A (very) Brief History of John von Neumann

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 419

  • @Quantumfluxfield
    @Quantumfluxfield 4 роки тому +292

    I've never heard as many scientists saying they cant keep up with someone else as with Neumann, his mind must have been immensily powerful. Thanks for the video!

    • @djbabbotstown
      @djbabbotstown 3 роки тому +5

      Yeah. But can he cook an egg?

    • @Wabbelpaddel
      @Wabbelpaddel 3 роки тому +8

      @@djbabbotstown Well, he couldn't drive well :D

    • @jangeertbruggink5044
      @jangeertbruggink5044 2 роки тому

      What i would never get is the great fear of death. I mean lots of people less intelligent have consolidated with their faith more easily and more readily. They say that only when you live fully you are ready to die at any moment. So the conclusion of this video does not make sense. How can one that is living so fully be so afraid of what is apparent? I think von Neumann was not living fully but merely biding time and trying to get as much out before the inevitable.
      There is a simple joke about this in my native (dutch) language it goes something like this. A guy walks into a bar and nervously asks for a beer quickly before the trouble starts, so the bartender gives him a beer. After a few minutes the guy asks for another beer ‘before the trouble starts’. The bartender gives him a beer. A few moments pass before the guy again asks for a beer ‘before the trouble starts’. The bartender finally fed up with this asks ‘how are you going to pay for this?’ to which the guy replies ‘there’s the trouble’.

    • @williambrandondavis6897
      @williambrandondavis6897 Рік тому +1

      Never heard of Terrance Tao then.

    • @jvizkeleti
      @jvizkeleti Рік тому +7

      Great scientists never admit if the other guy is smarter except they admit Von Neumann is. Because it would be utterly ridiculous to deny it.

  • @lowersaxon
    @lowersaxon 2 роки тому +110

    As an Economist I feel obliged to mention his fundamental paper on economic equilibrium and growth first published in German in 1938 and originally presented to a famous Seminar in Vienna. 8 years later the paper was published in English. This contribution was a brilliant door opener for what was to come later in theoretical economics after WWII. For the first time it used mathematical fix point theorems ( vN generalized Brouwer, later further generalized by Kakutani) to solve a set of linear economic inequalities. The paper cannot be overestimated, imho.

    • @thoughtsofalostoneofalosto2591
      @thoughtsofalostoneofalosto2591 2 роки тому +4

      I thought John nash had something to do with that as well?

    • @amayoka
      @amayoka Рік тому +4

      @@thoughtsofalostoneofalosto2591 it seems they both did contribute significantly to game theory

    • @edmundcharles5278
      @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +8

      @@thoughtsofalostoneofalosto2591
      John Nash was not on the same level of von Neumann, this despite the hype of the movie 'A Beautiful Mind'. Von Neumann was far more fascinating of a chap, very modest in behavior and of his genius too. John Nash was 'nominated' for his Nobel Prize years after his best years were over and he was almost like a street urchin due to his mental instability. Von Neumann was a mathematician and thus there is awarded Nobel Prize for either pure mathematics, yet there can be a Nobel Prize in another field to which mathematics can be applied and for which prize category exists under the Nobel Committee rules. Many critics also contend that the term 'Nobel Prize in Economics' is not valid since Mr Nobel never authorized economics as a category for which the prize should be awarded, rather any economics category award is predicated and created by the Swedish Sovereign Bank IN MEMORY OF Alfred Nobel, but not made by Alfred Nobel in his original intention of the prize. Trivia folks, just trivia.

    • @GordonBrevity
      @GordonBrevity Рік тому

      You are not an economist. Thank you.

    • @AB-et6nj
      @AB-et6nj Рік тому

      Economics is a psuedo-science.

  • @shawn576
    @shawn576 Рік тому +31

    What an interesting dude with such a wide range of knowledge. It's the kind of character that would actually break immersion if a book or movie made the main character this brilliant.

  • @thehammurabichode7994
    @thehammurabichode7994 4 роки тому +257

    *When he was six years old, he could divide two eight-digit numbers in his head and could converse in Ancient Greek. When the six-year-old von Neumann caught his mother staring aimlessly, he asked her, "What are you calculating?"* - Wikipedia

    • @jaassil
      @jaassil 2 роки тому +14

      Just historys… no proof. Tesla spoke 67 languages ​​fluently by age 2. Oh… I dont have a video to prove that either.

    • @viktorjuhasz1518
      @viktorjuhasz1518 2 роки тому +22

      @@jaassil at least we know what he done after. and what did you do?

    • @boredash4020
      @boredash4020 Рік тому +3

      @@viktorjuhasz1518 ypocrisy fallacy dum dum

    • @thedouglasw.lippchannel5546
      @thedouglasw.lippchannel5546 Рік тому +18

      When I was six, I could finish my entire Ice Cream cone.

    • @edmundcharles5278
      @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +21

      Also, his Ph.D dissertation was so complex that his examiners kindly asked that he re-write the thesis to a more understandable level for their understanding; his examiners were all Ph.D mathematics professors and they did not defy or question his paper, how could they since he was brighter than all of his professors. The remarkable thing about genius is that your teachers have little or nothing to 'teach' to you that you cannot just as easily discover or learn for yourself, all they can do is to provide some guidance and direction of further study. Scary intelligent. AI might easily achieve such a status shortly.

  • @omnivorous65
    @omnivorous65 Рік тому +40

    His brilliance was such that even sane - and immensely intelligent people - contemplated whether he might have been an alien.

  • @kchannel5317
    @kchannel5317 4 роки тому +268

    He probably was the smartest human on earth, this needs more views.

    • @stevo7220
      @stevo7220 4 роки тому +7

      @OverLord Opps In terms of IQ tests or cognitive ability tests he probably wouldve had aall time record . Nowadays asians have this capabilities.

    • @user-og9nl5mt1b
      @user-og9nl5mt1b 3 роки тому +20

      @@stevo7220 I m asian , u guys overestimate us , dumb guys exist here too alot of them

    • @terrylu9811
      @terrylu9811 3 роки тому +6

      Dude wtf??

    • @jaassil
      @jaassil 3 роки тому +7

      He was.

    • @kchannel5317
      @kchannel5317 3 роки тому +21

      @Noah dean In terms of mathematical and scientific work I would say he was on of the greatest. William Sidis didn't do anything usefull. He's suppose to be remembered as an American mathematician but didn't do anything significant mathematical or scientifically. I think it's unfair to treat intelligence as a game were you get the highest score, I think intelligence has to be useful for it to be really shown. Von Neumann had the mathematical depth of Euler, and was also a good engineer and physicist (Something Euler was not). His work on qauntum mechanics was on level with Dirac, and Dirac was one of the best mathematical minds to study qauntum mechanics. You can argue non of his work was a deep as the theory of special relativity (which is fair), but special relativity is a really deep concept that would take years to study even for a genius. Neumann definitely covered a lot of ground on a lot of deep concept. The Volume of his work is why I think he's the greatest.

  • @aghowrath
    @aghowrath 2 роки тому +19

    He is my Hero..an unrivaled Genius..I particularly admire his work with Ulam to realize the functionality of the Bomb and also with Chandrasekhar (stochastic fluctuations in stellar theory). He did all of this effortlessly..Wigner's epitaph to him was conclusive..to paraphrase.."There was only one Genius. JVN.."

  • @GreenHotDogz
    @GreenHotDogz 2 роки тому +36

    I started reading "The Three Body Problem" and came across his character and role in the book. I was not familiar with who he was prior to that point in the book.. but I'm glad you were here to explain his life.. even if it was brief. :D

    • @Apocalypsepioneer
      @Apocalypsepioneer Рік тому +1

      May you explain what this book is about for three body problem

    • @rushv989
      @rushv989 Рік тому

      @@Apocalypsepioneer - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Three-Body_Problem_(novel),
      It is worth reading the book. The story line is fascinating.

  • @jamesbentonticer4706
    @jamesbentonticer4706 Рік тому +76

    The most underrated scientist of all time.

    • @gullf1sk
      @gullf1sk Рік тому +5

      His papers and achievements rates him pretty accurately

    • @hunmari
      @hunmari Рік тому +1

      and Einstein with 1 theory, and 160 IQ is soooo famous

    • @jamesbentonticer4706
      @jamesbentonticer4706 Рік тому +17

      @@hunmari Einstein with ONE theory???

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 Рік тому +4

      For once, underrated actually is underrated, at least in terms of popular culture.

    • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
      @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Рік тому

      @@hunmari You do know Einstein basically invented condensed matter physics, right? And most people don't realize this.
      That was ONE of like 100 things he did. According to head of applied physics at Yale, who knows more physics than 10 clones of you put together, Douglas Stone, Einstein should have gotten 7 to 10 Nobel Prizes.
      Yeah "1 theory," you are very ignorant.

  • @BigA1
    @BigA1 2 роки тому +34

    I first heard of von Neumann when related to computer architecture. I was therefore a little surprised when no mention was made of his contribution to computer architecture.

    • @edmundcharles5278
      @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +4

      People are ignorant of his genius. As an aside, when computer programmers like Grace Hopper showed him the newer emerging forms of computer instruction languages being developed, he was very unimpressed because he thought that the underlying assembly language was sufficient enough in his mind to do the computer tasks without adding another layer of language atop that of assembly language. Such was his genius, the rest of us, however, need such advanced computer languages to write code more efficiently. Only in science fiction Star Trek's Mr. Data and Mr. Spock are von Neumann's math skills equaled.

  • @msives
    @msives Рік тому +11

    read very interesting book back in the 80's called "John Von Neumann and Norbert Wiener: From Mathematics to the Technologies of Life and Death" . It went out of print years ago but it detailed a lot of his personal life and character and how it differed from Wiener's.

  • @Kounomura
    @Kounomura Рік тому +9

    As a Hungarian physicist myself too, I highly appreciate the scientific achievements of JVN, Wigner, Szilárd, and Teller as one of the 8,000-meter peaks of human intelligence. But at the same time, we must also see that if the Earth ever becomes uninhabitable due to human activity, then we can thank it our greatest physicists (also for the peaceful mathematicians or other outstanding scientists, ) in the first place. Not because of their performance, - sithence they gave their best -, but because they were so naive that they didn't know what should or shouldn't be handed over to the ruling classes of humanity and what not. They make the same mistake as a father who puts a machine gun in the hands of his son, hoping that he will use it only to deter predators. Human intelligence is as much a curse as a blessing. Today, it is technically possible to wipe out all of humanity within 1 day.

  • @unclejuju12
    @unclejuju12 2 роки тому +19

    My favorite part of this was that he was reading while driving lol. Shows his dedications. Amazing work covering his life, super educational and well put together!

    • @jjvs9
      @jjvs9 Рік тому +1

      Just a precursor to driving whilst texting lol

    • @user-hu3iy9gz5j
      @user-hu3iy9gz5j Рік тому +1

      @@jjvs9 Reject modernity

  • @LydellAaron
    @LydellAaron Рік тому +6

    Thank you for sharing this video.
    10:13. "A point in a complex Hilbert space, which can be infinite dimensional even for a single particle." Nice.

  • @armchairtin-kicker503
    @armchairtin-kicker503 Рік тому +14

    Undoubtedly von Neumann's greatest idea was the Stored-Program Concept, a concept that recognized computer instructions as data. Previously, computers were programmed by rewiring them, a task that was quite tedious and error prone, taking hours if not days to complete.

    • @johneyon5257
      @johneyon5257 Рік тому +1

      what it greater than his other ideas?

  • @objectorienteddata3323
    @objectorienteddata3323 4 роки тому +22

    Was awaiting a video on this man. Excellent work my friend! Never failing to impress.

  • @briancase6180
    @briancase6180 Рік тому +21

    It's kind of ironic that, after his huge contributions to modern computing, we now prefer one type of non-von Neumann processor organization (separate data and instruction memories). But, he's the man(n)! ☺️ Although, Gauss was pretty damn impressive too (he proved the closed-form solution for the sum of the first n integers at age five...).

    • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
      @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Рік тому +1

      Who was greater Euler or Gauss? I'd go Euler, but it's close.
      And what about LaGrange vs Gauss? Lagrange was a freak of nature too.

    • @GordonBrevity
      @GordonBrevity Рік тому

      ​@@feynmanschwingere_mc2270 A shame Galois died so young.

  • @edmundcharles5278
    @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +6

    Can you imagine being a student in his class? Very intimidating, since any question that you asked with likely be followed by a long explanation relating to the correct answer and any associated data relating to the answer.

    • @richardkovacs2006
      @richardkovacs2006 Рік тому +2

      He attended a school that gave 6 or 8 Nobel prize winners. I don't tjink that was an issue. Btw Jancsi was a fun person, the heart of the party, he loved to make people laugh, hr used his immense knowledge to make people laugh. Just look at his broad smile, you can tell it's true.

  • @vanceharvey2789
    @vanceharvey2789 Рік тому +4

    John von Neumann was also one of John Nash's teachers - the famous mathematician, whose biography is entitled 'A Beautiful Mind.

  • @tamass6612
    @tamass6612 4 роки тому +13

    Thanks from Hungary. Köszönet Magyarországról!

  • @gucker
    @gucker 4 роки тому +54

    Wow, I had no idea that von Neumann was such a great mathematician. Thank you for this video!

    • @edmundcharles5278
      @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +4

      None better to date anyway. Imagine being able to do math that quickly and well, he was no mere 'Rain Man' character either, since von Neumann could create mathematical dogma that never previously existed and his genius leapt across varoius fields, not merely mathematics.

    • @Paul-fu5fi
      @Paul-fu5fi 8 місяців тому

      @@edmundcharles5278Would say Euler or Gauss may be just a tad bit higher up the rung of legendary mathematicians.

  • @mystereo9041
    @mystereo9041 3 роки тому +35

    As soon as your ego starts to rise.... Look what he did, then what you are doing. Ego = dropped

    • @aureliusfeynman485
      @aureliusfeynman485 2 місяці тому

      Exactly, I do the same and I can't comprehend how anyone can pompously behave after reading about any of History's great scientists. Look at any current celebrity, an enormous farce really.

  • @johneyon5257
    @johneyon5257 Рік тому +4

    7:10 "difficult time following his explanation - largely cuz he was a speed demon" - the story goes that he would write his proofs on the board and quickly erase them - which his student's called "proof by erasure"

  • @snowflower7668
    @snowflower7668 2 роки тому +13

    I love your videos, you pronounce everything so perfectly. Absolute gem of a channel:D

  • @justanotherguy469
    @justanotherguy469 Рік тому +10

    von Neumann also did the hydrodynamic calculations for the spherical symmetrical compression of the first plutonium bomb dropped on Nagasaki.

  • @felipebrunetta2106
    @felipebrunetta2106 3 роки тому +59

    A human with a mind as deep as Einstein's and as quick as Neumann's would push humanity decades into the future

    • @corvanha1
      @corvanha1 3 роки тому +9

      just that combination is a paradox

    • @asbayt81
      @asbayt81 2 роки тому +1

      @@corvanha1 how?

    • @corvanha1
      @corvanha1 2 роки тому +13

      ​@@asbayt81 Firstly a deep mind is no calculator, but a visionary mind, secondly a deep mind experiences a singularity of being without being separated from unity by divisions or pondering on opposites. And thirdly the outcome of the deep mind's thoughts are allencompassing and unifying. The quick mind- though a sign of genius on its own merits- does not comprehend by unifying but by seperating through extremely intricate equasions and by calculating its effects on a given premise, a particle, an isolated phenomenon, a series of related effects, i.e. by presuming those calculations will eventually be met by the propostion or even a revelation of a third unknown, which cannot be grasped with speed of thinking but only by meditating deeply upon its given presence, its absolute immanence, which is elusive to the mere calculator. Therefore quick minds always depend on the first grasp of understanding without being able to penetrate the underlying higher principle, which is unified and indivisible. Quick minds tend to ponder on the effects rather than the origins, their obsession prevent them to encompass the silence of the unknown, inwhich the absolute solution is embedded, but which cannot be extracted by mere calculations. The quick mind is capable however to step up to a higher principle altogether by transcending its inner motive of conquest through learning to listen to the inner voice in himself, which in the ends gives a clue to the endeavour to attempt a journey to the unknown within himself thereby dissoluting the inner conflict to become closer to his inner being, in which no opposite force exists (in the deepest sence, not in the present reality though), thus putting the equation (the output of calculation) in the service of unity of heart and mind. I do not hope my thoughts are an offence to you. Thank you.

    • @Self-Duality
      @Self-Duality 2 роки тому +2

      @@corvanha1 💯

    • @justanotherguy469
      @justanotherguy469 Рік тому +3

      By the time we get technology, it is already 50 years old. They already have the advanced technology; they just will not release it to the public. The things we have today, Tesla did 100 years ago.
      All in the service of maintaining the status quo of the Petro-dollar.

  • @عليجاسبحسين
    @عليجاسبحسين 3 роки тому +19

    He was a multi-talented marvel.

  • @stevenlord7793
    @stevenlord7793 2 роки тому +8

    Organized and thorough, as it should be, being largely a paraphrased version of the wikipedia page with added illustrations.

    • @dionlindsay2
      @dionlindsay2 Рік тому +1

      Could it be that the wiki article is an expanded version of the video?

  • @marcalvarez4890
    @marcalvarez4890 Рік тому +4

    Great video, thank you. You included info id never read or heard about him.
    Subscribed!

  • @birgirkarl
    @birgirkarl 3 місяці тому

    Fantastic mini-doc. Clear, concise and well spoken manuscript.

  • @edvargas3105
    @edvargas3105 2 роки тому +7

    Excellent work. I enjoyed it very much!!

  • @robertcook792
    @robertcook792 4 місяці тому +1

    It has been said Von Neumann was a major player on the project rainbow, or better known as the Philadelphia Project! It was also said that he didn’t pass away in the 50’s and actually wrote books up through the 70’s and 80’s. Check it out.

  • @Tupacfan0326
    @Tupacfan0326 3 роки тому +87

    If I had 100,000 years I wouldn't even come close to what this guy has achieved in his lifetime.

    • @jaassil
      @jaassil 3 роки тому +1

      100.000 years is a lot… are u dumb?

    • @DAMfoxygrampa
      @DAMfoxygrampa 2 роки тому +3

      ^ The point of his comment is that we are all dumb compared to him

    • @TheCorrectionist1984
      @TheCorrectionist1984 2 роки тому +2

      UA-cam says this comment has 2 replies. I click to see the replies and there are none. Why?

    • @TheCorrectionist1984
      @TheCorrectionist1984 2 роки тому +1

      @Leonhard Euler how many replies do you see here including this one?

    • @drzowadle9723
      @drzowadle9723 2 роки тому +1

      @@TheCorrectionist1984 i see 5

  • @asherwade
    @asherwade 2 роки тому +13

    One of the last true Polymaths.

  • @kdub1242
    @kdub1242 Рік тому +2

    3:32 Hey, my dad worked with Gabor Szego's son, Peter Szego, at Ampex Corporation, I suppose in the 1960s or so, where they were engineers.

  • @semidemiurge
    @semidemiurge 2 роки тому +6

    A new biography is coming out in February. It promises to be quite good.

  • @drbonesshow1
    @drbonesshow1 Рік тому +6

    So von Neumann was bald and always apologizing, which suggests to me that he was a brilliant George Costanza.

  • @jamesbuttery3862
    @jamesbuttery3862 Рік тому +2

    According to Al Bielek, Von Neumann was involved in 'Project Invisibility' aka "The Philadelphia Experiment ' during WW2 which sought to make ships invisible to radar by RF electro magnetism

  • @natepolidoro4565
    @natepolidoro4565 Рік тому +1

    What an illustrious career anybody would be proud of.

  • @richardfredlund8846
    @richardfredlund8846 Рік тому +5

    @moderndaymath I have really enjoyed watching your brief history of various mathematicians. For anyone particularly interested in John von Neumann b.t.w I highly recommend for further viewing: "The Inside Story Of The Math Genius Of The 20th Century" (on youtube) which I just found. Despite it's title, it's almost entirely about John von Neumann and includes some TV footage of the man himself.

  • @edmundcharles5278
    @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +2

    My mere mortal mind is hopelessly spinning just watching this video!

  • @davidneumann9653
    @davidneumann9653 5 місяців тому

    I have been looking for my roots. Thank you for this history lesson.

  • @johanbaltazar2924
    @johanbaltazar2924 3 роки тому +11

    I read details of neumann, his work related to computer and his tragic death. I ask for a gentle man that recommend me a book to read his history in one whole pack. Thanks for the attention

  • @boredCoy
    @boredCoy 2 роки тому +12

    When a someone asked Chuck Norris to calculate his power, Chuck's answer was "Talk to John von Neumann".

  • @antetesija3033
    @antetesija3033 Рік тому +9

    Listening to this video an image of Goethe started to appear in my head.
    Wide range of knoweldge accumulated in such a short period of time is just absurd. This man was a genious. Aha!
    Thats what happens when you follow the path of mastery.
    Learning principles must be applied and constant need for learning must be present.
    You sell your soul for knowledge. But being great mathmatician he concluded "it's logical to be a believer".
    Go back to the video.
    Now, at the end of JVN's life as he's closer to the end, he's reciting lines from Goethe's Faust. Wtf man

  • @bubbercakes528
    @bubbercakes528 3 роки тому +31

    So strange I had never heard of this man. We do not celebrate the geniuses of our world enough! These Hungarians had it on the ball it seems.

    • @Tommy_007
      @Tommy_007 Рік тому +3

      Most people don't appreciate what they don't understand. That is one reason why singers, movie stars, and other entertainers get much more recognition than (scientific) geniuses.

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому

      Hungary's unfortunate 20th century political affiliations have resulted in a kind of 'banishment to the dogbox'. One main outcome of that was that some other European nations and the US have done their best to negate or cover-up the contributions of Hungarian intellectuals. It did not suit THEIR political agendas. Sad.

  • @scottspoerry2761
    @scottspoerry2761 Рік тому

    It was wonderful to hear such extensive background on Johnny Von Neumann. I've read and heard so many bits and pieces about him over the years but had not gotten around to reading a full biography. Thanks for this excellent piece of work. But please, you must correct your use of he word "him" when you should be using the word "he"...I kept cringing on and off all the way through, even though I understand that it is the speaking style in some regions of the U.S. But despite this grammatical error, I still enjoyed your very comprehensive and well written video. Thank you very much and please excuse my quibbling over the grammar.

  • @My-Nickel
    @My-Nickel Рік тому +2

    Excellent video, thank you so very much!

  • @david203
    @david203 Рік тому +4

    I think there are two errors at 11:20. First, the Uncertainty Principle doesn't much benefit from an operator solution (nonabelian operators). It is the same tradeoff between the precision of position and velocity that we also see in the tradeoff between the precision of amplitude and frequency in a Fourier analysis. The reason is that velocity is not independent of position--in fact its definition is the derivative of position, similar to the inverse relationship between amplitude and frequency.
    The second is the claim that quantum mechanics must be nondeterministic--there is no such proof. It is not required in quantum mechanics at all. It is an axiom of the Copenhagen interpretation and is contradicted by the Bohm interpretation, which has an experimental verification of its prediction of deterministic paths.
    The appearance of probabilities in QM experiments is mostly due to the very real random errors in the equipment used, such as random initial positions for the photons generated by a laser.
    Also, nonlocality is not inconsistent with special relativity. Causality in inertial frames of reference holds just fine with nonlocal forces. Of course, human perceptions cannot possibly reveal nonlocality directly, since in most natural cases we cannot perceive pure quantum states or the behavior of individual atoms.

  • @greensombrero3641
    @greensombrero3641 2 роки тому +4

    Bravo. Recently read a biography of JvN (by Norman Macrae).

  • @edmundcharles5278
    @edmundcharles5278 Рік тому +3

    Instead of making a movie on John Forbes Nash (Ala 'A Beautiful Mind' movie), a move on Johnny von Neumann instead should have been made- much more fascinating and prolific!

    • @richardkovacs2006
      @richardkovacs2006 Рік тому

      Neumann has been robbed off of his achievements many times by hollywood. As if they didn't care about the body of work this genius created.

  • @NikolajKuntner
    @NikolajKuntner 4 роки тому +17

    Thanks for the video, I appreciate it.
    What's your personal background? I have occasionally talked about biographies of mathematicians on youtube, e.g. two videos about van der Waerden. In case you don't know, Halmos (which you mentioned as one of the Marsians) has a cute autobiography, as well as a photobook showing hundreds of his photographs from mathematicians at conferences over the decade.

    • @moderndaymath
      @moderndaymath  4 роки тому +19

      I studied mathematics in undergrad and tutored. I studied statistics for my masters and taught + tutored. I also started working in Data Science 3+ years ago.
      There's so many great mathematicians, it seems I'll never stop having content to create! If I end up digging into Halmos later on, I'll def check out that autobiography. Thank you for the note :D

    • @NikolajKuntner
      @NikolajKuntner 4 роки тому +5

      @@moderndaymath Ettore Majorana could be an interesting one.

    • @moderndaymath
      @moderndaymath  4 роки тому +5

      @@NikolajKuntner Oh wow I didn't realize he worked with Fermi! Added him to the backlog :)

  • @colinadevivero
    @colinadevivero Рік тому +3

    Excellent work. The background music was too loud and distracting

  • @telwood15
    @telwood15 Рік тому +4

    Fearing death is real pain.

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Рік тому +4

    Excellent biography. A few minor problems with narration: "him" used instead of "he" at least twice, Goethe pronounced Gold.

  • @FairyWeatherMan
    @FairyWeatherMan Рік тому +2

    The first half of the 20th century had a remarkable concentration of geniuses. Something never seen before.
    Today the number of people (both females and males) involved in science and maths is surely far higher, but I'm wondering if we have less off-scale minds than a century ago.
    Statistically we should have more, but the complexity of what our grandfathers achieved (or contributed to) is so great is probably making harder to young minds to get genius-level results: today the main outcomes are made by teams of people maybe.

    • @gyozop
      @gyozop Рік тому +2

      I had a similar thought. A huge amount of people try to make a living in science, basically producing theories to publish, which is the bases if their titles and income. This creates sensationalism and chaotic narratives.

  • @AsadAf-rs1mm
    @AsadAf-rs1mm Місяць тому

    thanks for the video but it's not only a video for me it's one of the best things and best learning thank you.

  • @ChuPang
    @ChuPang 2 роки тому +7

    Smartest person ever lived. Last polymath ...

  • @cdrundles
    @cdrundles Рік тому +4

    He was truly amazing!

  • @vatsalmaru6941
    @vatsalmaru6941 2 роки тому +5

    brilliant work, props!

  • @the-quintessenz
    @the-quintessenz Рік тому +5

    What a chad! He certainly would have made Hungary great again.

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому +1

      MHGA? Well, in the present situation, Hungary could well do with some improvements to its global image.

  • @alfonsoantonromero932
    @alfonsoantonromero932 2 роки тому +8

    A great video that will create vocations. The Faust who cared about studying everything did not care about mathematics. Goethe compared mathematics to a Frenchman and to that quintessentially French literary rhetoric, which indicates that Goethe did not appreciate the fundamental importance of mathematics, but then people like Leibniz, Euler or Neumann came along and gave birth to a new world.

    • @mikev4621
      @mikev4621 Рік тому +3

      Leibnitz and Euler pre-dated Goethe

  • @drisszyani3497
    @drisszyani3497 3 роки тому +8

    The greatest brain in the 20th century.

  • @sanjj_1
    @sanjj_1 4 роки тому +6

    dude these videos are great !!!!

  • @telwood15
    @telwood15 Рік тому +3

    We hear of famous people like Turin etc but little of guys like Neumann.

  • @himat
    @himat Рік тому

    Economists at War presents a tableau of his works and passions

  • @rishavkarki3593
    @rishavkarki3593 4 роки тому +3

    Never miss it.

  • @anthonycardenas4994
    @anthonycardenas4994 3 роки тому +7

    I wonder if he shared the same opinions on war and violence he had in the prime of his life as he did when actually facing his own mortality. I would wager no.

    • @DoddoJordan
      @DoddoJordan 3 роки тому +7

      He didn't.
      "Of this deathbed conversion, Morgenstern told Heims, "He was of course completely agnostic all his life, and then he suddenly turned Catholic-it doesn't agree with anything whatsoever in his attitude, outlook and thinking when he was healthy." Father Strittmatter recalled that even after his conversion, von Neumann did not receive much peace or comfort from it, as he still remained terrified of death."

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому

      @@DoddoJordan Regardless of one's lifelong attitude toward the existence of Deity, most of us would be terrified of impending death. This is totally understandable. However, it is amazing that so many dying people instinctively turn toward seeking solace from that Deity, regardless of the veracity of its existence.

  • @douglasstrother6584
    @douglasstrother6584 Рік тому +1

    Great job pronouncing Hungarian names!

  • @therealjasonpark
    @therealjasonpark 2 роки тому +3

    What is the music in the background? Rachmaninoff?

  • @rupertpitt4
    @rupertpitt4 Рік тому +2

    Brilliant man..

  • @human8612
    @human8612 7 місяців тому

    A little correction at 6:30 -by the end of 1927 von Neumann had only published 4 mathematics papers not 12, and by 1929 he had published 5, not 32

  • @Marcelo-m6f
    @Marcelo-m6f 2 роки тому +5

    Certain people should live 200 years, other ones shouldn't even born...

    • @arma5166
      @arma5166 Рік тому +1

      I'm a big fan of his works, but if we're being realistic here, he contributed to a lot of deaths aswell. brilliant but flawed in many ways too

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому

      @@arma5166 Not by intent or by design.

  • @balancedactguy
    @balancedactguy 2 роки тому +6

    He makes 99.99999% of the Earth's Population seem dimwitted....including the people we usually call "Smart"!

    • @sdlillystone
      @sdlillystone 2 роки тому +2

      A few more points after decimal place?

    • @balancedactguy
      @balancedactguy 2 роки тому +2

      @@sdlillystone Maybe infinitely more perhaps??

    • @linoserrano476
      @linoserrano476 2 роки тому +4

      Yeah, a big gap between smart and super genius.

    • @balancedactguy
      @balancedactguy 2 роки тому +4

      @@linoserrano476 Yup! His mind was in another Realm!

  • @syrup7894
    @syrup7894 4 роки тому +5

    Amazing

  • @JasonBranford
    @JasonBranford Рік тому +2

    I thoroughly enjoyed this well produced and informative biography. Thank you! BUT ... PLEASE learn the correct usage of the words, "HE" and "HIM"!

  • @agurciajack
    @agurciajack 2 роки тому +10

    How interesting that a man with such powerful mind and such a willingness to inflict death upon others (at the scale of nuclear massacre), was so weak and afraid when confronted by his own inevitable end.

    • @Self-Duality
      @Self-Duality 2 роки тому +3

      One might venture to say that “reality” was teaching him something very profound through his premature demise.

    • @CONTACTLIGHTTOMMY
      @CONTACTLIGHTTOMMY Рік тому

      Ummm. There was a world war in full swing. You can read about it in a book.

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому

      We are all weak, when confronting our Final Exit. Very few people die singing limericks or telling jokes...

  • @RyanGoutbeck
    @RyanGoutbeck 2 роки тому +8

    I just found out about this guy, Im convinced he was the smartest human to ever live

    • @linoserrano476
      @linoserrano476 2 роки тому +3

      Hi Ryan, I think it's either von Neumann or Issac Newton. Newton was also an amazing intellect and advance science tremendously during his lifetime. I recommend a good book named, Never at Rest as a good read about Issac Newton. Very interesting.

    • @RyanGoutbeck
      @RyanGoutbeck 2 роки тому +4

      @@linoserrano476 there is no downplaying what Newton did to mathematics and phisics, we literally teach newtonian physics in highschools, so of course he is one of the candidates for highest intellect to ever live, and I know alot of what Neumann did was expanding on or using these older theories of how the universe works but he too had theories of his own so its just hard to tell different time and different resources, Im sure if newton was around durring the 1900s with all the theories and resources of that age he would have had some mabey more crazy and brilliant theories but well never know. But yeah both are Incredible minds.

    • @justanotherguy469
      @justanotherguy469 Рік тому +4

      We all stand on the shoulders of giants. Albert Einstein, Max Planck, Carl Fredrich Gauss...Homer Simpson.

  • @남이-v8x
    @남이-v8x 2 роки тому +5

    PURE GOD

  • @tsancio
    @tsancio Рік тому +1

    Excellent

  • @Andrew1454
    @Andrew1454 Рік тому +2

    Imagine if he lived into his 80's

  • @kay-christianringgardt8295
    @kay-christianringgardt8295 Рік тому +1

    Great review of a genius’ life 👍

  • @metanoiaganzel1327
    @metanoiaganzel1327 9 місяців тому

    I am here for knowing him well enough to include his sign inside my book which related to biography.

    • @banothsnkfamily1452
      @banothsnkfamily1452 9 місяців тому +1

      Could u pls include two major contributions of Neumann's in both maths and stat... Wanna give my presentation...

  • @JackHDW
    @JackHDW 4 роки тому +12

    Guy has a pog hairline

  • @johnaugsburger6192
    @johnaugsburger6192 Рік тому +1

    Thanks

  • @pappaflammyboi5799
    @pappaflammyboi5799 Рік тому +4

    If I were to rate someone with the highest IQ ever, of all time, it would probably be John von Neumann.

  • @joeybasile545
    @joeybasile545 Рік тому +1

    What is the music in the background

    • @Mango_9934
      @Mango_9934 4 місяці тому

      Künneke's Piano Concerto No. 1.

  • @douglasstrother6584
    @douglasstrother6584 Рік тому +1

    von Neumann, Pauli & Fermi all died relatively young.

  • @alexdelvento1273
    @alexdelvento1273 3 роки тому +8

    why arent these people praised more

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому

      The Hollywood moguls can provide the answers here. Followed by the media.

  • @telwood15
    @telwood15 Рік тому +2

    And there was I thinking I did well in gaining two GCE's .

  • @DrHyperBrain
    @DrHyperBrain 2 роки тому +10

    Mathematicians and Scientists like John Von Neumann are underrated by Societies, Athletes and Singers are overrated

    • @OldPannonian
      @OldPannonian Рік тому

      Exactly. I will never understand the idolization of today's entertainers, who are ephemeral when compared against true geniuses like von Neumann et al.

    • @novelas3536
      @novelas3536 10 місяців тому

      He would be dancing to their songs while asking you why you're so serious and simultaneously blowing you out of the water intellectually.

  • @helloicanseeu2
    @helloicanseeu2 Рік тому

    tyty, great articulation

  • @micotexo
    @micotexo Рік тому +4

    Maybe von Neumann was not totally human. He was a mutant. Maybe part alien part human. Intelligence beyond believe.

    • @chrisruss9861
      @chrisruss9861 Рік тому

      I suspect brilliant people are another species.
      Still I wonder if a bird in flight or a top athlete has as much a sense of being: perhaps a Buddhist stumbling on enlightenment by totally stilling the mind more so.

  • @clydecessna737
    @clydecessna737 Рік тому +2

    Einstein said he was the smartest man he ever met.

  • @CandidDate
    @CandidDate Місяць тому

    As far as quantum mechanics goes, I wonder if they were alive today, how much would they say was derived from reality and separate that from what was just a hunch that appeared to turn out right?

  • @gbernardwandel4174
    @gbernardwandel4174 Рік тому +1

    I just wish these were narration only
    The background music (though lovely in its own right) distracts me from the story

  • @ahdyabdelatif
    @ahdyabdelatif 8 місяців тому

    can you tell me th name of music in background it seems like a piano concerto

  • @ivanpenkov2612
    @ivanpenkov2612 Рік тому

    good video!

  • @starsandnightvision
    @starsandnightvision 10 місяців тому

    Enrico Fermi reportedly told a very smart guy that, although he could calculate 10X faster than him, van Neumann could calculate 10X faster than Fermi himself. Go figure.

  • @petrosthegoober
    @petrosthegoober 2 роки тому +3

    he read BOOKS while DRIVING

    • @michaelbarry8373
      @michaelbarry8373 2 роки тому +1

      and while doing some tensor calculus on the side. WHILE EATING A HOT DOG!