets are like entering an F1 race before you've passed your drivers license test. I am a beginner I never believe I made $30,000 in just 1 week from trading and with the market. an expert financial analysis and he made me learn to read and understand the language of price action. He guides me with the exact time frame to trade and now I just received me first withdrawals of $30k in my bank account today I'm very happy, my advice is for you to contact him he will guide you perfectly well, and thank me later, I guess this is a good way to show my heartfelt appreciation for literally breaking the chain of my financial debit when I needed it most (friedrichwalter533@gmail..com)
This story has brought to my mind an experience that I had in high school. I was in a plane geometry class that I found boring and very seldom turned in any home work. My instructor had a habit of assigning the most challenging problems from our text book to be presented on the class black board. The problem that he tasked me with kept me up most of the night until I discovered an obscure way around the problem's "trap". After I filled the class room boards with my solution my teacher said that my solution was accurate but that I had wasted allot of time involving unnecessary steps. I challenged him to show me a shorter proof for that problem. He then suggested that I should have used a particular axiom that would have made the problem much more easy to solve. I said to him that the method that he had now mentioned was not one that was available to us until the next chapter in our text book. For a few moments, he was without words. He said that the problem could not be solved without that particular axiom, but he stepped back from the board and thought about it and admitted that somehow I had managed to do what should not have been possible.
I WHOLEHEARTEDLY believe that it’s the truth. Our problems are a result of our perception. Effectively - telling ourselves it’s impossible takes away our belief that it’s impossible!
20 years ago a job recruiter sent me on an interview that apparently only he knew about. The company on the receiving end was not expecting me but decided to interview me nonetheless among the other 50 or so candidates that DID have an appointment. Long story short after interviewing with multiple people within the company I landed the position and have been there ever since. Sometimes you just don't know what not knowing will do for your current situation. I did not know I was not supposed to be there but I acted liked I did belong there and put forth my best effort. It worked!
Reminds me of the classic Seinfeld episode where Kramer goes to work for some New York business office, simply by showing up and pretending he’s been hired. Much hilarity ensues, but in the end it becomes apparent that he doesn’t have any clue what he’s doing. So his “boss” calls him into his office and says he’s sorry but they have to let him go. Kramer goes “....But I don’t really even work here!” Boss: “I know. That’s what makes this so difficult.” 😂😂
Let me save you 7 minutes and 14 seconds of your life: A man named George Dantzig was a college student who had a tendency to be late to lectures. One statistics lecture, he was 20 minutes late and had no clue what was going on. He saw two open statistics problems on the blackboard and wrote them down, confusing them as homework. When he finished the problems, he gave his solutions to his professor. When the professor was done checking it, George found out the problems he solved were two historically unsolved problems
Love the story. This reminds me of the book: The obstacle is the way. Sometimes The solution is the problem itself. But in this the problem is the framing of the problem, not the actual problem. We create our own impossible wall by focusing on the "impediment." I wonder how many more "geniuses" would have solved it if the professor had said he was providing an "easy" riddle for those that wanted extra credit.
“Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world?” What Steve Jobs said to Pepsi executive John Sculley.
I'm a maths student Now I'm struggling with an assignment form the past two days....and feel too exhausted ...... This story inspires me to solve that problem and regains my self belief
Keep on going, and the chances are that you will stumble on something, perhaps when you are least expecting it. I never heard of anyone ever stumbling on something sitting down
The guy was late and the professor had written up two impossible equations on the board the guy though they were homework and did them both he got famous.
Except if it is impossible, it is impossible. The problem is people thinking, "well no one has solved it yet so therefore it cannot be solved." There are actually problems that have been proven to be unsolvable (and by proven to be unsolvable, I do mean yet, there is a proof that demonstrates that the problem itself is unsolvable) -- there is a whole class of problems in mathematics and computer science that are in this category - don't even bother to try to solve them, you never will and any "solution" you offer will always contain an error. However, there is also a much larger class of problems that have never been solved. Go solve one of these as yet unsolved problems and reap the rewards!
In my high school final exam for probability and statistics class, there was one problem that I could not recall ever having encountering during the semester, so I just used what I knew and derived what I thought would be the formula to calculate the odds. It turned out to be correct and when afterward I asked my teacher the following semester, she show me how the problem was suppose to be solved (according to the teacher's manual) and it turned out I had derived a different approach to solving the problem just not the way the people who designed the exam thought it should be done.
I am in absolute agreement!!! "Can't" is just a psychological way to make sure the educators are still smarter... Just because we haven't thought of it yet doesn't mean it's not possible. Anything is possible. Keep trying, NEVER give up.
50 of the richest people ever are dropouts, including Bill Gates. My daughter is a dropout and bought a house at age 21 without any help. I am not worried, that she did not have the blessings of an indoctrination center and the debt that goes with it. There are many in college, who seriously expect her to pay for their indoctrination.
Professors, especially in the fields of science, mathematics, engineering, etc. have never been known to say anything is “unsolvable” - that’s something you only hear from the uneducated on the internet. What they would have said is that the problems were “unsolved”. Those are two very different things. Ignorant people think things are either possible or impossible. Educated people think things are probable or improbable, and the reason they think so is that they know enough to know there is much they don’t yet know. Ignorant people think they know everything - even more than people who have dedicated their lives to learning them.
You are so right, George. In my mid-twenties, my business partner, much older than me, once asked me why I seemed so timid around CEO's and VP's and I explained that they probably had degrees and went to prestigious Universities, but I quit high school in grade ten. My partner stated, "No, it's the other way around, they had the free-thinker beaten out of them and you didn't." My outlook completely changed in that moment.
@@babybirdhome Indeed. Besides, Dantzig himself didn't hear those words, that's the whole point of the story. So how does the narrator know what was said exactly?
Thank you... this is a message of hope for everyone struggling with "mediocrity"... Believe in yourself... Do not see problems as unsolvable... Rather - persevere without worry of outcome...
I wouldn't go as far as to say that he couldn't have solved the problem, I'd believe it would have more to do with the fact that if he'd known it was unsolved at the time, then he may have concluded either after some effort; or none at all that it was unsolvable. It's not to say that he couldn't have done it with some effort there-after either, it is just that it took I think 2 days was mentioned. That I'd say is a lil' more than some effort imo.
Certainly not nearly to this extent but in school I'd struggled a bit with Calculus and thus made an honest attempt at grasping the subject to the very best of my ability by working every problem in the entire textbook by hand on paper, in and out, back and forth, until I became quite proficient. There was one last problem in the textbook which I hadn't attempted to work through and thus decided I was prepared. This was no doubt the most challenging problem in the entire book so I knew I must tackle it to prove to myself I'd learned how to perform Calculus to the greatest extent possible from this textbook. Well, my result differed from the result given in the textbook and by following through the example I'd concluded the author had made a mistake! So, I presented my finding to the professor, explaining I believed there was a mistake in this challenging textbook example. He completely blew me off and was not in the least bit interested.
That school teacher should have been hauled up to the school headmaster...by your parents...he is there to teach, and also inspire students. If I had an English teacher like that I would never past English and Englis Lit. for my leaving certificate. Instead, our English teacher thought nothing of staying back a bit longer to help me with my Shakespeare, and Chaucer as well. I passed with decent marks because we had a teacher who cared, and wanted us ALL to succeed, we all passed. (My other subjects were OK but English was my best subject. It qualified me years later to be a 'grammar nazi' in social media...😅😂😅 All those years of training paid off.)
I had almost the same experience like that...twice really. First, once when I was 18 I was day dreaming not paying attention. At the end of the class I copied what looked like was the homework assignment. I worked half an hour on it and didn't get anywhere really. Just like 3 solutions in the continued series problem. The next class I said to the teacher that I had some difficulties with the assignment and gave him the first 3 solutions. He became like agitated and I thought oh shit. I screwed up. He asked how long I worked on this? Somewhat ashamed of the truth I wimpered: 15 minutes? He said, if you have the first 3 than you have the rest too. And he showed us. He told me jokingly to never do that again. I was still unsure what's he trying to convene. I said I just tried it and I saw the pattern. He said it was not homework! It was a well known unsolvable problem. It was something like the natural number to the power of the square root of 2 . Anyway the second one was at engineering school. I flunked Chemistry college by the way and decided to study computer science. In math class the professor was explaining calculating the derivate function with L'Hopital's law. It was boring and he kept writing 3 sides of the giant blackboard to calculate the derivative of some function. I said to him why not take the square root on both sides and you'll the answer after 3 steps. He looked at me in disbelieve and indulged me with the goal to prove me wrong. I was right and he said: from now on, we call this Toon's law.
@@MrAlexandermartis .. with the income derived from your increasing skills; that's how you afford it! And some employers subsidize the cost of your studies. Where there's a will there's a way! Good luck! 😊
Lesson: when you tell someone they can’t do something, it sinks into their psyche. Don’t listen to anyone who says you can’t and stifle your own growth.
I recall a time in the late 1950's when my father, who was a major player for a first class aircraft company, was having a discussion with a neighbor who had a Phd in aeronautical engineering . My father had described to him a design for a fighter jet his company had recently tested ( not sharing too much as the design was still secret) when the neighbor began to ridicule him , "as the " design " has been proven wrong". I remember my dad's reply to this day... " well you may be right ... but we keep building them and they keep flying. I guess no one told the airplanes"....
Some of the most arrogant and ignorant people I've ever met have been college graduates, people good at math and engineers. These people will fuck up a wet dream. The principle problem with our educational institutions and social interactions is that people are trained WHAT to think instead of HOW to think. By the time they graduate college, they are arrogant know-it-alls with no mind of their own. They believe that just because they have a degree that they must be correct about everything and everyone else must be wrong. These individuals are insufferable.
@@No-vm7go You just nailed it spot on. I think the word is "Institutionalized". You present them with a new thought, or a 'paradigm shift' and they just cant / wont let know of what they "know" to be the truth.
@@No-vm7go Yeah I think the problem also comes from the days where professors or PhD holders were worshipped like gods. Some people just think they are better because they hold a PhD. In fact, a PhD just proves that you put a lot of effort in a specific task and that you are an expert in this very specific area of science. Nothing more.
When I was in the navy I, and my crew, changed the bearings on a reduction gear while the ship was at sea, we did not know that we were not supposed to do that if we had known that we would have never tried to do it. We received a commendation for that achievement.
When you´re two thousand miles at sea you do what you have to do to get back underway. There are a million stories just like yours. Mine is/was repairing a 400 cycle motor/generator - back in homeport, the civilian engineers said it was *impossible*. They spent days looking at my repair while scratching their collective butts. It was so simple and obvious that a kid fresh out of "A" school would have seen it.
@@zanedavid1 I repaired a flat screen plasma TV very, very early in the evolution of them (like a year or two in). There were no manuals and no references and TV repair shops just laughed when I asked them if they could fix it. I don't even think that RUclips was around back then. I had prior electronics knowledge as well as computer and networking skills. I kept that thing until just a few years ago. Iw as SUPER HEAVY and though it still worked, it had a burnt in image of Disney in the corner from my kids growing up and watching mostly that. My boys are 26 & 19 so I think it was around 1999 as I recall needing to fix it before Y2K.
dats what Hole Snipes do , rebuilt 11T firepump and brought it online for the first time in 20 years on the Connie. no manuals or tech reps , we had to take parts off other turbine driven firepumps to make it work but we did it.
My dad, a pathologist, was in a meeting with colleagues who were presenting cases on a powerpoint. One doctor was presenting a biopsy of a colon in which cancer had been ruled out and he was seeking input on what it could be. My dad, whose mind had wandered so he did not hear that cancer had been ruled out, was asked directly what he thought and he emphatically declared that it was cancer. A week or so later the doctor called my dad and informed him that since he had been so emphatic he ordered another biopsy and they found the cancer. He may have saved the patient's life by not listening in a meeting.
There is a story of a philosophy professor who gave an exam and the question was simple. He writes the world "Why?" on the board and students are writing, filling up blue book after blue book. However one student turns in a very short answer and gets an A. The answer he wrote was "why not?" Another one: I knew someone that had a college essay question. It was What is the riskiest thing you have done in your life? He drew a big X through the question and sent it back. (back before college applications were computerized). He got accepted.
@charlesflannery4610- I remember hearing the "why" story decades ago. I thought that if the student who wrote why not was someone the prof didn't like then that student would have gotten a failing grade and we would never have heard this story. That's life.
They said "it is impossible", till someone who doesn't knew that came around and just did it. - Words are powerful in raising...or demolishing your talent.
@@elamsyar7745 I used to think that way, too. But then I realize there are numbers less than zero, the negatives and going by that logic dividing by negative should give us a results larger than infinity
@@aimar2122 in 3 months of time you will find out that we already know what happens when a number is divided bya negative number. Spoiler alert : Its not even close to being large
My Dad, a math professor, told me a version of this story when I was growing up as a lesson about assumptions. Just because everyone tells you something is impossible, doesn’t mean it is.
Thanks for posting this. They say a similar thing about the number theory genius Ramanujan. Initially while he was a clerk in the Madras Port Trust he had very little access to advanced text books, journals etc. This allowed him to think differently about problems. If you have not heard of him, I would recommend the biography by Robert Kanigal titled "The Man Who Knew Infinity" (Also made into a movie of the same name).
This reminds me when I was working construction and on weekends I was a janitor as a very prestigious college. One of the math professors used to put on a chalk board in the hallway and I anonymously solved equations until I got caught. Since I grew up in a foster home I was in trouble with the police a lot. The math professor found me and got me a deal with the court as long as I saw a therapist. The therapist helped me finally get my life straightened out. Now I make bank doing classified math problems. I live in California with my wife who's a British Dr.
Pippi Longstocking is a great series showing kids exactly this: "I never tried that before, so I should definitely be able to do it" I tell my son every day being stubborn (in Dutch we call it "your own way" ~ eigenwijs ~ an even more succinct definition of this trait) is a great trait to have. If I ever fall in the trap of telling him he is being stubborn, for sure he will tell me that it is a good thing. And knowing myself, I will step back and agree. Its just lazy parenting, ego or peer pressure to call your kid stubborn as a negative. It should be celebrated!
To be fair, Pippi Longstocking did have the overwhelming advantage of being the strongest (and richest) little girl in the world. ... That, and the fact that she was fictional. ;) But I still agree that children should not be held back except when absolutely necessary for safety of life and limb (their own or others').
hmmm so youre saying if you tell people that they wont progress because people are keeping them down and they shouldnt try, that would be a bad thing to do? i agree and we have a good amount of that here in america.
@Melkior Wiseman The latter of course clearly outways the first as the first is only a result of the latter ;-) Fair enough, but many phylosophers have done thought experiments to come to a verifiable real life conclusion and in that vein one could argue there is abundant empiric evidence Pippi was on to something :D
Agreed. Growing up, my mom seemed to define the word "stubborn" as having my own perspective and not instantly conceding to her. Too many kids today give up the moment they face adversity; they could use a little stubbornness.
What you mean is persistent, not stubborn. Stubborn is about self, it's "my way or no way, no matter what". Persistent is about goal, it's "I will achieve this, despite all the difficulties".
In the word of Henry Ford, Whether you say you can or can't, either way you are right. If you want to find the solution, give it to the person that hasn't been told that it cannot be done.
Thank you. I have gone through a rather stressful time in my life. These videos does what most other videos don't do. They calm me down. And, just as important, they remind me, that there's more to life than material wealth.
moral of the story: mind with the absence of the negatives can do amazing things. In George's scenario, he did not hear the negative (no one can solve this problem).
What I've learned in my life as I look back in my life is that there's a solution to every problem and the solution is in your face. I always say that to myself when ever there is a problem to be solved and it always works for me and I end up solving the problem because I look at it in a different way.
My dad drove a chicken truck in Mississippi in the early 1930s. There was a depression. He went on to earn 3 masters degrees from MIT and was a Captain in the Naval Reserve. You can do many things if you are not told that it is impossible.
His statistics Professor must be recognized and awarded too, for not stealing it and taking the credit.
Damn that pretty low bar for professor... Which I admit is probably true and that very sad....
How would he be able to prove it?
@@carknower Yea he can prove it, he was amazed as how he got the answer. Many people that time was manipulative even in other inventions they took the credit, But George's Professor was indeed a great professional.
Once you are a mathematician, if you encounter a first time problem, you only need to see a solution in how to get it to understand the whole things. But it's a low bar to a professor to take someone's work. A very beautiful history💓💕
@@carknower if u talking about how can the professor stealing the work. Well who ever the student was already wrote down the answer. It's just the matter of taking it back and examine it or reverse it to see how's it done
But he didn’t know that the student didn’t know that... Oh, never mind.
That reminds me of the time I myself was late for class. There was a problem written on the blackboard of which I thought it might be homework. So I spent a week trying to solve it. Then it hit me, that was surely an unsolvable problem! The next week I told the professor I tried hard, but failed to solve the problem, thus concluding it has to be unsolvable. Turned out, it was a normal homework assignment and I was just bad at it.
I feel
I touch
it was getting interesting until the last part.
F
@@kni8owl07 umm..cherry on the cherry cake?
I learned this in life: "If you don't know what you can't do, you can do anything".
Profound words but useless in real life
When I had a small custom printing company we had a sales woman who called on Coca Cola. We never could have taken on that account and we certainly didn't ask her to call them. But she was ambitious and we used to joke that she didn't know what she couldn't do. 😊
Success is when opportunity meets preparation. Without the years of solving geometry problems he would be sitting on his arse in class like all the other students.
It took me 1 month to understand this.
It’s very true that check and balance with in our mind keeps most people away from truly discovering one self. If I don’t know what I can’t do then path for doing anything is open due to the unknown.
A similar thing happened to me, though obviously on a vastly smaller scale. I was taking my maths degree at Oxford (which was a mistake - I would have done better at a less pressured university), and had a reputation as a poor student. I hadn't left myself much time to complete my homework and did it in a rush. In my tutorial my tutor looked at me oddly, and asked if I'd read this one question. I thought I had, but she added "and did you notice the part at the bottom pointing you to the section of the book that explains how to tackle questions like this?"
I think I blushed, because I'd been going too fast to notice it. But she hadn't finished.
"Well, congratulations. You've come up with a much better way of solving the problem. This is far more elegant, and I'll be using it in future."
Best maths moment of my life. I wish I could remember what the question was!
Maths?
@@jimklemens5018 Yep, we studied more than one mathematic... 😉
@@elvwood r/BRITISHPERSONSPOTTED
@Science Revolution You mad bro?
The human mind is complicated and prefers complicated solutions . It takes much longer to create accurate simple solutions .
He never knew it was unsolvable that is why there was no limit for his brain to seek the answer...amazing story.
My parents were both school teachers. My father loved science, including math. I was more right-brained! I've often wished I had been a better student however. I remember both my parents complaining how the State of California was changing both math and reading books for the worse ( this was mid to late '60's).
Since those days, one need only look around at the generations since, who can't do simple sums in their heads in order to charge you the correct amount for a cheeseburger and fries. More's the pity!
The language of the universe is math. Eternal truth and truths, are absolute and eternal. They do not change from one planet to the next, from one universe to another. Nor from one plain of existence (or time) to another. It just IS. The only mysteries to us, in this mortal life, are these unsolved, mathematical problems. I guess it sounds silly, but of all that we lack and don't understand in this life, we must overcome through love. Love of self, love of others, and love of God.
Really, this love is all we've got. Share it freely. All the rest will eventually fall into place. Just my 2 cents worth...!
@@1allanbmw They said the mathematical solution for love after 6 months remains unsolved ;)
how can professor know tht answer was correct even himself said tht question was remain unsolved for a decades..
It wasn't unsolvable, just that it hadn't been solved yet. In Math, once a problem is proven unsolvable, it's final - not solvable
@@MrNobody_7967 coz they cannot find the right path or approach to the formula
"The person who says it can't be done should not interrupt the person already doing it." - Old Chinese Proverb
So true much is derailed by those who do nothing but interrupting those busy doing ...
ROTFLMAO
Why am I thinking about SpaceX and the ULA? ;-)
Preminded.
What's there as Chinese in it?
@@rogersthilaire8179 bhhiy
Imagine what he could have accomplished if he had not attended at all.
🤣 🤣
You're hilarious
You made my day. LOL
now i am inspired to not attend my next class
Omg this is absolutely hilarious, I laughed out load for ages 😂
something similar happened to me at my company. A problem that was being worked on for 25 years was assigned to me when I was first hired... 5 months later, while I was thinking I was going to be fired for not finding the answer quick enough, the answer came to me. I was on a call, and in a meeting, and wanted to run to the lab to try my new theory, and while I couldn't at the time, when I realized I solved it, I was elated! it was only after I presented my findings that I was let in on the secret that nobody had figured it out.. before I did.. Thank you for this! I love stories like this!
As one joke says: Never say, that something cannot be done, because there is always some idiot, who doesn't know about that and will do it :)
Ill keep that in mind!😂
He can’t be an idiot if he/she can solve it!
@@sandramcmann4720 he certainly was not. It is quite the opposite, thats the joke about. That lazy people say it cannot be done, so they don’t have to do it or don’t know how, and then there is this one person, who didn’t hear , that this problem “is” insolvable and does it. The “Idiot” is in quotes here, because he in fact makes idiots from all those, who said it can not be done.
keeping that in mind
So how did the scratch yer right elbow with yer right hand experiment go?
A friend told me a story about her grandfather who was a mathematics professor. He had a student who came to one class and received a 98% as a final grade. The professor met the young man and asked him how he attained the mark he got when he only attended one class. The student’s reply, ‘Well sir, I think the first class confused me.’
i don't get it...
@@ernestbien2346 I think he is indicating that he would have gotten 100 % if not for attending the class, and getting confused. It's a jab at the professors teaching ability I suppose
@@shinom0ri
ohh ok, thanks
Well, in my case, I can only remember my maths professors are so bad at teaching difficult concepts in a simpler way I just tuned off after the 1st lecture. I subsequently spent my time in the library scouring the right books to self teach. I only attended the final lectures to hear from them what topics would possibly be examined. I graduated with maximum effort from myself and little understanding from the lessons taught by some of the most horrendous lecturers. You may wonder where? Well, I'm from Singapore, so you can go figure out...lol....There were times I thought I might as well attend distance learning program than go to this University.
@@ymhktravel dam the horrendous bit made me go insane
He's lucky the Professor didn't take all the credit!
Math teachers have high respect to their peers. I don't think this could happen
@@Melpheos1er Agreed. I had something similar happen to me - where my professor gave us a challenge assignment to create a new molecule. Took me 5 minutes to work it out and had my experimental written up to submit by the end of the lecture.
My lab partner messed up the procedure and I was unable to complete the separation. (He grabbed the wrong separating agent - a nonpolar solvent). But my professor saved the work. It took six months of rotovapping to finally dry the oily substance (which I predicted) to a purity where its structure could be confirmed.
Personally I didn't care about the credit. But the professor did give me the credit due. Of course, proving my work was his effort. So he more than deserved that credit. Frankly it would have gone much faster to re-run the experiment - this time with the right separating agent. But ... I was working with uranium in an effort to find a way to reclaim it from waste or contamination.
It's generally stupid to even do so. You have to prove the method used to prove you are the correct recipient of the credit for the solution. If you don't fully understand the method used, then you cannot break down the method into simple terms and thus you cannot teach it on to the next in an easy way. Yes, math teachers and professors love to calculate stuff. But they're also lazy and will always take the easy way out. Calculating things the easy way is always to be preferred
@@Arterexius Not in my experience. Math professors love proofs, not number crunching. It is more important to work out mathematical relationships than answers.
It is physicists who hate deriving equations and go begging math professors for those.
if he had taken credit , he still has to explain how exactly he had done it and fail.. the professor wouldnt get away with lies unless he can exactly explain the way he solved the problem
This is so true. I have fixed problems very easily when I thought they were easy and others thought they were difficult. It's in our mindset.
I'm going to tell a newborn baby to simplify the universe into a simple equation and say it's easy
@@cube-nite bruh.hahahaha
I have love and hate and relationship with math. I do enjoy math,but my back hurts like hell.
That’s why I firmly believe in a saying: “If we all think the same, then no one is thinking.” 🤓
Progresive college campus "debate" = no alternative views or opinions allowed.
Nardz Arrieta Yes there was a similar situation in the early 1960,s at Cambridge . A student 👨🎓 shirked and loafed about , his lecturers wearied Of Him , and wanted to send him down . But a fair minded lecturer decided no we will allow him a Viva Voca , so they got a hard professor to come in and set him a Viva Voca . Hours seemed to go by and nothing , then suddenly the professor came rushing out more than enthusiastic , declaring he would not allow the undergraduate a Third , but a First he had such a brilliant mind . The lecturers were up in arms because they wanted to deprive the student of a Third even and ranted and resisted the First award 🥇 so after much arguing and ranting he had to detract from the First award to one lower a 2/1 as they wanted to award a First to a more sober studious Student 👨🎓. You just never know if a person is hiding their light 💡 under a bushel.
How does someone know how to think out of the box, when they're in that box? Best example...Nicola Tesla.
@@carlfrye1566 I doubt that. Prove it
There are flaws in that theory.
Context: " Go late to lecture to unlock your full potential."
r/madlads
Genius 👍 I might try that
😂
Jokes on you, I’m always late
@@tatarotoda3618 he was good at arithmetic,what about you?
1st requirement of being a true teacher: Don't tell your students that anything is unsolvable. Tell them it hasn't been solved... yet.
The school system will never be legitimate until predatory teachers who harass students are immediately fired.
@@lanceknightmare bro what
@@wisdomisawesome5934 Predators include anyone who causes harm through words or physical contact with a student. Verbal abuse for many students causes far more harm than a physical attack.
Except, you ignore human psychology. Tell me I can't do something, then stand back and watch me do it!
@@larryjones8848 I believe a person's ability to do something or not do something has to do with their mental aptitude. If the task exceeds your aptitude then you need to increase your aptitude up to the value needed to accomplish the task. If your aptitude exceeds the task then it is only a matter of time before you solve it.
"I have never let school interfere with my education." Mark Twain
Many people will say "ha, you just have to believe in yourself" and forget the 17 years of tough prep that George's math teacher dad gave to him growing up.
Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% transpiration. -- Edison
Ha Ha. But it is PER spiration.
@@richardcollier1912 other languages....
No one in this video said that soooooooo….. not really central to the overall point kid
@@p2pportal Read the comments, blinders-boy.
I was horrible in regular math and when I had to take Algebra I knew I'd get an "F". Not only did I get an "F" for the class, I got an "F" on every test, exam and homework assignment. I asked my teacher for help, with tutoring, willing to come to school early, stay late, skip lunch to study to no avail. His time was his time and it was up to me todo the work. The last day of school my Algebra teacher told me I would amount to nothing. I'd be a complete and utter failure in life. I graduated all right by the skin of my teeth. I joined the Army and when I got out I became a police officer. I was working traffic enforcement one day when I stopped this speeding car. It was being driven by my former Algebra teacher. I recognized him immediately and of course he had no clue who I was, other then the cop that just pulled him over. He asked for a break, one more chance, willing to do anything to get out of the ticket. He promised he would obey all traffic laws and be a better driver.I asked him, do you remember an Algebra student who got "F's' on everything and asked for help? He was willing to come to school early, skip lunch, stay late for a little tutoring. You told him he would amount to nothing and be a complete and utter failure in life. That student was me and here is your traffic ticket.
Thankyou kind sir
But, sorry to say; then you were no better than him.
sweet, sweet revenge :D
@@burchardisbasement2671 Yes, he was. Shouldn't let someone putting the public in danger go just because you need to feel like you are better than them.
@@burchardisbasement2671 false equivalency
I'm guessing when George went to do a PHD, the Uni told him to just use his old homework as his PHD thesis.
The story has been pretty distorted... He was already enrolled on the doctoral programme at UCB when this happened
He was already in his PhD program at that point but when he was ready to start his PhD and was unsure what his thesis topic should be, he went to his thesis advisor who told him to basically just pretty up those pages and hand them in as his thesis.
@@MiniAgnostic I was just wondering about that. Typically you would need some good foundations in real analysis and even complex analysis before solving any open math problem.
The Thesis is connected to a Masters degree, the Ph.D vehicle is a Dissertation, not a thesis.
@@jimfowler5930 It actually depends on the particular program. Some call it the PhD thesis, although dissertation is the standard term. See, for example, dmse.mit.edu/graduate/programs/doctoral/thesis
Towards the end of my senior year in high school, I met with my HS school guidance instructor. When he asked me what I was going to do after graduation, I told him I was going to go to UT in Austin, TX. He smirked and told me to go to the local community college instead and learn a trade. Many years later, after obtaining my degree in economics and my juris doctorate, I ran into him at a grocery store. When I reminded him of our conversation many years back and that he had been completely wrong about my intellectual abilities, he replied that he was not wrong. In fact, he said, it was his intention to challenge me. He explained that by pretending to have zero faith in my abilities, I became motivated to prove him wrong. I thought it was a clever way to get out of it.
Reverse psychology is a common and often a very successful technique in motivation - especially with adolescents who like to prove authority wrong!
I suspect he was being disingenuous, and that he took the cowardly way out. He gave you bad advice, which speaks to his own character. What if you had taken it? He never followed up with you to make sure you hadn't pivoted because of his response did he?
Two points of view optimism and pessimism. I’ll take the positive can do view. 👍🏻
It may have worked but it was a gamble. He judged correctly
I love showing up arrogant teachers.
I remember my little sister, 4 years younger struggling with high school math.
The teacher tried to put her on the spot by doing the home work on the blackboard.
Little did he know I showed her how to do the homework faster using Calculus that would not be taught for several more years and she understood it.
The teacher did not have a lot to say when other students did not understand her method yet she had the correct answer.
I have a similar story. When my son was about 16 years old, he hated asking me for homework help in his Math. I loved Math in school but had forgotten most of it, on purpose, but he was desperate one time because he really could not grasp an Algebra concept. I knew of a trick to get the right answer with a minimum of calculations. His teacher wondered what was going on since it was not something he taught and didn't even know about that 'cheat solution'. He phoned me the next day because he was impressed. Glad, since I thought I was going to be told that it was better not to show alternate ways of doing the problems.
Lol, I still remember the day I learned how to solve square roots using calculus. It's so much easier.
@@islandgal500 when I was a graduate student, I moved out of town so I took one of my last classes at a different school and transferred the credit. It was an advanced biomechanics class. The Professor taught a solution to a problem that had an easier solution. I happened to learn it at the other school I attended. The students there weren't familiar with it and had a difficult time solving the problems using the more difficult way. It was a small class so I was able to show everyone in class the easier way before the exam. All he could say was "yeah, you can solve it that way too."
@@MR-fn7rw Sometimes the ego of a teacher gets in the way of being impressed by an alternative and easier method of solving. Glad at least you got to show everyone.
I mean lets all be real calculus could be taught to a mich younger audience because it isn t really a difficutl concept to grasp and once you grasp it it is all about practise
"The Fool didn't knew that he couldn't do it , so he did it "
this comment is wickedly underrated
This is a genius comment
He forgot how to fail
@@BuddinGHP No, he didn't knew he could fail
😄
"I'm not going to talk about his childhood..."
*Proceeds to talk about his childhood*
Yesnt
He gets more money the longer he can draw it out. More room for ads. I fast forwarded thru it in 90 seconds.
@@happydays8171 Yup, 90 seconds was about the point where I was like, "fuck this, get to the point"
Also, "he was not a genius"...goes on to have many genius level accomplishments.
Over 7 minutes to tell a 1 minute story. I hate these stupid channels.
Once upon a time, I took an exam for my Chemical Structures and Bonding class and solved a problem using 2 ratios of unknown quantities which allowed me to give a quantitative answer. The prof brought up my answer later saying she was only looking for a qualitative answer and did not know it was possible to solve it quantitatively. Felt good!
Kristine, you ARE Smart! 👍
A slacker?........No, not hardly. He was a brilliant person who “marched to the beat of a different drummer.” It takes all kinds to make this world.👍
I GOT ASKED TO LEAVE COLLEGE BECAUSE MY ART WORK MADE THE OLD RICH WOMEN FEEL WEIRD.
3.82 GPA.
Truth
I have to remind myself that when my 14 year old boy doesn't get up until noon but gathers full marks on his sciences tests... still, it is sometimes hard to live every day with a gifted minded person. I told him he would have to praise me for my patience and support if he receives a Nobel Prize. It has become a family joke everything he's "slacking" :-)
He’s lucky the professor didn’t claim the answers as his own
Professor probably knew he couldn’t replicate it.
Happened to me in high school. I figured out a shortcut for geometry, because our teacher would let the first person to solve a problem, close to the end of the school day, to leave early. He asked me how I did it. He decided to pass it as his own with some college professors. He was offered a job, then came to me to explain my system, but I had found out about it and said no. His job offer disappeared since he couldn't duplicate it. I was upset because he was favorite teacher. If he had asked me first, I would have agreed.
@@carmenortiz5294 did you publish it in the end? Check if the proofs been published yet in a paper through an online search and if not, you could publish it on one of the mathematics communities online.
@@carmenortiz5294 You shouldn't agree, it was your work, not his, he doesn't deserve it, it's fair, meritocratic
@@lilianzhang2789 No, I was still a minor. Plus, he couldn't figure out the formula and I did not tell him. I saw it as a betrayal. He got his punishment, when they took back the offer. I ran into him years later and he was obviously drunk.
imagine your a scientist and heard that the unsolved question you were trying to solve was just solve by a person late to class everyday and just took a few days when you took years
It happens quite often. Mathematicians have the shortest peak period than almost any other professional. The real math geniuses are in their 20s, likely just in graduate schools. The work that are approved to be revolutionary later on sometimes were just their school paperworks. After peak time, most of them do research work which is important too
@M R I was a student of math in my first university study and a teacher of math in high-school. I was not a student of math history tho. The comment came from my readings not research. Key words in the comments are geniuses and revolutionary.
Most newbies fail simply because they don't understand how the market works in general or in particular how the market relates to stock or currency pair they entering. If a retail trades doesn't grasp what the market makers are doing and when they are doing it, the greatest strategy in the world will fall. For new traders the markets are like entering an F1 race before you've passed your drivers license test. I am a beginner I never believe I made $30,000 in just 1 week from trading and with the market. an expert financial analysis and he made me learn to read and understand the language of price action. He guides me with the exact time frame to trade and now I just received me first withdrawals of $30k in my bank account today I'm very happy, my advice is for you to contact him he will guide you perfectly well, and thank me later, I guess this is a good way to show my heartfelt appreciation for literally breaking the chain of my financial debit when I needed it most (friedrichwalter533@gmail..com)
There was once a famous problem in math announced in like the 18th century, and LOTS of mathematicians took the year off just to work on it, while Leonard Euler solved it in one afternoon.
You are = you're
Using the simplex method to solve linear programming is such an elegant way to solve the problem. Not many steps are taken in order to reach the optimal solutions and it saves a lot of time. The inventor of this method really helped moved society towards a better future because every industry is using his techniques to solve their problems which results in a more efficient production.
And what is the answer? 🤔
The great thing about solving impossible problems is that there's no competition. If everybody believes it's impossible, you're the only one trying.
Well said.
Here here...
No there's plenty of people that try to solve unsolved problems.
The problems werent even described to be impossible, just not solved yet........
I believe, "There are no problems -- there are only increasingly creative solutions!"(TM)
Lack of competition breeds complacency. Competition breeds innovation. Simply stated, if you make a product for sale and you are the only one making it there's no reason to improve it as long as it sells but if there's 2 other companies making similar products and they come out with a better product then you are forced to improve upon the original in order to stay competitive. Competition creates progress, progress is what drives society forward.
My mother always said, "They said it couldn't be done but the darn fool didn't know it and went ahead and did it anyway."
Mac gardner lot of woman told me they didn't want to do it but I did it anyways. I'll be damned if you tell me what I can and can't do. ;) Roadhouse!
bruhhhh imagine coming late to class then accidentally solving one of the worlds most mysterious questions thinking it was homework.
Coming late and falling down a flight of stairs in front of the professor but hey am A on the Final, I helped my friend study the night before - he was a bit embarrassed 🙃
And he solved them all bcs he felt guilty for being late
Read the book "The Man Who Knew Infinity", about an Indian boy who solved theorems that University math professors could not. His name was Ramanajuan. He was constantly writing equations on scrap paper, on metal with pieces of coal, whatever he could find. He died young while at Cambridge University from pneumonia in the late 1890s. His equations are still being discovered to solve modern day problems in space, etc.
Yes, Ramanajuan was an amazing genius and I believe he said that a god was telling him the equations. Another amazing guy is Tesla figuring out alternating current and applying.
Ramanujan passed in 1920 he went to Cambridge in 1915-ish. He was born in 1887
@@johnferrara392 not a god but a local goddess... probably an emanation of Sarasvati.
@@MrCookding He credited his acumen to his family goddess, Namagiri Thayar (Goddess Mahalakshmi) of Namakkal. This godess is for wealth, not knowledge (Sarasvati ).
@@rayrwyr Thanks. It seems her salutations or sloka praises her as embodiment of knowledge as well: "... Who is Lakshmi, Who has within her all Vedas, who is learned and intelligent..."
Narrator: he's not a genius
But yet still he solved something no one in the world could I don't know what you called that but it sounds pretty genius to me
Hear hear ^^^
One simply cannot define genius based on public performance or appearance, there are for sure many gifted people out there with extraordinary capabilities that fly under the radar.
@@HansensUniverseT-A I agree
What about Pickle RIck tho
And really, really smart.....
Einstein said 'Imagination is more useful than knowledge ' I was wrong, he said it " ... is more important than ... ".
I have shocked many with a college education who think you are stupid w/o a college degree.
Don't think I don't think a college degree is important because it is VERY IMPORTANT. BUT many punish you for climbing (thinking) out of the box.
This is a major flaw of collage Education.
Thinking only inside the box.
All walks of life think this way.
Many times I have been asked what college I went to. You can see them discount you as stupid when you tell them
The college of hard knocks.
It's not my Problem they are STUPID.
Actually he said, “I am enough of the artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.”
No he didnt
Love Einstein's quotes. Look at Winston Churchill's quotes. He was also a genius.............
Catherine Rogers - doesn't it help to have at least a little knowledge before your imagination takes over . . . . ? ?
I feel that not believing in ourselves is the largest problem to solve.
Another though is the normal human routine is, if there's a problem which is deemed too difficult, nothing ensues.
Your mind is the most powerfull think u will every have!!!!
We are humans ouer brain and mind is all we got ;)
You can and you will do everything if you just NEVER give up!!!!!!!!
Edit: ruclips.net/video/bheHjqvkaaI/видео.html
@@hmcredfed1836 Mind and Spirit are not one and the same.
I battles with it all my life
What is needed is motivation. With motivation, people don't quit, even when the problem is extremely hard. That's how hard problem is solved
The mind is powerful. He unlocked that hidden potential we gain with determination. He never knew it was unsolvable so that doubt obstacle never arose.
The biggest problem with the institution’s of higher learning is their population of lecturers who think that their knowledge is perfect and that they have nothing to learn. A mind works best when it is open ! Knowing methods doesn’t mean that they are the only successful methods …. I believe that the crews of Spacex and Tesla Autos are leading edge because they don’t just depend on what is, they strive to beat the rest of the market ….
Yep!
I'm going to raise a baby and tell it gravity is optional
Exactly right.
Anyone who does math in ink must be a genius.
Hahaha
Have you never used a pen for math class
Work with the tools at your disposal and allow your skills and abilities to be honed or enhanced as you adapt to the more demanding challenge.
Limiting ones own ability to succeed by not believing that the possibility of success is unrealistic also works in the opposite as depicted in this story.
Nah, just means that they forgot a pencil
@@demonic_minotaur9148 ..good..
Showing algebra to describe "the boy was solving geometry problems" .... two demerits.
Yep, showing math in movies but it's actually sports
And you have never read the work of René Descartes?
Wrong. At advanced levels algebra is the language of geometry
@@martinmuller3244 Exactly, "like he's shaking his fist from the grave, LOL."
@@XoPlanetI Algebras are the core of all maths, I state this with the greatest of humility...."We gonna get all abstract on your buttocks."
For those who don't have patience...
Kid comes late to class and accidentally answers problems that he thought were the homework but were in reality 2 "unsolvable" math problems.
Done
thank you
thx now i dont have to waste 7 mins of my life
@@magicianwizard4294 np
Underrated comment tbh
If you just read this, you'll miss 7 min of completely unrelated images showing scribbled notes of just about anything but statistics.
Got to admire anyone that solves a math problem with a fountain pen.
Never tell kids that something is impossible. You'll stunt their abilities. Instead only present them the challenges.
Man will never fly was a constant refrain before man figured out how to fly.
In math nothing is impossible untill proven.
"No one solved it yet", that's different. That is exactly what you're saying, to present a hard challenge.
That is mean to not tell them that pi can not be represented as a ratio of integer. They could solve real challenge instead of chasing wild geese.
You're a legend
Kinda lying don’t you think?
I once told my boss to bring me any product that the customer told him they had been told "it couldn't be printed" and I would find a way to do it. Three years later we had 20 printers working full time, all employing my tricks. The "think out of the box" "don't give up" "It can be done" attitude. is real, It can MAKE NEW THINGS HAPPEN.
The problem is in mistaking has not been done with cannot be done. There are definitely some things that can never be done but they are a very small number of things and the only thing I consider impossible is something that has been formally proven to be impossible, not simply something that simply hasn't been done as of yet. Too many times people say "it can't be done" when they really mean "I won't be doing it."
You are lucky you didn't have a jealous boss ...and not get fired and he took credit for you Ideas....IT HAPPENS ALL THE TIME!!!!
A friend of mine in high school was in AP math and solved the derivative of x on his own without it being first explain to him. in his words it just made sense. There was a test and his answer took a quarter page of work. The rest of the class including the teacher needed two pages to show their work. His Professor did not understand his method and had to go to his old college professor to get it explained to him and then my friend got to explain it to the whole class. a real genius. He worked in computer programming for a while and the last time I looked he's selling real estate. Kind of weird but how many people are working in their planned occupation?
lol the derivative of x is 1, doesn't take a genius
@@warpromo6636 is there work involved? Maybe I stated it wrong. It was something like that. College calculus in 11 grade hs.
@@geniferteal4178 the derivative of f(x) = x is 1. since at any point on the function, the slope is 1, u get it?
@@geniferteal4178 currently doing pre calc in 9th
@@warpromo6636 ty don't care. Lol. He did something spectacular. He was also a great programmer. Surprised he's doing realestate now.
My father, born in 1921, went to school in OK and had to drop out pick cotton, his dad was a Constable, he went back to school and was able to up even going up 6 grades higher, joined Navy, electrical Engineer and all that helping his big family as the youngest boy during depression on up! Amazing the drive people have to accomplish dreams ❤
My Mother had a saying, "He was young and innocent and didn't know it couldn't be done, so he did it anyway."
And RIGHT she was.
My son wasn't listening when his math teacher told the class there wasn't enough information given to solve one of the problems so don't try. (She was wrong.) He was working the problems out. About the time she finished talking, he handed in the assignment. He then had to explain to her how. She wasn't very good at math.
Stash the Iconoclast my mother had a saying, "woman are trouble."
This story truly is an example of "Where there is a will, there is a way," Remember: Just because someone says that something is unsolvable, does not mean that it can't be solved. All it takes is someone who is more than willing to give it a try, and keep at it and before you know it, an answer will come to you.
People say it is impossible to build a space elevator from current materials but I realized it would be possible if done in stages as we now build rockets in stages. On a space elevator the heavy lifting is done at the center where multiple tethers could be used in the first stage and gravity is virtually zero which means no weight penalty. Fewer tethers would be used on consecutive stages as you move out from center. Patents are not granted for things that are impossible. I now have a patent on this method.
Why didn't he just ask a friend from his class what he'd miss? :P
Probably a loner like me (╥_╥)
same
worked in his favour
He didn't have any friends, lol
Even if he had a friend , he wouldn't ask ihm or her, because he doesn't needed other helps and he believes in himself , so the cause if this reaction was to solve the Impossible problem in Mathe/ Geometrie.
I'm 48 years old and lived my whole life in the US. I have met many, many more people who overestimate their ability, their knowledge, and their expertise, full of confidence, lacking introspection or any sense of self doubt, than people who just needed to believe in themselves in order to accomplish greatness.
What’s your point?
There is far too much overconfidence in this world, much of it is feigned and not even real. Most such people fall flat on their faces.
I agree completely. The arrogance of some people is astounding!
Yes it is a widely known as the Dunning-Kruger effect.
Yes, but maybe in the little things we can find balance.
The Philosophy of Bruce Lee …..“Using no way as a way, having no limitation as limitation”
@Baxter James ofc one has to have the talent and work ethic needed. However if we take this example the person with the talent and work ethic would have never even attempted the question if he knew it to be impossible to solve.
Most newbies fail simply because they don't understand how the market works in general or in particular how the market relates to stock or currency pair they entering. If a retail trades doesn't grasp what the market makers are doing and when they are doing it, the greatest strategy in the world will fall. For new traders the markets are like entering an F1 race before you've passed your drivers license test. I am a beginner I never believe I made $30,000 in just 1 week from trading and with the market. an expert financial analysis and he made me learn to read and understand the language of price action. He guides me with the exact time frame to trade and now I just received me first withdrawals of $30k in my bank account today I'm very happy, my advice is for you to contact him he will guide you perfectly well, and thank me later, I guess this is a good way to show my heartfelt appreciation for literally breaking the chain of my financial debit when I needed it most (friedrichwalter533@gmail..com)
Having no pants as your pants
Going forward I'll be 20 minutes late for everything.
This story has brought to my mind an experience that I had in high school. I was in a plane geometry class that I found boring and very seldom turned in any home work. My instructor had a habit of assigning the most challenging problems from our text book to be presented on the class black board. The problem that he tasked me with kept me up most of the night until I discovered an obscure way around the problem's "trap". After I filled the class room boards with my solution my teacher said that my solution was accurate but that I had wasted allot of time involving unnecessary steps. I challenged him to show me a shorter proof for that problem. He then suggested that I should have used a particular axiom that would have made the problem much more easy to solve. I said to him that the method that he had now mentioned was not one that was available to us until the next chapter in our text book. For a few moments, he was without words. He said that the problem could not be solved without that particular axiom, but he stepped back from the board and thought about it and admitted that somehow I had managed to do what should not have been possible.
Well done
Good work
My ancestor invented the wheel, FACT!
@@philipocallaghan Wow.. Mine too... maybe we are related. :D
@@paulhope3401 The dude must've watched Good Will Hunting before he commented.
I WHOLEHEARTEDLY believe that it’s the truth. Our problems are a result of our perception. Effectively - telling ourselves it’s impossible takes away our belief that it’s impossible!
20 years ago a job recruiter sent me on an interview that apparently only he knew about. The company on the receiving end was not expecting me but decided to interview me nonetheless among the other 50 or so candidates that DID have an appointment. Long story short after interviewing with multiple people within the company I landed the position and have been there ever since. Sometimes you just don't know what not knowing will do for your current situation. I did not know I was not supposed to be there but I acted liked I did belong there and put forth my best effort. It worked!
Reminds me of the classic Seinfeld episode where Kramer goes to work for some New York business office, simply by showing up and pretending he’s been hired. Much hilarity ensues, but in the end it becomes apparent that he doesn’t have any clue what he’s doing.
So his “boss” calls him into his office and says he’s sorry but they have to let him go. Kramer goes “....But I don’t really even work here!”
Boss: “I know. That’s what makes this so difficult.”
😂😂
@@Syclone0044 🤣
thats a long time to be a walmart greeter, congrats
@@kindredspiritzz66 🏅. i was going to comment something similar
The crisis of Western education ruclips.net/video/cxPEFLSCZNo/видео.html
Let me save you 7 minutes and 14 seconds of your life: A man named George Dantzig was a college student who had a tendency to be late to lectures. One statistics lecture, he was 20 minutes late and had no clue what was going on. He saw two open statistics problems on the blackboard and wrote them down, confusing them as homework. When he finished the problems, he gave his solutions to his professor. When the professor was done checking it, George found out the problems he solved were two historically unsolved problems
Thankyou, we need more people like you
THANK YOU!!!
You are amazing
🤜🤛
Unfortunately it took me 7 minutes 14 seconds to read that... Should've done more school. 👨🎓
This is why your kid can operate things you think are impossible.
They don't know that they can't !!
Wow I’m 8 I can think of stuff very very weird
And I ha e a lot of nightmares
Have*
Like figure out a "childproof" bottle seal.
@@darthbiker2311 Childproof is intended for toddlers and younger though. At 5 or older they can typically read or figure how to open the bottle.
Love the story. This reminds me of the book: The obstacle is the way. Sometimes The solution is the problem itself. But in this the problem is the framing of the problem, not the actual problem. We create our own impossible wall by focusing on the "impediment." I wonder how many more "geniuses" would have solved it if the professor had said he was providing an "easy" riddle for those that wanted extra credit.
yeah or at least test them, then say don't worry it is no possible. others might have continued to try afterwards.
I'm going to raise a baby and tell it that gravity is optional
What is the book you are referring to?
Yes, I think he would have had a lot of students Trying to work it out.
@@JS-jh4cy "The obstacle is the way" written by Ryan Holiday.
A classic : he did it because he didn't know it was impossible.
“Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world?” What Steve Jobs said to Pepsi executive John Sculley.
Wait really???
And Sculley quited his job to join Apple. -- What a punch it was.
@@dembeno86 And later fired Jobs.
@@callmeishmael3031 the apple sold apple juice, and they lived happily ever after
@@huhulili9021 lol nice twist
Luke: “I don’t believe it!”
Yoda: “That is why you fail.”
lol, hahaha🤣🤣🤣
I'm a maths student
Now I'm struggling with an assignment form the past two days....and feel too exhausted ......
This story inspires me to solve that problem and regains my self belief
The only place where success comes before work is in the dictionary
Keep on going, and the chances are that you will stumble on something, perhaps when you are least expecting it. I never heard of anyone ever stumbling on something sitting down
Success seems to be connected with action. Successful people keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don't quit
@@dungmasibay1613 A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation with the bricks that other throw at him."
@@dungmasibay1613 true, if you want to be successful you need to start somewhere, success doesn't fall like manner
@@dungmasibay1613 success is a finished product of hard work, smart work and hustle over time
The guy was late and the professor had written up two impossible equations on the board the guy though they were homework and did them both he got famous.
I want yo be late always 😂😂😂😂
@@ESL-O.G. Yeah I wanted to just put into short
When “impossible” becomes “I’m possible”.
wasn't that a qoute from Audrey Hepburn?:)
Yes, could be. I heard it a long time ago and it fit in this situation.
Corny af
Except if it is impossible, it is impossible. The problem is people thinking, "well no one has solved it yet so therefore it cannot be solved." There are actually problems that have been proven to be unsolvable (and by proven to be unsolvable, I do mean yet, there is a proof that demonstrates that the problem itself is unsolvable) -- there is a whole class of problems in mathematics and computer science that are in this category - don't even bother to try to solve them, you never will and any "solution" you offer will always contain an error. However, there is also a much larger class of problems that have never been solved. Go solve one of these as yet unsolved problems and reap the rewards!
Or, Kim Possible.
In my high school final exam for probability and statistics class, there was one problem that I could not recall ever having encountering during the semester, so I just used what I knew and derived what I thought would be the formula to calculate the odds. It turned out to be correct and when afterward I asked my teacher the following semester, she show me how the problem was suppose to be solved (according to the teacher's manual) and it turned out I had derived a different approach to solving the problem just not the way the people who designed the exam thought it should be done.
when will educators learn? - NEVER say "can't be done"; students end up believing it & the world loses.
I am in absolute agreement!!! "Can't" is just a psychological way to make sure the educators are still smarter... Just because we haven't thought of it yet doesn't mean it's not possible. Anything is possible. Keep trying, NEVER give up.
50 of the richest people ever are dropouts, including Bill Gates. My daughter is a dropout and bought a house at age 21 without any help. I am not worried, that she did not have the blessings of an indoctrination center and the debt that goes with it. There are many in college, who seriously expect her to pay for their indoctrination.
Professors, especially in the fields of science, mathematics, engineering, etc. have never been known to say anything is “unsolvable” - that’s something you only hear from the uneducated on the internet. What they would have said is that the problems were “unsolved”. Those are two very different things. Ignorant people think things are either possible or impossible. Educated people think things are probable or improbable, and the reason they think so is that they know enough to know there is much they don’t yet know. Ignorant people think they know everything - even more than people who have dedicated their lives to learning them.
You are so right, George. In my mid-twenties, my business partner, much older than me, once asked me why I seemed so timid around CEO's and VP's and I explained that they probably had degrees and went to prestigious Universities, but I quit high school in grade ten.
My partner stated, "No, it's the other way around, they had the free-thinker beaten out of them and you didn't."
My outlook completely changed in that moment.
@@babybirdhome Indeed. Besides, Dantzig himself didn't hear those words, that's the whole point of the story. So how does the narrator know what was said exactly?
Thank you... this is a message of hope for everyone struggling with "mediocrity"... Believe in yourself... Do not see problems as unsolvable... Rather - persevere without worry of outcome...
He solved because his mind didn't know that it had been unsolvable. He was unbound by the influence of the people who tried before him
dont use this one hyperbolic situation to try to prove an incorrect point
Just one part of the story! Ofcourse he was very good at maths :)
I wouldn't go as far as to say that he couldn't have solved the problem, I'd believe it would have more to do with the fact that if he'd known it was unsolved at the time, then he may have concluded either after some effort; or none at all that it was unsolvable. It's not to say that he couldn't have done it with some effort there-after either, it is just that it took I think 2 days was mentioned. That I'd say is a lil' more than some effort imo.
ok , then give all unsolvable problems to students who are very good and never heard of those problems... hahaha
@@warpromo6636 How do you know it is incorrect in this instance?
Certainly not nearly to this extent but in school I'd struggled a bit with Calculus and thus made an honest attempt at grasping the subject to the very best of my ability by working every problem in the entire textbook by hand on paper, in and out, back and forth, until I became quite proficient.
There was one last problem in the textbook which I hadn't attempted to work through and thus decided I was prepared. This was no doubt the most challenging problem in the entire book so I knew I must tackle it to prove to myself I'd learned how to perform Calculus to the greatest extent possible from this textbook. Well, my result differed from the result given in the textbook and by following through the example I'd concluded the author had made a mistake!
So, I presented my finding to the professor, explaining I believed there was a mistake in this challenging textbook example. He completely blew me off and was not in the least bit interested.
That school teacher should have been hauled up to the school headmaster...by your parents...he is there to teach, and also inspire students. If I had an English teacher like that I would never past English and Englis Lit. for my leaving certificate. Instead, our English teacher thought nothing of staying back a bit longer to help me with my Shakespeare, and Chaucer as well. I passed with decent marks because we had a teacher who cared, and wanted us ALL to succeed, we all passed. (My other subjects were OK but English was my best subject. It qualified me years later to be a 'grammar nazi' in social media...😅😂😅 All those years of training paid off.)
I had almost the same experience like that...twice really. First, once when I was 18 I was day dreaming not paying attention. At the end of the class I copied what looked like was the homework assignment. I worked half an hour on it and didn't get anywhere really. Just like 3 solutions in the continued series problem. The next class I said to the teacher that I had some difficulties with the assignment and gave him the first 3 solutions. He became like agitated and I thought oh shit. I screwed up. He asked how long I worked on this? Somewhat ashamed of the truth I wimpered: 15 minutes? He said, if you have the first 3 than you have the rest too. And he showed us. He told me jokingly to never do that again. I was still unsure what's he trying to convene. I said I just tried it and I saw the pattern. He said it was not homework! It was a well known unsolvable problem. It was something like the natural number to the power of the square root of 2 .
Anyway the second one was at engineering school. I flunked Chemistry college by the way and decided to study computer science. In math class the professor was explaining calculating the derivate function with L'Hopital's law. It was boring and he kept writing 3 sides of the giant blackboard to calculate the derivative of some function. I said to him why not take the square root on both sides and you'll the answer after 3 steps. He looked at me in disbelieve and indulged me with the goal to prove me wrong. I was right and he said: from now on, we call this Toon's law.
Congratulation. I hope you got that software engineering diploma.
@@moiquiregardevideo Thank you. Yes I graduated. I really wanted to continue at the university, but on the other hand I couldn't really afford it.
@@MrAlexandermartis .. with the income derived from your increasing skills; that's how you afford it! And some employers subsidize the cost of your studies. Where there's a will there's a way! Good luck! 😊
P.S. From your story you sound super talented, and an original thinker; I mean that in the nicest way! 😃
Lesson: when you tell someone they can’t do something, it sinks into their psyche. Don’t listen to anyone who says you can’t and stifle your own growth.
The world mathematicians: This is impossible to solve!
George: I missed the part where that's my problem.
He missed the part where the teacher explained that it wasn't his problem
I understood that reference 😉
ruclips.net/video/iCAaBWmKTDg/видео.html
Lol, 🤣🤣🤣😎👍
He took "It's all a part of the plan." to a next level.
I recall a time in the late 1950's when my father, who was a major player for a first class aircraft company, was having a discussion with a neighbor who had a Phd in aeronautical engineering . My father had described to him a design for a fighter jet his company had recently tested ( not sharing too much as the design was still secret) when the neighbor began to ridicule him , "as the " design " has been proven wrong". I remember my dad's reply to this day... " well you may be right ... but we keep building them and they keep flying. I guess no one told the airplanes"....
Thanks for sharing.
Some of the most arrogant and ignorant people I've ever met have been college graduates, people good at math and engineers. These people will fuck up a wet dream.
The principle problem with our educational institutions and social interactions is that people are trained WHAT to think instead of HOW to think. By the time they graduate college, they are arrogant know-it-alls with no mind of their own. They believe that just because they have a degree that they must be correct about everything and everyone else must be wrong. These individuals are insufferable.
@@No-vm7go You just nailed it spot on. I think the word is "Institutionalized". You present them with a new thought, or a 'paradigm shift' and they just cant / wont let know of what they "know" to be the truth.
@@No-vm7go Yeah I think the problem also comes from the days where professors or PhD holders were worshipped like gods. Some people just think they are better because they hold a PhD. In fact, a PhD just proves that you put a lot of effort in a specific task and that you are an expert in this very specific area of science. Nothing more.
The next day the neighbor tried to convince a bumble bee that it couldn't fly.
When I was in the navy I, and my crew, changed the bearings on a reduction gear while the ship was at sea, we did not know that we were not supposed to do that if we had known that we would have never tried to do it. We received a commendation for that achievement.
When you´re two thousand miles at sea you do what you have to do to get back underway. There are a million stories just like yours. Mine is/was repairing a 400 cycle motor/generator - back in homeport, the civilian engineers said it was *impossible*. They spent days looking at my repair while scratching their collective butts. It was so simple and obvious that a kid fresh out of "A" school would have seen it.
@@zanedavid1 I have a permanent deaf spot at 400!
@@zanedavid1 ,, Ya, amazing what a little Duct Tape can do.
@@zanedavid1 I repaired a flat screen plasma TV very, very early in the evolution of them (like a year or two in). There were no manuals and no references and TV repair shops just laughed when I asked them if they could fix it. I don't even think that RUclips was around back then. I had prior electronics knowledge as well as computer and networking skills. I kept that thing until just a few years ago. Iw as SUPER HEAVY and though it still worked, it had a burnt in image of Disney in the corner from my kids growing up and watching mostly that. My boys are 26 & 19 so I think it was around 1999 as I recall needing to fix it before Y2K.
dats what Hole Snipes do , rebuilt 11T firepump and brought it online for the first time in 20 years on the Connie. no manuals or tech reps , we had to take parts off other turbine driven firepumps to make it work but we did it.
My dad, a pathologist, was in a meeting with colleagues who were presenting cases on a powerpoint. One doctor was presenting a biopsy of a colon in which cancer had been ruled out and he was seeking input on what it could be. My dad, whose mind had wandered so he did not hear that cancer had been ruled out, was asked directly what he thought and he emphatically declared that it was cancer. A week or so later the doctor called my dad and informed him that since he had been so emphatic he ordered another biopsy and they found the cancer. He may have saved the patient's life by not listening in a meeting.
awesome dad. Thanks for sharing this!
No, he just knew what he was looking at
There is a story of a philosophy professor who gave an exam and the question was simple. He writes the world "Why?" on the board and students are writing, filling up blue book after blue book. However one student turns in a very short answer and gets an A. The answer he wrote was "why not?" Another one: I knew someone that had a college essay question. It was What is the riskiest thing you have done in your life? He drew a big X through the question and sent it back. (back before college applications were computerized). He got accepted.
Awesome. In both cases, they finished the challenge so quickly and got passing marks to boot.
dumb -
@charlesflannery4610- I remember hearing the "why" story decades ago. I thought that if the student who wrote why not was someone the prof didn't like then that student would have gotten a failing grade and we would never have heard this story. That's life.
They said "it is impossible", till someone who doesn't knew that came around and just did it. - Words are powerful in raising...or demolishing your talent.
George was "wicked smart" and thus the script for Goodwill Hunting was written.
Man didn’t know it was impossible, so he did it.
Yes,human mind is just extraordinary
Sigma Grindset
I'm going to raise a baby and tell it that gravity is optional
@@cube-nite 😹
Great story, great unsung hero, great moral to the story. If you don't know what you can't do, there's less stopping you from doing it.
Imagine if there was a 3rd problem that deals with dividing by zero
Good thing it wasn’t or we would have to do it
If he figured that out, he would discover how to destroy energy.
I know the answer to that, it's was infinity. If think logically
@@elamsyar7745 I used to think that way, too. But then I realize there are numbers less than zero, the negatives and going by that logic dividing by negative should give us a results larger than infinity
@@aimar2122 in 3 months of time you will find out that we already know what happens when a number is divided bya negative number.
Spoiler alert : Its not even close to being large
If at first you don't succeed, pass the assignment to one of your students.
... and then take the credit. Jocelyn Bell
Most geniuses are broke - money is not a motivator, challenges are.
My Dad, a math professor, told me a version of this story when I was growing up as a lesson about assumptions. Just because everyone tells you something is impossible, doesn’t mean it is.
Some people are not noticing the most obvious takeaway from this: never think a problem is unsolvable.
Really? I thought it was about not coming to class on time.
what? i know some problems that up till now have never been solved.
@@kengorion8190 doesn't mean they aren't unsolvable.
I thought it was becoming Rick Pickle tho Pickle of RIck jelly belly bean challenge 3 am
Solve corruption and greed please :)
Thanks for posting this. They say a similar thing about the number theory genius Ramanujan. Initially while he was a clerk in the Madras Port Trust he had very little access to advanced text books, journals etc. This allowed him to think differently about problems. If you have not heard of him, I would recommend the biography by Robert Kanigal titled "The Man Who Knew Infinity" (Also made into a movie of the same name).
And the moral of the story: Let's all be late.
Niesrind lucky for you that's what your mother said.
Yes
No. The message is "Allow late comers in. "
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Hahaha 😂
This reminds me when I was working construction and on weekends I was a janitor as a very prestigious college. One of the math professors used to put on a chalk board in the hallway and I anonymously solved equations until I got caught. Since I grew up in a foster home I was in trouble with the police a lot. The math professor found me and got me a deal with the court as long as I saw a therapist. The therapist helped me finally get my life straightened out. Now I make bank doing classified math problems. I live in California with my wife who's a British Dr.
Brilliant 😂😂
So, you're the inspiration for Good Will Hunting, eh?
Moral of the story: Always be late to class.
😂
Yes
Pippi Longstocking is a great series showing kids exactly this: "I never tried that before, so I should definitely be able to do it"
I tell my son every day being stubborn (in Dutch we call it "your own way" ~ eigenwijs ~ an even more succinct definition of this trait) is a great trait to have. If I ever fall in the trap of telling him he is being stubborn, for sure he will tell me that it is a good thing. And knowing myself, I will step back and agree. Its just lazy parenting, ego or peer pressure to call your kid stubborn as a negative. It should be celebrated!
To be fair, Pippi Longstocking did have the overwhelming advantage of being the strongest (and richest) little girl in the world. ... That, and the fact that she was fictional. ;)
But I still agree that children should not be held back except when absolutely necessary for safety of life and limb (their own or others').
hmmm so youre saying if you tell people that they wont progress because people are keeping them down and they shouldnt try, that would be a bad thing to do? i agree and we have a good amount of that here in america.
@Melkior Wiseman The latter of course clearly outways the first as the first is only a result of the latter ;-)
Fair enough, but many phylosophers have done thought experiments to come to a verifiable real life conclusion and in that vein one could argue there is abundant empiric evidence Pippi was on to something :D
Agreed. Growing up, my mom seemed to define the word "stubborn" as having my own perspective and not instantly conceding to her. Too many kids today give up the moment they face adversity; they could use a little stubbornness.
What you mean is persistent, not stubborn.
Stubborn is about self, it's "my way or no way, no matter what".
Persistent is about goal, it's "I will achieve this, despite all the difficulties".
In the word of Henry Ford, Whether you say you can or can't, either way you are right. If you want to find the solution, give it to the person that hasn't been told that it cannot be done.
Thank you. I have gone through a rather stressful time in my life. These videos does what most other videos don't do. They calm me down. And, just as important, they remind me, that there's more to life than material wealth.
I have the opposite: I have plenty of unsolvable problems that apparently my wife has solved long time ago ... ;(
She will keep you on the right track my friend
:)😂
moral of the story: mind with the absence of the negatives can do amazing things. In George's scenario, he did not hear the negative (no one can solve this problem).
What I've learned in my life as I look back in my life is that there's a solution to every problem and the solution is in your face. I always say that to myself when ever there is a problem to be solved and it always works for me and I end up solving the problem because I look at it in a different way.
All problems are kaleidoscopes, you only have to turn it the right way to see one of the solutions
Perception, Perspective, and Interpretation are everything!
He solved the problem because he thought that it was expected of him.
His father/ mother was the guiding light for George by teaching him the love / passion of learning, especially geometry.
The worst thing about youtube is how the title makes a claim and then you have to sift through TRASH unrelated to the title.
What, how is the title unrealted
The title is absolutely related and well summarised
if anything the title sounds like a generic clickbait that turns out legit
read the transcript lol its faster
My dad drove a chicken truck in Mississippi in the early 1930s. There was a depression. He went on to earn 3 masters degrees from MIT and was a Captain in the Naval Reserve. You can do many things if you are not told that it is impossible.