WHY RAMANUJAN WAS A SUPER GENIUS (K.A. 41)

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  • Опубліковано 19 тра 2024
  • SRINIVASA RAMANUJAN,...THE WORLDS GREATEST MATHMATICIAN OF ALL TIME
    Discover the incredible life and achievements of Srinivasa Ramanujan, the greatest mathematician in history. Born in 1887 in Erode, India, Ramanujan made groundbreaking contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions. Despite little formal training, his intuitive grasp of complex mathematical concepts astonished established mathematicians.
    In this video, we explore Ramanujan's early life, his journey to Cambridge University, and his remarkable collaboration with G.H. Hardy. Learn about the famous Ramanujan-Hardy number 1729 and the profound impact of his work, which continues to inspire mathematicians today.
    Join us as we delve into the mysterious notebooks filled with thousands of theorems that Ramanujan compiled. Uncover the legacy of this mathematical genius whose insights into partition functions and mock theta functions have paved the way for modern mathematical research.
    Whether you're a math enthusiast or just curious about this legendary figure, our video offers a comprehensive look at why Srinivasa Ramanujan is celebrated as one of the greatest minds in the history of mathematics.
    Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more fascinating videos on the world's most brilliant mathematicians and their contributions to science and history.
    #SrinivasaRamanujan #Mathematics #NumberTheory #Genius #History #Mathematicians #InfiniteSeries #PartitionFunctions #MockThetaFunctions
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 47

  • @walterrutherford8321
    @walterrutherford8321 14 днів тому +11

    They were fine talking about Ramanujan, but then it went off into a metaphysical supernatural direction, which has nothing to do with many of the world’s greatest minds. To say that Steve Jobs envisioned the iPhone in a daydream doesn’t mean he was tapped into a supernatural realm. That’s called imagination and we all have done it. And while Ramanujan had a freakish mind for math, so did people like Tesla, Euler, Gauss, Erdös, and Archimedes who also left volumes for future generations to decipher.

    • @TheDavidlloydjones
      @TheDavidlloydjones 9 днів тому +3

      Walter,
      Well said.
      I subscribed when I heard the guy's description of the channel's aims -- and unsubscribed seven minutes in, when he wandered off into spiritualistic nonsense.

    • @cxa24
      @cxa24 8 днів тому

      Kind of like the people who post these videos, I'll just poke it with a fucking stick until a response is achieved

  • @hera-nf8mz
    @hera-nf8mz 2 дні тому +1

    he had no formal education and yet he produced his work, is that not a miracle?

  • @hakandemirtas216
    @hakandemirtas216 4 дні тому +2

    The greatest mathematician the sun has ever seen, along with Euler. Unsurpassed aptitude, unbeatable cerebral capacity, unmatched processing speed, unparalleled mathematical depth... Ramanujan was the upper boundary of human comprehension. Innate, immutable talent... He is the definition of unearthly intelligence.

  • @jimwinchester339
    @jimwinchester339 3 дні тому +1

    Surprising that Leonard Euler was not even mentioned.

    • @bookashkin
      @bookashkin 2 дні тому

      Euler's first name is Leonhard (probably because he solved hard problems) :)

  • @timirbiswas3834
    @timirbiswas3834 24 дні тому +12

    Ramanujan was a perfect mad man. We define a PERFECT mad man as the person who can drive other people mad while he remains the same and sane. When you say I have added toooooo many positive whole numbers and got a negative answer people will say ...OK we understood where you belong....but when Ramanujan says I have added all the positive integers and got a NEGETIVE FRACTION people say yeah you got it right. Definitely Ramanujan got those people mad !!!

    • @Kweesh
      @Kweesh 8 днів тому +2

      I made the mistake of reading your entire comment

    • @grewknowledge8750
      @grewknowledge8750 4 дні тому

      wasted 25 precious seconds by reading your dumb comment

    • @berdjidjelloul5046
      @berdjidjelloul5046 2 дні тому

      Who are you? you are one of the special people. you have a special function in your mind that you can think in this way i think you are genius i'm saying the truth i'm not joking.

  • @subramanyakarthik5843
    @subramanyakarthik5843 5 днів тому +1

    Anyone can be genius just be brilliant in maths😎😎
    Ramanujan is normal indian mathematician who studied maths at extreme levels took it to research method

  • @mjnyc8655
    @mjnyc8655 4 дні тому

    How can I get some of this akashic stuff?

  • @Vishal_Singh0
    @Vishal_Singh0 27 днів тому +3

    Sir Ramanujan 😊👍

  • @John-pp2jr
    @John-pp2jr 3 дні тому +1

    5:28 Steve Jobs ?

  • @bookashkin
    @bookashkin 6 днів тому +3

    2:28 Huh? Pi is transcendental.

    • @ukornel77
      @ukornel77 2 дні тому +1

      This came from the first element from the infinite series. They should have written approximately equal instead of equal. Actually, the error of this approximation is a mere of ~2x10E-8, what is insane.

    • @bookashkin
      @bookashkin 2 дні тому

      @@ukornel77 Using wxmaxima float(9801/1103/sqrt(8)-%pi); I get absolute error about 7.64235115191525*10^-8 ... the series is indeed mind blowing.

  • @goldnutter412
    @goldnutter412 3 дні тому

    Complex life -> complex wife

  • @Mike-wc1ns
    @Mike-wc1ns 24 дні тому +1

    Imagine what the world would be like if everyone had something as significant to offer? Amazing.

    • @walterpoelzing9765
      @walterpoelzing9765 6 днів тому

      Everyone does. One just has to find one's place in the universe where what one is can flourish.

  • @krishna8976
    @krishna8976 22 дні тому +2

    The narrator sounds like david atenenberough

  • @dhirendrasingh764
    @dhirendrasingh764 5 днів тому

    Most of mathematics belongs to europe , few comparable to G.w. leibnez, Gauss and for background kant , R. Descartes

  • @JxH
    @JxH 7 днів тому

    1729.

  • @michaelblankenau6598
    @michaelblankenau6598 11 днів тому +1

    I’m not even able to calculate the volume of my dunce cap .

    • @JxH
      @JxH 7 днів тому

      My dunce cap has the shape of Gabriel's horn (also called Torricelli's trumpet).
      My cap can hold 1.0L of paint (finite volume), but would require infinite paint to cover the inner surface (infinite surface area).
      A very strange hat it is.

    • @hera-nf8mz
      @hera-nf8mz 2 дні тому

      @@JxH Are you sure? an equation would prove that!

    • @JxH
      @JxH 2 дні тому

      @@hera-nf8mz
      Okay.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%27s_horn
      🙂

  • @MadScientyst
    @MadScientyst 10 днів тому

    Nice video, but whilst Ramanujan is definitely a top-tiered (pure) mathematician, IMO...a comparison with other 'applied' scientists such as Newton, Einstein & Tesla is a bit off balance.
    Make no mistake that he was a rare type of genius, but I'm not sure how much of his legacy has applicability to say modern Physics, Engineering & even Chemistry (Newton's 2nd specialty)....only time will tell....🤔

  • @calicoesblue4703
    @calicoesblue4703 8 днів тому

    Nice 😎👍💯💯💯

  • @xtiancortez467
    @xtiancortez467 4 дні тому

    Ramgoolam ti maryonet angle aret fer boufon

  • @NoferTrunions
    @NoferTrunions 2 дні тому

    Not even half way through couldn't deal with the stupid music - but if you insist (cannot imagine why you want to dilute your fascinating presentation with hypnotic music) why not try some Satie which would be good music - music that was designed NOT to be listened too

  • @jeroensoenen4054
    @jeroensoenen4054 24 дні тому +4

    But not beyond Euler.

    • @timirbiswas3834
      @timirbiswas3834 24 дні тому +1

      It is very tough to judge among these big guns. Everyone has worked on their chosen or loved branches of Math. I am a Math teacher and I love plane geometry the most. I can solve very tough questions on geometry and have a huge urge to solve an unknown problem....but I don't feel the same in algebra, number theory etc...as I can't visualize them.

    • @HUNTER-qn5ff
      @HUNTER-qn5ff 22 дні тому

      ​@@timirbiswas3834so what you meant is everyone has a good at side

    • @premaseem8914
      @premaseem8914 19 днів тому

      ​@@HUNTER-qn5ff✓

    • @amitkumarsharma9511
      @amitkumarsharma9511 6 днів тому

      What Euler did in his 20s. Ramanujan died at age of 32 and had no formal mathematical education.

    • @walterpoelzing9765
      @walterpoelzing9765 6 днів тому

      @@amitkumarsharma9511 Good point. Euler had a much faster track to the ideas that would show his greatness. Still Ramanujin was able to conqueror and expand number theory in a way..... that these geniuses would nod their head to an equal. Definitely on the same footing.

  • @premaseem8914
    @premaseem8914 19 днів тому

    Subscribe having no better Eng knowledge 😂

  • @SurprisedDivingBoard-vu9rz
    @SurprisedDivingBoard-vu9rz 23 дні тому

    Because he drank only milk and blood. Okay sometimes curd.

    • @walterpoelzing9765
      @walterpoelzing9765 6 днів тому +1

      Well I will say this comment is someone ignorant. Ramanujan was a vegetarian and a healthy body most certainly allows for a HEALTHY MIND.

  • @FloydMaxwell
    @FloydMaxwell 7 днів тому

    Certainly similar to Tesla. Whereas Newton was just a very very very hard worker, with a singular focus his entire life. And Einstein is just way overrated -- others (Poincare, etc) came out with relativity before him, and he needed help from David Hilbert (& others), and....relativity is a home in the clouds -- nothing new has been built with it.

    • @tomrose2086
      @tomrose2086 3 дні тому

      Poincare, Lorenz, Minkowski, Lorenz and others contributed to the development of the theory of Special Relativity, but none of them figured out the whole picture. That was left to Einstein
      Special relativity
      Proof of existence of atoms
      Photoelectric effect (leading to Quantum Mechanics)
      ... all in the same year
      followed by General Relativity some years later
      Yes, what an overrated underachiever he was.
      I note you are happily using modern computer and communications technology which would not exist without QM and Relativity theories
      And Newton, that old drudge. "Just" a hard worker. Anyone could have done what he did. NOT!
      Heck, most people can't manage an hour of hard intellectual work, never mind a lifetime.