Reality is messy, which is why mathematicians will probably never, ever, find that Lingua Franca he was envisioning at the end. They're too obsessed with putting everything into numbers while frankly the Universe does not care. It works just because. I happily invite anyone to prove me wrong tho.
@@DarkAngelEU I think it's more like people are too obsessed with mathematicians. They never claimed to solve the world. They are interested in their own field, "like" some people are interesting in football. Will football describe reality one day? I doubt so. Also, if people are juding mathematicians capacity to describe reality, it's because they are so efficient at it. And by the way, numbers are not the only thing mathematicians use. They more accurately draw links between "things" (whatever the things are, what is interesting are the links).
The idea of math being grounded in our physical experience is explored well in Lakoff and Nunez' "Where Mathematics Comes From." Highly recommended book if you are interested in a more anthropological/psychological perspective on why we care about the kind of mathematics we do!
One way of conceptualize that is thinking: 'physics is physics of the actual world, mathematics is physics of the abstract world'. You can use maths in physics because the abstractions of the abstract world are usually models of the actual world.
Because there is more of a payoff applying math to reality. If there was no physical application, then we would have no technology essentially. Obviously, you need the math, but if you measured the effort and outcomes of mathematics up to this point, and put that up against the progress we've made as a species applying math to physics, I think there is a strong argument to say that there is more benefit and useful applications created from the application of math to reality than there are benefit and useful applications created by just creating mathematical models, on average, at this point in our history.
but it just uses a little part of group theory. Algebra is huge, we now have algebraists who spend their whole life just on algebra. Now algebra can be applied to error-correcting codes, physics, etc ....
Why does everyone want to establish some sort of hierarchy of science(s)? It's not like Maths > Physics or Physics > Maths. For a physicist, math just happens to be a tool of the trade, but a mathematician is far more specialized on maths rather than its applications. It's not like a physicist is better than a mathematician or vice versa.
It's about what can exist without the other. Physics can't exist without maths, and maths can't exist without philosophy. In converse, philosophy will exist regardless of the existence of maths, and maths will exist regardless of the existence of physics.
Philosophy is logic applied to the universe. Mathematics is a rigorous formulation of logic as a language. Physics is the application of that language to describe the universe. So physics is just a rigorous formulation of philosophy.
I'm still holding out on current findings. There are numerous alternative explanations for us to put all our eggs in the basket of "spooky actions at a distance".
Taken two semsters of quantum, might as well would've been math classes. Also, it is interesting to see physics advances math since it is mostly the other way around, ie, green function, qunatum mechanics, math to physics, and orbital mechanics, calculus, physics to math.
This is the reason I decided to focus on on math more. This stuff is so cool and I feel that if I keep studying and getting into higher math classes I get to learn and understand this. This channel is one of the reasons I want to pursue math. Thnx
8:37 Is that a reference to Newton's famous line: "I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me."
I like how everyone is talking like they have degrees in math, physics, chemistry, and biology. I have to assume they must be professionals based on the way they speak with such knowledge of all these subjects.
Thank You. As a maths major in university, I've been debating on wither or not to Double major in physics. And this video helped me sort some things out. Thank You so very much!
Whether or not you decide to formally study physics, at least have it as hobby and try to develop a physics intuition and use the maths and physics viewpoints to aid each other.
Cool to see Robert Dijkgraaf here! He’s a very popular physicist in the Netherlands, because of his televised colleges (that are really engaging and fairly easy to understand). I believe he’s the head of the Institute for Advanced Study in America (the same institution Einstein worked in)
Physics is just math but with the constraint of reality whereas math is the study of logic and all of its possibilities. Just as engineering is physics but with the constraints of economics, practicality and purpose. In other words, physics = what is? math = what can be? Engineering = what can we build for the cheapest price?
You reminded me of something I said once: To a pure mathematician, the square root of 2 is the (positive) number whose square is 2. To a computational mathematician, it's the sum of a Fourier series. To an engineer, the square root of 2 is whatever measurable number has a square close enough to 2 for a thing to work.
Cool, a dutch professor on Numberphile. It's a joy listening to him. He can explain physics with such enthusiasm, that you almost would consider a career change. :-)
How do you find all these great communicators, Brady? I mean it's one thing to find smart people but to find smart people who have such beautiful language or can explain things so well? Do you have castings for your channel?
this guy is a famous dutch mathematical physicist, he has a program on our national television channel and made some very nice lectures on tv. Also he is the Director of the Institute for Advanced Study.
Those programs and lectures.... they don't happen to be in Dutch? Because my Dutch is limited to just speaking English or German and hoping someone will understand me :/
Haha I've loved Numberphile for years, but dropping in Aussie's win against South Africa in the 99 World Cup semi final in the timeline...that just makes me love it more.
Maths moi ça ! I think physics is king, and math is queen. Physics deals with real situations, like a king, and math tells physics how to do it, like a queen. Math= queen physics = king. With both combine Math + Physics = kingdom or in this long metaphor math+physics = the universe or reality. This metaphor is also based on the old days, so feminist do not take this the wrong way.
Loved every minute... one of the best numberphile videos I've seen (and that is saying something). I read last week an interview of mr. Dijkgraaf in Quanta Magazine on this very same topic.
If all mathematical intuitions fundamentally come from our perception, it shouldn’t be surprising that as our perception expands with scientific progress a new wave of mathematics should ensue from quantum mechanics as it provides new intuitions to work with. I’d say it’s just the same process again.
I see Robbert Dijkgraaf, I insta like this video. He's a famous Dutch Physicist and he has done a couple of live tv lectures in the Netherlands. edit: changed lecteres to lectures
I am surprised that none of the top comments here is talking about the last 2 minutes. Literally saying, we need to find something deeper than geometry and space. Just pure information. That's a mind boggling way to explain reality.
Very interesting, very well explained, very informative. A really rare explanation of many abstract notions in a few minutes. You know someone knows his subject very, very well and is definitely confident for what he says, since he can explain it vividly, simply and fully understandably to a layman, like me, who does not have any special knowledge of physics or mathematics. "The sum of all histories" is a remarkable definition for quantum mechanics events. Nothing but deep respect for Robbert Dijkgraaf, a true scientific personality.
This was an excellent interview, I'd love to hear more about the "sum over all histories" - which I am sure is Feynman's path integral. Maybe another video on this?
I like to think we are progressing beyond these distinct boundaries between the sciences, because in reality it is far more useful to us to take all the sciences in unison than to divide them
The toughest part is letting go of the notion that things are predictable. The fact that nature has always been working based off chance and has been doing so well before we ever came along. So something has to be working right.
None of the Sciences or Math is King. They are all equal describing complex phenomena in the universe and we should appreciate them all equally. Not argue about it in comments
Does anyone else feel like everyone in the world should see videos like this? Not because they will apply it everyday or make the next discovery, but just to expand their mind and teach them totally new ways to think about reality? It just seems important.
I would love to see a follow up to this with that really clever Japanese professor of practical mathematic problems relating his knowledge of things like knots to quantum theory.
Always love to hear Robert speak. He can talk about very complicated topics and make them understandable for everyone. On top of that the enthusiasm he has for science is something that comes across very clearly and makes you enthusiastic about science as well
Haven't watched the video yet but my understanding is that physics is the study of the fundamental logic of our universe and mathematics is our most comprehensive language for describing the physics around us. Both are based on logic which is simply put, the existence we find ourselves in.
Like them both. Playing around with mathematical objects and observing patterns is fun, and so is finding out about the physical world; also the fact that they have a close relationship makes it even better :)
I believe that mathermaticians will prove something like ,matrices do not commute under multiplication and will ask phycisists if this is any use to them.
Physics also gives answers that seem physically impossible, perhaps it’s better to think of the truth that maths and physics imply as being beyond human experience
At 6:39 one can see the great achievements in history. These include Egypts pyramids, the Roman Empire, the compositions of Mozart, the Titanic, the Moon landing and last bit not least Australias ICC World Cup win in 2015. What a moment for all of mankind. Aussie Aussie Aussie!!!
The flow of information physics -> math is only surprising if you don't know history. Math has only been divorced from reality in the last century, it needs to get back in touch.
I'm not a mathematician, but on a conceptual level I feel like I've never had a hard time understanding quantum theory. Probabilistic space makes way more sense than determinism
Look: i've only heard the basics of quantum mechanics in youtube videos and giant group lectures and isn't it more likely that quantum particles are too small and too fast for any creature to understand it. Basically meaning that whatever we measured/calculated always gives differend answers because they are incomprehensible by humans and current technology.
Tobias K. No. Knowing both position and momentum is fundamentally impossible. It is a feature of the system. Things like uncertainty apply to objects of any size as well. We've done the double slit experiment with molecules made up of thousands of atoms.
Why is chemistry always separated from math and physics? Chemistry is very similar to physics in lots of ways, and it is basically all about using Newton's laws and the concepts of energy, momentum, torque etc on atoms, like or example Gibbs energy, dipole moment and so on.
It's weird only on a superficial view. It is very similar to classical mechanics for waves. What is weird is the wave function collapse, which I regard as a unjustified assumption.
If you want to see that discussion go look at the replies of the Crash Course video on sociology and the scientific method. It is not something I would like to revisit.
This man can teach the is the world and beyond. His level of understanding creates this simplified explanation, he has to teach people to understand these matters. I know I’m late! But I just enjoy these explanations from Robert Dijkgraaf.
The difference between math and physics is that mathematicians start from a blank sheet of paper while physicists start from a universe and need to seperate objects, properties and environment. Because of the blank sheet mathematicians think they can do anything they want wielding divine-like creative powers ;)
Anyone else laugh at the images of cricket and the pyramids and the moon landing and the Mighty Black Stump™️ because they're all Brady's favorite things
Extra footage from this interview: ruclips.net/video/FpkvNJCVEUA/видео.html
Numberphile nice
If you could also do engineering vs physics.
The Cease engineering, like physics but actually useful.
Awesome lecture!
The Cease don't go too low, there is no place for comparison between the two.
_"They deal with this messy thing called reality."_
Reality is messy, which is why mathematicians will probably never, ever, find that Lingua Franca he was envisioning at the end. They're too obsessed with putting everything into numbers while frankly the Universe does not care. It works just because. I happily invite anyone to prove me wrong tho.
_everybody must get stoned_
-Bob Dylan
@@h00db01i lol. bob dylan may be clever, but not wise
@@dreandro458 troof, I guess. but then I got to use the EM dash...
@@DarkAngelEU I think it's more like people are too obsessed with mathematicians. They never claimed to solve the world. They are interested in their own field, "like" some people are interesting in football. Will football describe reality one day? I doubt so.
Also, if people are juding mathematicians capacity to describe reality, it's because they are so efficient at it.
And by the way, numbers are not the only thing mathematicians use. They more accurately draw links between "things" (whatever the things are, what is interesting are the links).
I thought mathematicians and physicists are going to fight with armour on. Guess i was wrong
Be patient.
They can't show it on youtube, check on liveleak...
They're two sides of the same coin. Newton invented calculus
@@noname-it2up Leibnitz*
Engineers Vs Physicists
This man appeared in my dreams and gave me a lecture on quantum physics
You must be high
How much do you remember?
I want to know.
dream it again please
I love how emphatic he is, look at him smiling when talking about the sum of histories. He's probably told this 100 times and it still excites him
When I saw the title I was expecting to see all of Numberphiles mathematicians and Sixty Symbols' physicists battling it out. Not disappointed though
The idea of math being grounded in our physical experience is explored well in Lakoff and Nunez' "Where Mathematics Comes From." Highly recommended book if you are interested in a more anthropological/psychological perspective on why we care about the kind of mathematics we do!
One way of conceptualize that is thinking: 'physics is physics of the actual world, mathematics is physics of the abstract world'. You can use maths in physics because the abstractions of the abstract world are usually models of the actual world.
Why study applied maths, when you can study pure maths and let physicists apply it for you in 100 years ;)
Vort3x unfortunately bigger fraction of mathemarics is motivated by Physics .. Example: Calculus, fourier transform, functional analysis,
Because there is more of a payoff applying math to reality. If there was no physical application, then we would have no technology essentially. Obviously, you need the math, but if you measured the effort and outcomes of mathematics up to this point, and put that up against the progress we've made as a species applying math to physics, I think there is a strong argument to say that there is more benefit and useful applications created from the application of math to reality than there are benefit and useful applications created by just creating mathematical models, on average, at this point in our history.
This wasn't a serious comment guys...
Also, I hear what you say and raise you all of modern algebra.
+
When I went into graduate school (for chemistry), I realized that much of the subject can be reduced to purely mathematical group theory.
Same for physics.
but it just uses a little part of group theory. Algebra is huge, we now have algebraists who spend their whole life just on algebra. Now algebra can be applied to error-correcting codes, physics, etc ....
Diego Morales Yeah, no.
Tell me more. iammaxhailme. Are there any resources of chemistry broken down into math. I am also interested in the reason and properties of tables.
most of inorganic chemistry is described with group theory
Why does everyone want to establish some sort of hierarchy of science(s)? It's not like Maths > Physics or Physics > Maths.
For a physicist, math just happens to be a tool of the trade, but a mathematician is far more specialized on maths rather than its applications. It's not like a physicist is better than a mathematician or vice versa.
Swankity Dankity this is just how humans work.
It's about what can exist without the other. Physics can't exist without maths, and maths can't exist without philosophy. In converse, philosophy will exist regardless of the existence of maths, and maths will exist regardless of the existence of physics.
Philosophy is logic applied to the universe. Mathematics is a rigorous formulation of logic as a language. Physics is the application of that language to describe the universe. So physics is just a rigorous formulation of philosophy.
noah schaefferkoetter maths is the language of the universe but physics is it's actions.
Swankity Dankity Because everything is an ego competition for some people
7:13 turn on autogenerated captions to learn what knot theorists really study
"Anyone who claims to understand quantum theory is either lying or crazy" -Feynman supposedly.
I'm still holding out on current findings. There are numerous alternative explanations for us to put all our eggs in the basket of "spooky actions at a distance".
There's video of him saying it.
OR both
@@hs9577 Its been 2 weeks...
Nice, i can then say i'm in the same level as those top physicists...
Taken two semsters of quantum, might as well would've been math classes. Also, it is interesting to see physics advances math since it is mostly the other way around, ie, green function, qunatum mechanics, math to physics, and orbital mechanics, calculus, physics to math.
when you advance math, you are a mathematician, doesn't matter if your job title is physicist
This is the reason I decided to focus on on math more. This stuff is so cool and I feel that if I keep studying and getting into higher math classes I get to learn and understand this. This channel is one of the reasons I want to pursue math. Thnx
2:29 "This is a Pen" for a very brief moment I expected him to say next "This is an apple". I need to spent less time on the internet.
you need to spend less time in 2016
And this is a TV that looks like an apple.
pineawpewrl pen.
“This is not a pipe.”
the book is on the table
My first year of my study was opened by this man, amazing lad
Where.... curious
@@charibrianshingirai5358 Utrecht! (In the Netherlands)
Robert Dijkgraaf!!!
Dijkgraaf - for when you need to find the shortest path to your lightning ball generator
+Jackeea Ha!
ik wist dat het een Nederlander of een Vlaming was aan zijn accent
Soufian 27 ik dacht eerst aan Denemarken t/m ik zag wie t was
ik herkende de thumbnail meteen! :)
8:37 Is that a reference to Newton's famous line: "I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me."
You caught a big fish with Robbert Dijkgraaf, Brady. And it speaks for your work how willing he is to contribute. Well done.
Whoo Robbert Dijkgraaf! Our Dutch national treasure. Such a smart and inspiring man :D
EgoLTR he went to my high school
Vivat haec societas!
EgoLTR
Ok, ok. We get it.
Lol, Robert Dickgraph
ur just a baby :)
Casio F-91W
My man, I've been wearing it for 3 years already. Best watch ever.
I like how everyone is talking like they have degrees in math, physics, chemistry, and biology. I have to assume they must be professionals based on the way they speak with such knowledge of all these subjects.
I don't, but I study it and even I know that most people in the comments just write bs ^^
Who did you think watches there videos?
@@user-dr9gs6wh1k RUclips commenters
Some actually do. We have nothing else like that, society generally does not take math as something worth for entertainment (sorry for my english).
"This one is knot and this one is not" probably could've been phrased better lol
s ss Nah
Couldn't possibly have been phrased better in my opinion.
he said knoted
Knotted
It's a pity that this guy is not a regular at Numberphile
Thank You. As a maths major in university, I've been debating on wither or not to Double major in physics. And this video helped me sort some things out. Thank You so very much!
James Roden what did you decide?
Whether or not you decide to formally study physics, at least have it as hobby and try to develop a physics intuition and use the maths and physics viewpoints to aid each other.
Cool to see Robert Dijkgraaf here! He’s a very popular physicist in the Netherlands, because of his televised colleges (that are really engaging and fairly easy to understand). I believe he’s the head of the Institute for Advanced Study in America (the same institution Einstein worked in)
Physician or physicist?
JayzOned C Lol. Changed it now.
And now he becomes the minister of education in the Netherlands
He explained string theory so well in the last part, i never understood why it could be the solution until now. excellent.
Physics is just math but with the constraint of reality whereas math is the study of logic and all of its possibilities. Just as engineering is physics but with the constraints of economics, practicality and purpose. In other words, physics = what is? math = what can be? Engineering = what can we build for the cheapest price?
You reminded me of something I said once: To a pure mathematician, the square root of 2 is the (positive) number whose square is 2. To a computational mathematician, it's the sum of a Fourier series. To an engineer, the square root of 2 is whatever measurable number has a square close enough to 2 for a thing to work.
Best comment for the mileage!
Cool, a dutch professor on Numberphile. It's a joy listening to him. He can explain physics with such enthusiasm, that you almost would consider a career change. :-)
How do you find all these great communicators, Brady? I mean it's one thing to find smart people but to find smart people who have such beautiful language or can explain things so well? Do you have castings for your channel?
this guy is a famous dutch mathematical physicist, he has a program on our national television channel and made some very nice lectures on tv. Also he is the Director of the Institute for Advanced Study.
Those programs and lectures.... they don't happen to be in Dutch? Because my Dutch is limited to just speaking English or German and hoping someone will understand me :/
Penny Lane sadly in dutch, maybe you can find subtitles? his tv program is called the mind of the universe and the lectures are of DWDD
So basically it’s all about solving problems 🧐🧐🧐
Haha I've loved Numberphile for years, but dropping in Aussie's win against South Africa in the 99 World Cup semi final in the timeline...that just makes me love it more.
Mathematics is the queen of the sciences Gauss said.
End of the game !
Maths moi ça ! And who's the KING
Yeah, gauss was a mathematician, you cant expect him to say something else.
Darius Duesentrieb he actually researched a lot about stars and comets
Maths moi ça ! I think physics is king, and math is queen. Physics deals with real situations, like a king, and math tells physics how to do it, like a queen. Math= queen physics = king. With both combine Math + Physics = kingdom or in this long metaphor math+physics = the universe or reality. This metaphor is also based on the old days, so feminist do not take this the wrong way.
EFoE wut...who's Prince?
Loved every minute... one of the best numberphile videos I've seen (and that is saying something). I read last week an interview of mr. Dijkgraaf in Quanta Magazine on this very same topic.
Really loved the animation style in this one! Keep up the good work!
yes, haunting.
amazing artists.
If all mathematical intuitions fundamentally come from our perception, it shouldn’t be surprising that as our perception expands with scientific progress a new wave of mathematics should ensue from quantum mechanics as it provides new intuitions to work with. I’d say it’s just the same process again.
I see Robbert Dijkgraaf, I insta like this video. He's a famous Dutch Physicist and he has done a couple of live tv lectures in the Netherlands.
edit: changed lecteres to lectures
sonavvs, he also does 'mind of the universe', which is on Dutch television every Sunday! Very interesting stuff.
Jonathan Klein Schiphorst Do you know which channel it's on?
Rónán McIntyre, NPO 1 2 or 3 (not sure), maybe you can access it through vpn if you are not dutch.
Rónán McIntyre you could probably find it on youtube, but it will be in dutch
It's on NPO 2 (just looked it up) on sunday 21:05.
I am surprised that none of the top comments here is talking about the last 2 minutes. Literally saying, we need to find something deeper than geometry and space. Just pure information. That's a mind boggling way to explain reality.
Absolutely amazing, mesmerizing conversation!
Very interesting, very well explained, very informative. A really rare explanation of many abstract notions in a few minutes. You know someone knows his subject very, very well and is definitely confident for what he says, since he can explain it vividly, simply and fully understandably to a layman, like me, who does not have any special knowledge of physics or mathematics.
"The sum of all histories" is a remarkable definition for quantum mechanics events.
Nothing but deep respect for Robbert Dijkgraaf, a true scientific personality.
This was an excellent interview, I'd love to hear more about the "sum over all histories" - which I am sure is Feynman's path integral. Maybe another video on this?
It is
I like to think we are progressing beyond these distinct boundaries between the sciences, because in reality it is far more useful to us to take all the sciences in unison than to divide them
#40 on trending woo!
The toughest part is letting go of the notion that things are predictable. The fact that nature has always been working based off chance and has been doing so well before we ever came along. So something has to be working right.
None of the Sciences or Math is King. They are all equal describing complex phenomena in the universe and we should appreciate them all equally. Not argue about it in comments
Finally a comment from someone above 14 years old.
Math is king
HELLL YEAAA this is trending!! Awesome content, keep it up.
Does anyone else feel like everyone in the world should see videos like this? Not because they will apply it everyday or make the next discovery, but just to expand their mind and teach them totally new ways to think about reality? It just seems important.
Shut up
I would love to see a follow up to this with that really clever Japanese professor of practical mathematic problems relating his knowledge of things like knots to quantum theory.
Always love to hear Robert speak. He can talk about very complicated topics and make them understandable for everyone. On top of that the enthusiasm he has for science is something that comes across very clearly and makes you enthusiastic about science as well
Haven't watched the video yet but my understanding is that physics is the study of the fundamental logic of our universe and mathematics is our most comprehensive language for describing the physics around us. Both are based on logic which is simply put, the existence we find ourselves in.
I love both of these two wonderful subjects. I really like science. 😊
Like them both. Playing around with mathematical objects and observing patterns is fun, and so is finding out about the physical world; also the fact that they have a close relationship makes it even better :)
Physics wins 60% of the time, every time
Alan J Define "win" please.
Alan J perfect use of that reference
theUnknown wrong order
you must be a goblin. gnomes dont say that
Alan J math is entirely made up
Favourite video from your channel so far
1999 world cup semi-final Australia v South Africa
the way he explains things is so absorbing... I hope i can be a mathematical physicist like him someday....
In this video "Physicists are plumbers."
In the extra footage "Physics is like art."
Aiman Al-Eryani I can imagine plumbers doing art, but it would be shitty.
Plumbing is art
come on , both mathematicians and physicists are brothers , they both are legendary
6:57 LUL
I was searching for a comment like this xD
Kymate Robbert was like: "Damn it!, It's not what it looks like"
With nuts
I believe that mathermaticians will prove something like ,matrices do not commute under multiplication and will ask phycisists if this is any use to them.
My calc 3 prof said you always believe physics over math. There's times where math with give you an answer that just isn't physically possible
Like the rectangle with sides -5 and -15 meters.
@@JayTemple That cannot exist in math either, though. Length is defined as positive. But I guess that intersects with physics.
Or the sum of all natural numbers is -1/12.
Physics also gives answers that seem physically impossible, perhaps it’s better to think of the truth that maths and physics imply as being beyond human experience
@@name5702 such as? If Physics gives an answer, by definition it is physically possible.
this is the best numberphile video. i love pure mathematics, and also love physics. its great so see theyr interaction on modern science
Nice animations Mate! Congratulations
Don't doubt the power of mediation, man. It will blow you away.
Physics and math exist in a superposition ;))
Mate you're a golden nugget
-0.08333333333333333333333333333333333333 = -1/12 right ? HOW DARE YOU !!!
* not quite equal though
me and my gf have a superposition in bed where when can either be in one or two places at the same time.
Take one twelfth.
This is by far the best numberphile interview.
Finally! A Dutchie on Numberphile!
Man, this is one of my favorite videos of Numberphile.
This man just became the Dutch Minister of Education!
At 6:39 one can see the great achievements in history. These include Egypts pyramids, the Roman Empire, the compositions of Mozart, the Titanic, the Moon landing and last bit not least Australias ICC World Cup win in 2015. What a moment for all of mankind.
Aussie Aussie Aussie!!!
"Is math related to science?"
Yes. But Math is complicated but it's necessary in every science.
Mathematics is the language of the universe therefore it's also the language of science.
Excellent to see more of Robbert Dijkgraff.
Physics ❤️
I have to say that this is one of the best videos on the Numberphile channel. Comparable to the Tadashi ones.
The flow of information physics -> math is only surprising if you don't know history. Math has only been divorced from reality in the last century, it needs to get back in touch.
Frankly the whole human species are getting detached from reality for about a century. Don't think that's just coincidence.
I'm not a mathematician, but on a conceptual level I feel like I've never had a hard time understanding quantum theory. Probabilistic space makes way more sense than determinism
Look: i've only heard the basics of quantum mechanics in youtube videos and giant group lectures and isn't it more likely that quantum particles are too small and too fast for any creature to understand it. Basically meaning that whatever we measured/calculated always gives differend answers because they are incomprehensible by humans and current technology.
Tobias K. No. Knowing both position and momentum is fundamentally impossible. It is a feature of the system. Things like uncertainty apply to objects of any size as well. We've done the double slit experiment with molecules made up of thousands of atoms.
Why is chemistry always separated from math and physics?
Chemistry is very similar to physics in lots of ways, and it is basically all about using Newton's laws and the concepts of energy, momentum, torque etc on atoms, like or example Gibbs energy, dipole moment and so on.
Ik hoor die stem, ik kijk naar de description, een nederlander.
Had is ook, DUTCH
Another great episode, Numberphile, you guys are awesome. Commercial world, please sponsor these guys.
"Even if you sit and meditate a 1000 years you couldn't come up with the laws of quantum mechanics" - Why would this be true?
It's not
Connes embedding conjecture is an amazing example of this. It would be a great numberphile video.
I have Quantum Depression, it follows every possible path of my life at the same time.
This one was great. The speaker, the discussion, the art. All fantastic :)
I'm tired of people just saying quantum mechanics is wierd and not explaining anything
Misterlegoboy that's the point. There is nothing to be explained
Do the math
Do a physics master if you want to understand, it’s not something you just explain in a 15 minute video, or even a 5 hour one for that matter.
Try Feynman Lectures on Physics, Vol 3. They are freely available, look them up.
It's weird only on a superficial view. It is very similar to classical mechanics for waves. What is weird is the wave function collapse, which I regard as a unjustified assumption.
You’re giving so many different subtitles that is fantastic 👍👌
Idea for next video:
Science vs social science.
If you want to see that discussion go look at the replies of the Crash Course video on sociology and the scientific method. It is not something I would like to revisit.
LolGuy HAHAHHA
This man can teach the is the world and beyond.
His level of understanding creates this simplified explanation, he has to teach people to understand these matters.
I know I’m late! But I just enjoy these explanations from Robert Dijkgraaf.
7:22 Deez Nutz
This is great. More mathematical physicist please!
The difference between math and physics is that mathematicians start from a blank sheet of paper while physicists start from a universe and need to seperate objects, properties and environment. Because of the blank sheet mathematicians think they can do anything they want wielding divine-like creative powers ;)
The graphics in thus video were particularly beautiful, it really enhanced it for me. I think this was top
Anyone else laugh at the images of cricket and the pyramids and the moon landing and the Mighty Black Stump™️ because they're all Brady's favorite things
I CRY A RIVER WHEN I SEE THIS KIND OF TITLE, oh wait It's numberphile
Is maths related to science?
AEIOU UOIEA Math IS a science
It's the language of science.
Contrary to science, though, math is about absolute truth.
Math is the language to describe science.
Bo Zhang - Not just describe, but especially DO. You can't DO science without math.
AEIOU UOIEA Math IS a field of science!
I love your show, Numberphile. Thanks!
7:03 what kind of knot is that??😂😂😂
The field of natural numbers or integers is the first quantum field we discovered, when we learned to count.
is my phone wierd or the animation was ?
Wow Brady if this was 6 hours long I'd still be watching.
Math is the language of Physics. Physicists "speak" this language while Mathematicians develop this language.
Physics cannot exist without math.