Birth of Calculus (Part 1)

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 125

  • @TheCanon66
    @TheCanon66 3 роки тому +41

    This man's ability to read Newton's handwriting is almost as impressive as Isaac Newton inventing/discovering calculus.

    • @user-pl7tf9gv8e
      @user-pl7tf9gv8e 3 роки тому +2

      I wonder what you'd call the man with ability to read doctor's handwriting..
      tbh newton's cursive looks like the common one, not too hard to read it imo (trying to not be sounds smart).

    • @prllearning7595
      @prllearning7595 3 роки тому

      @@user-pl7tf9gv8e b;

    • @animaray4548
      @animaray4548 2 роки тому +2

      @@user-pl7tf9gv8e yes Newtown is a social man , and also write poet so his writing is simple as to understand the common people easily

    • @prakharanand5760
      @prakharanand5760 2 роки тому

      @@animaray4548 Newton was actually a not very social man, you need to do some research. He rarely spoke to anyone, as far as I know, and died a virgin....

  • @apdsouza
    @apdsouza 5 років тому +61

    Anyone else started learning calculus and was like *"how tf did someone come up with this shit?"*

    • @categories5066
      @categories5066 5 років тому +6

      Literally everyone that has studied calculus. I ask myself that question everytime I do.

    • @Sk8erMorris
      @Sk8erMorris 4 роки тому +2

      honestly.. that's the very same question that got me really into Sir Isaac Newton.. like it still is bonkers to me.. props to him and to my Professors that have taught me this.

    • @monkeytrollhunter
      @monkeytrollhunter 4 роки тому +2

      Me, everyday

    • @vikraal6974
      @vikraal6974 3 роки тому +1

      Really, the first time I saw it I was like bruh

  • @gg9565
    @gg9565 4 роки тому +8

    Can you believe these dates...1665 this man was having these thought. His life is literally a beautiful story.

  • @newtron762
    @newtron762 7 років тому +15

    wow, i love old books. those are treasures of knowledge.

    • @puppergump4117
      @puppergump4117 3 роки тому

      All of our knowledge of the truth is only our interpretations.

  • @prachi579
    @prachi579 7 років тому +5

    Finally my search is over.....
    I was dying for such explanation.
    Thank you a lot....

  • @shekharruler2006
    @shekharruler2006 11 років тому +29

    Thanks for the video... I was searching for something like this for over 3 years. Why these idiots dont include history of physics and mathematics in the school syllabus. Instead they will ask you to mug up the formulas.... Sucker education system..

    • @Sk8erMorris
      @Sk8erMorris 4 роки тому

      @@ParamjitSingh-gz3de what do you mean?

    • @1dan1609
      @1dan1609 4 роки тому +2

      The books we use here do have history. But the history is usually ignored by both, teachers and students.

  • @tomejcasey
    @tomejcasey 12 років тому +1

    - literally - absolutely wonderful - and to see the very words on the page - thank you - and thank you for not talking down to anybody - despite the props and incidental music. Keep on doing this work -it is so valuable.

  • @williamjayaraj2244
    @williamjayaraj2244 4 роки тому +1

    Happy to see the signature of Sir. Isaac Newton. Thank you.

    • @vikraal6974
      @vikraal6974 3 роки тому +1

      @@spiderman-gt1mm bhaskara gave derivatives of some and cosine

  • @leeskolmoski4494
    @leeskolmoski4494 Рік тому

    Amazing video.
    Watching this guy touch those pages with bare hands…. So much anxiety

  • @raymondlai5
    @raymondlai5 9 років тому +1

    Hi MathHist =),
    I would like say, thank you for taking the time and effort to both upload and share this video with the youtube family. I hope you have a nice day! =).

  • @specialfx87
    @specialfx87 11 років тому +7

    should be shown in schools

  • @Math_oma
    @Math_oma 8 років тому +2

    A very interesting and accessible text for those interested in the development of the infinitesimal calculus is "The Method of Fluxions and Infinite Series". I'm currently making a video series about the text and have some videos on my channel about the text for those interested.

  • @ionutradulazar8984
    @ionutradulazar8984 5 років тому +4

    But why are area and tangent problem inverses ?

  • @warplanner8852
    @warplanner8852 8 років тому +30

    These videos are fascinating but are those truly the original notes/books of Newton? Shouldn't they be handled and stored more carefully?

    • @Crytoma
      @Crytoma 7 років тому +2

      War Planner Lel he probably had so much fking books

    • @TechnoPunk64
      @TechnoPunk64 4 роки тому +1

      Seriously, no gloves? He bends the pages very harshly as he flips through the book. Wow. Just wow. Replica book?

  • @mdshahrear
    @mdshahrear 5 років тому +4

    I'm a bit surprised. The Presenter is touching such important historic documents without wearing gloves. Is that normal?

    • @camila_costa12
      @camila_costa12 5 років тому

      I think its just a copy of the original work.

    • @ziad_m_404
      @ziad_m_404 5 років тому

      what if it is not :'' @@camila_costa12

  • @mikedaniels3009
    @mikedaniels3009 4 роки тому

    Interesting historical flow of the study of curves. For more recent contributions to this science, see the monthly publications by
    The Hugh Hefner Academy and other illustrous authorities on this topic.

  • @AliHassan-ro6qp
    @AliHassan-ro6qp 6 років тому +3

    I would still this book with out second thought

  • @islespatrick
    @islespatrick 10 років тому

    This is pretty fascinating.

  • @sscoconut1265
    @sscoconut1265 9 років тому +4

    Now I'm still waiting how these work in real life...

    • @jakebarrett2323
      @jakebarrett2323 9 років тому +4

      The technology you used to watch this and write that comment incorporate calculus and many other forms of math. Much of mine and your lives are guided by math, it just takes some looking to find it.

    • @jakebarrett2323
      @jakebarrett2323 9 років тому

      Correctamundo

    • @sscoconut1265
      @sscoconut1265 9 років тому +2

      Jake Barrett No I mean schools nowadays don't teach us to apply those in real life and I know how to do derivatives

    • @jakebarrett2323
      @jakebarrett2323 9 років тому +3

      Yes they do. I'm taking ap physics and we do calculus. Even if your school doesn't, you have the internet and a public library. You can teach yourself anything you want to learn. I taught myself most of the calculus I know

    • @AceofDlamonds
      @AceofDlamonds 9 років тому +2

      COCO LOOPIE Easy. You can calculate how much or how little of a material you need to complete, say, a fence or find the volume of a strange shape.

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Should it not be ‘quadratics/quadratrix’?

  • @scoobydoo5164
    @scoobydoo5164 10 років тому +2

    So newton was first to invent calculus

  • @orbsandtea
    @orbsandtea 11 років тому +1

    WHERE is part 2? !

  • @prachi579
    @prachi579 7 років тому +1

    But I have a question:
    Why tangents are so important?
    & How do these people came to know that if we get a way to find tangent then we would be able to learn about curves????

    • @HarisVFX
      @HarisVFX 7 років тому +1

      for derivatives/differentiability

    • @dhanasekardhanasekar7581
      @dhanasekardhanasekar7581 6 років тому

      Thats because both of them lifted calculus from somewhere else. That is the reason both of them were working on it at the same time. just like newton knew the presence of gravitational waves but not able to prove it, he lifted it from somewhere else.

    • @vikraal6974
      @vikraal6974 3 роки тому +1

      Prachi, Newton's motivation was to deduce Kepler's laws mathematically. To do that he needed integral calculus which is fundamentally linked to differential calculus.

  • @michaelgonzalez9058
    @michaelgonzalez9058 8 місяців тому +1

    Acually newton new how to introduce Calculas

  • @josephinewinter
    @josephinewinter 12 років тому +1

    This is vintage Open University (UK) right?

  • @markbenn1907
    @markbenn1907 3 роки тому +1

    Buddy also didn’t have a calculator like how

  • @Ssmileplz
    @Ssmileplz 12 років тому +3

    it's like all of his hair decided to migrate south and end up on his chin

  • @SuperFinGuy
    @SuperFinGuy 13 років тому

    @qtutoringhelps Newton's claims are very shady, for instance Huygens published his "Theoremata de Quadratura Hyperboles, Ellipsis et Circuli" in 1651. Him, Leibniz and others were developing ways to calculate and draw curves without a compass, they were specially after the explanation of the catenary curve. By all means read the originals papers, it is amazing what mainstream calculus leaves untold and unexplained.

  • @mohittiwari8934
    @mohittiwari8934 5 років тому

    Nice video

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    What is Hooda?

  • @RudraC
    @RudraC 2 роки тому

    Who invented calculus before Newton?

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Tangent FULLSTOP (period)

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Should be capital X axis

  • @frankdimeglio8216
    @frankdimeglio8216 Рік тому

    Consider what is E=MC2. TIME is NECESSARILY possible/potential AND actual ON/IN BALANCE, AS ELECTROMAGNETISM/energy is CLEARLY AND NECESSARILY proven to be gravity (ON/IN BALANCE). It is imperative to consider why and how it is that there is something instead of nothing ON BALANCE. WHAT IS GRAVITY is, ON BALANCE, an INTERACTION that cannot be shielded or blocked. Consider TIME AND time dilation ON BALANCE. Consider INSTANTaneity. Excellent.
    By Frank Martin DiMeglio

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Hanover, not Hannover

  • @ksqueezey
    @ksqueezey 4 роки тому +2

    Put on some GLOVES bro. Dude is touching century old handwritten notes with fingers that secrete oil and moisture.

  • @Gatoradecup
    @Gatoradecup 12 років тому

    Watch this at 1/2 speed lol it is gold

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    I think e said ‘his’ not ‘it’s’

  • @elamvaluthis7268
    @elamvaluthis7268 3 роки тому

    Before Newton in India Brahmagupta found calculus some thousand years before him.

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Not ‘tangency’

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Newton, not Nutan

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    ‘tangents he says’

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Newton, not ‘nucleus’

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    He said ‘curved’ not

  • @robertweidner2480
    @robertweidner2480 Рік тому

    Touching those pages with his bare fingers...

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Actually,mean who is hooda?

  • @sanahaskuranage8071
    @sanahaskuranage8071 Місяць тому

    Newton can humble everyoneone earth

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    I think he said ST ST desValles

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    ‘to have given’

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    “He has” not

  • @lhaviland8602
    @lhaviland8602 4 роки тому

    Not this calculus or that calculus, but *the* calculus.

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    speed (singular)

  • @spinner8930
    @spinner8930 3 роки тому

    also respect to the canananananananananananananananananananandian accent

  • @rocketomega11
    @rocketomega11 8 років тому

    They improved something that has been invented before them.

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    tangent. FULLSTOP

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Should be ‘a’

  • @5yuser
    @5yuser 10 років тому +14

    This guy's fingers needs to be cut off. Can't believe he's rubbing his dirty hands over those old sacred handwritten text like that. It's pissing me off just watching it.

    • @MatterinoHS
      @MatterinoHS 5 років тому +1

      Well i mean all of this valueable information has already been copied and spread around the world and I also dont think Newton would mind people using his material in an educational way or people touching his books with bare hands.

  • @willman85
    @willman85 4 роки тому

    What about Archimedes?

  • @aadityarajbhattarai46
    @aadityarajbhattarai46 6 років тому

    1:13
    Fucking gamma functions

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Transcriptionist needs to be taught some punctuation skills.

  • @strato172
    @strato172 12 років тому

    Shouldn't he be wearing gloves and treating the notebooks with care?

  • @donaldtrumpet8191
    @donaldtrumpet8191 3 роки тому

    8:23

  • @johnbatchler8551
    @johnbatchler8551 3 роки тому

    Ur cycloid is part of stock market cyvle

  • @nph9973
    @nph9973 3 роки тому

    Also transcriptionist needs lesson on what gets capitalized, vs.not

  • @nc51509
    @nc51509 10 років тому +2

    Archimedes is the father of modern integral calculus "The Method".

    • @harshitchaurasia1693
      @harshitchaurasia1693 7 років тому

      Batti mat dey

    • @Sybaris_Rex
      @Sybaris_Rex 5 років тому

      @огромная эрекция Yep.

    • @spiderman-gt1mm
      @spiderman-gt1mm 4 роки тому

      Nope

    • @vikraal6974
      @vikraal6974 3 роки тому +1

      Big no no. The method of exhaustion is an approximation and the best you can think of in modern terminology is Riemannian Summation.

  • @ahmosethemelanite9325
    @ahmosethemelanite9325 5 років тому +1

    Egypt Afrika...is the birthplace MATHEMATICS..

  • @spinner8930
    @spinner8930 3 роки тому

    < 3

  • @stevethebarbarian99
    @stevethebarbarian99 10 років тому +2

    Archimedes discovered it in 300bc.

    • @ndon85
      @ndon85 7 років тому +2

      no

    • @Sybaris_Rex
      @Sybaris_Rex 5 років тому

      @огромная эрекция Right. (You see, how assertions don't actually mean shit?)

    • @spiderman-gt1mm
      @spiderman-gt1mm 4 роки тому

      Nope... He just worked on some areas...

    • @stevethebarbarian99
      @stevethebarbarian99 4 роки тому

      @@spiderman-gt1mm
      Some areas of calculus - thus inventing it.

    • @vikraal6974
      @vikraal6974 3 роки тому

      Archimedes used Reimann Sums to prove theorems concerning areas and volumes. He did not know of the differential calculus at all. And he did not systemize the method for general curves. It was called method of exhaustion, the idea is very similar to integral calculus.

  • @macmos1
    @macmos1 12 років тому

    LOL

  • @worldisone2429
    @worldisone2429 6 років тому +2

    It is Madhava who invented PI... what a nonsense video.. please do research before uploading wrong video.. if you have doubt go and check BBC documentary videos