I clicked and immediately paused the video before reaching the 3sec mark, if you do this then leave you're not giving the video any views, take advantage of this to dislike ragebait without giving the creator satisfaction😉
As a French person myself who had to struggle with French math teachers, I can relate to your comments about French professors and their teaching methods. France is one of the countries with the most Fields Medalists, although French students are really not that good at math (myself included). Perhaps this has something to do with the teaching methodology...
"Partial Differential Equations in Physics" by Arnold Sommerfeld is based on his lectures on Theoretical Physics. It, like other volumes in the series, illustrates the thought-processes of a truly great mind; he was one of the strong bridges between Classical and Quantum Mechanics.
"Applied Complex Variables" by John W. Dettman (Dover Publishers) is a great read ("The Math Sorcerer" has a video on it.): the first part covers the geometry/topology of the complex plane from a Mathematician's perspective, and the second part covers application of complex analysis to differential equations and integral transformations, etc. from a Physicist's perspective. I've used Smith Charts (RF/microwave engineering) for years, but learned from Dettman that the "Smith Chart" is an instance of a Möbius Transformation. For practical reasons, a typical "Math Methods for Physics & Engineering" course introduces the Cauchy-Riemann Conditions, Conformal Mapping, Contour Integrals and applications of the Residue Theorem, but has to omit a lot interesting details. The Schaum's Outline on "Complex Variables" is a great companion book for more problems/solutions and content.
0:27 you cant just drop a banger line like "his assignment was his life's work, and the deadline was tomorrow" and just move on and put galois theory in D
I understand this is meant to be humor, and for that I congratulate you on how bold you were. But these kinds of jokes I don't find particularly pleasurable nor clever, they are just ragebaiting. Anyway, D tier.
@@JoaoGabriel-ne3uc Get a big calculus text (These cover a ton of material which usually doesn't get covered in class.), and a Mathematical Methods text such as "Mathematical Methods in the Physical Sciences" by Mary L. Boas, "Mathematical Methods for Physicists" by George B. Arfken or "Advanced Engineering Mathematics" by Erwin Kreyszig. The Math Methods texts trade formal rigor for breadth of topics, but have extensive bibliographies when you need to get into greater detail and formalism. I used "Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems" (3rd ed.) by Boyce & DiPrima and "Vector Calculus" (2nd Edition) by Marsden & Tromba. Get lots of paper, pencils & erasers, too!
Ok, this is my ranking when it comes to what has been useful to me in my professional life outside the university. This is totally subjective for me, many of my low ranking subjects are really useful for people working in different areas. I work in mathematical finance, by the way. S : Measure Theory, Partial Differential Equations, Probability theory (especially stochastic calculus), numerical analysis A: Calculus, Real analysis, Set theory, Linear Algebra. Differential Equations. B: Functional Analysis, Complex analysis, Differential Geometry, Topology, Calculus of variations. Fourier analysis .... D: The rest. Since I have yet not encountered any real applications of them in my area The S tier subjects are the major subjects which are applicable in real world situations in my job all the time. The A tier are necessary subjects that often are a prerequisite for the S tier subjects. The B tier subjects have a lot of applications, but often i more specialized ones.
I agree with the entire list except 1; I disagree with functional analysis since it’s linear algebra 2.0 And abstract algebra is useful in chemistry, physics and anything using geometries
I did functional analysis during physics study in the 90s and can safely say: its completlely useless. But the stuff on measure theory and banach-tarsky is somehow good to know.
I'm about to anger every nerd in a one kilometer r = d/2 Math is S tier (+-÷×√²) Normal Algebra is A tier (A+B = C) Mathematics is F tier (e, φ, ψ, β, rad, log, quadratics, sin, cos, tan) but π can stay since pi is useful for me.
I hope you get a chance to come back to abstract algebra as you get more practice with theoretical math. I didn't enjoy abstract when I first took the class, but when I came back to the material and self studied, I fell in love.
No mention of Combinatorics, the funnest math field? FAKE MATH ENJOYER DETECTED. Also, >integration bees: touch grass sounds like somebody got filtered, lmao
That's not a first year beard, surely. Still, I'm surprised about the differential topology/geometry split. When first doing them, you'd struggle to notice a difference for a lot of it.
Literalmente me hiciste reir con este video pesima clasificacion pero valio la pena la risa, mas adelante te daras cuenta como se conecta la topologia algebraica con todas las otras ramas, por eso es tan pesado el curso al igual que la geometria algebraica
the buildup lore drop on the insane story of galois theory just for it to be thrown into d tier oh my god
azali what the hell are you doing here
A man of culture I see.
*music is math*
Yoo azali wassup
You baited me HARD putting set theory in the bottom tier
I clicked and immediately paused the video before reaching the 3sec mark, if you do this then leave you're not giving the video any views, take advantage of this to dislike ragebait without giving the creator satisfaction😉
Said it before me 😭
no... i just pressed the video...
Calculus is in the useless pile and you're complaining about set theory??
You've pissed off all the math nerds with this one.
Am a set theorist. For some reason, I wasn't pissed off with this one.
Putting Galois theory in D is just ignorance
Fr!
not recognizing sarcasm is equally as ignorant
@@hgjgjfjfmd Sorry but freedom of speech doesn't apply to Galois
"Mathematics is difficult, even for mathematicians." ~ Reinhold Böhme, quoted in Appendix A of "Vector Calculus" (2nd Edition) by Marsden & Tromba.
As a French person myself who had to struggle with French math teachers, I can relate to your comments about French professors and their teaching methods. France is one of the countries with the most Fields Medalists, although French students are really not that good at math (myself included). Perhaps this has something to do with the teaching methodology...
Imagine being Galois looking down at his life work being D tier, only to watch a picture of a hippo being S tier
"Partial Differential Equations in Physics" by Arnold Sommerfeld is based on his lectures on Theoretical Physics. It, like other volumes in the series, illustrates the thought-processes of a truly great mind; he was one of the strong bridges between Classical and Quantum Mechanics.
“Omg touch grass D” I almost died 💀 it’s actually useful bro 💀
Edit: he’s studying pure math hide the wife
I was about to say, calculus is the most useful 😂😂😂
hide the wife is crazy 💀
Top tier comment ✅
I agree with you on that going outside is dangerous but useful.
Watching this is my break from studying math
functional analysis in C is crazy work
who does functional analysis in C? like programmed language?
@@ErcoleBellucci no he means in C tier
Why are you doing a ranking when you have no proper exposure to any of the topics except calculus?
Hippopotomus
bro didnt watch to the end of the video
@@PotatoBag5823either that or its a joke
@TheUnqualifiedTutor
Angry mathematician tend to be scary lol.
@TheUnqualifiedTutorHOW can I be a math genius like.Ramanujan or.apis or I swear I will.fucking kill myself PLEASE..there must be a way dammit
.
I hated abstract algebra at first when it was tought to me. But then, when I started to dig a little by myself, I've found it super fun.
Can you recommend some resources for it that made it fun for you?
"Applied Complex Variables" by John W. Dettman (Dover Publishers) is a great read ("The Math Sorcerer" has a video on it.): the first part covers the geometry/topology of the complex plane from a Mathematician's perspective, and the second part covers application of complex analysis to differential equations and integral transformations, etc. from a Physicist's perspective. I've used Smith Charts (RF/microwave engineering) for years, but learned from Dettman that the "Smith Chart" is an instance of a Möbius Transformation.
For practical reasons, a typical "Math Methods for Physics & Engineering" course introduces the Cauchy-Riemann Conditions, Conformal Mapping, Contour Integrals and applications of the Residue Theorem, but has to omit a lot interesting details.
The Schaum's Outline on "Complex Variables" is a great companion book for more problems/solutions and content.
Im not sure whats more hilarious, this video or the people commenting how mad they are lol
Complex Analysis is absolutely S-Tier. Cauchy’s Integral Formula is lovely.
@0:52 killing it straight from the get go! I'm dying hahahahahha
This brother has not heard of category theory
"it's statistics and probability" two very different things
Maybe you shouldnt rank all of these subjects that you havent studied yet. It just feels weird ranking stuff you havent tried yet
Galois theory is pretty useful for computer science, finite rings are used in compression and cryptographic algorithms.
Well guess what buddy, I'm a SECOND year university maths student!!! (I can't even remember the last time I saw a woman)
I feel like complex analysis should get an S tier, but A tier is pretty good 😌
No, i am getting angry at this rating. Galois and differential topology in D tier?
the little d's comment was so funny
0:04 Evariste, not Eloise!
0:52 What a bizarre thing to base your ranking on! "Symbols and stuff".
Evariste Galois was a legend
D tier
I love this channel so much
0:27 you cant just drop a banger line like "his assignment was his life's work, and the deadline was tomorrow" and just move on and put galois theory in D
differential geometry is beautiful
I understand this is meant to be humor, and for that I congratulate you on how bold you were. But these kinds of jokes I don't find particularly pleasurable nor clever, they are just ragebaiting.
Anyway, D tier.
"Infinite Powers: How Calculus Reveals the Secrets of the Universe" by Steven Strogatz is a great read.
I would appreciate if you made a single comment with all (or most) of your math book recommendations :)
@@JoaoGabriel-ne3uc Get a big calculus text (These cover a ton of material which usually doesn't get covered in class.), and a Mathematical Methods text such as "Mathematical Methods in the Physical Sciences" by Mary L. Boas, "Mathematical Methods for Physicists" by George B. Arfken or "Advanced Engineering Mathematics" by Erwin Kreyszig. The Math Methods texts trade formal rigor for breadth of topics, but have extensive bibliographies when you need to get into greater detail and formalism.
I used "Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems" (3rd ed.) by Boyce & DiPrima and "Vector Calculus" (2nd Edition) by Marsden & Tromba.
Get lots of paper, pencils & erasers, too!
please recreate this when you're in your 3rd year🤣, I promise you (coming from a current 3rd year) this list will look completely different
Looking forward to you being confronted with Galois representations.
😎
When I'm in a shitty opinion competition and this mf is my opponent.
ima touch u
maliciously
Now rank every episode of skibidi toilet (very related)
Ok, this is my ranking when it comes to what has been useful to me in my professional life outside the university. This is totally subjective for me, many of my low ranking subjects are really useful for people working in different areas. I work in mathematical finance, by the way.
S : Measure Theory, Partial Differential Equations, Probability theory (especially stochastic calculus), numerical analysis
A: Calculus, Real analysis, Set theory, Linear Algebra. Differential Equations.
B: Functional Analysis, Complex analysis, Differential Geometry, Topology, Calculus of variations. Fourier analysis
....
D: The rest. Since I have yet not encountered any real applications of them in my area
The S tier subjects are the major subjects which are applicable in real world situations in my job all the time.
The A tier are necessary subjects that often are a prerequisite for the S tier subjects.
The B tier subjects have a lot of applications, but often i more specialized ones.
Lol, this is like just putting things in random categories without any real motivation.
Just got done using galois theory in AES implementations so I just had to see what you were on about with the bait.
The comments are a gold mine for people the solidify their understanding in math.
Your channel was amazing...🎉
This is offensive, you haven't included hyperreal analysis.
I agree with the entire list except 1;
I disagree with functional analysis since it’s linear algebra 2.0
And abstract algebra is useful in chemistry, physics and anything using geometries
Terror dreams are made of such math stream subject names lol i
putting algebra low is fine, but functional analysis has to be at least A
I did functional analysis during physics study in the 90s and can safely say: its completlely useless. But the stuff on measure theory and banach-tarsky is somehow good to know.
If you put partial differentiation in b tier because you enjoy it, you and i have a score to settle
nah abstract algebra in D is crazy dawg
"just started elementary abstract algebra" but u have an opinion on galois theory?
How would you compare geometric algebra vs algebraic geometry?
Probability needs to be A tier
thumbnail is certified ragebait (it worked)
I'm about to anger every nerd in a one kilometer r = d/2
Math is S tier (+-÷×√²)
Normal Algebra is A tier (A+B = C)
Mathematics is F tier (e, φ, ψ, β, rad, log, quadratics, sin, cos, tan) but π can stay since pi is useful for me.
What is this supposed to mean?
@@MarceloKatayama ranked on day to day use and usefulness.
@@GreatestRiceMuncher Oh, I see. I just did not understand the distinction between "Math" and "Mathematics". Seems kind of arbitrary.
Day 1 of asking you to solve a JEE Advanced Paper
What tier do the 12 timestables go into
S tier, straight away. I used to grind out times table rockstars relentlessly in year 1
lol he knows more than 95% of people yes, but yet doesnt know more than 95% of what a typical mathematician knows
got baited so hard seeing calculus down there 😭
Such a shame putting Galois theory into D tier :(
Weird to make a video about topics you haven't covered yet. And last time I saw a woman was in high school like 15 years ago
I was waiting for Lie algebra and theory of categories
My bro, as a 10th grade calc 2 kid, I need your level of confidence. Maybe if I pass lmao :)
I hope you get a chance to come back to abstract algebra as you get more practice with theoretical math. I didn't enjoy abstract when I first took the class, but when I came back to the material and self studied, I fell in love.
No mention of Combinatorics, the funnest math field? FAKE MATH ENJOYER DETECTED.
Also,
>integration bees: touch grass
sounds like somebody got filtered, lmao
Why are you ranking so many topics you never learned and know pretty much nothing about?
its a joke
The emphasis here is on, wait for it: Unqualified! 🤮
The last time I seen a woman this evening mate
What about the others at the end?
funny nerd? impossible
nice vid
Ranking based on what?
I'm sorry but algebraic number theory deserves to be in A tier, at least
That's not a first year beard, surely. Still, I'm surprised about the differential topology/geometry split. When first doing them, you'd struggle to notice a difference for a lot of it.
tell me you dont know a lot of math without saying it
What do you think about interestelar?
you are not qualified to do this!! if u havent studied ANYTHING related to most of the fields, why even make this. views i guess but bruhhhhh
im watching a video on a guys opinion on mathematical fields that he doesnt know anything about.... goddamn i feel stupid right now. bye.
you lost me at Galois theory
Linear algebra S tier
thats what you call a deadline lol
bro put measure theory and Fourier in D
What's erodic theory?
What uni do u go to ?
functional analysis is objectively SSS tier. are you even trying man
7:04 mindset
Literalmente me hiciste reir con este video pesima clasificacion pero valio la pena la risa, mas adelante te daras cuenta como se conecta la topologia algebraica con todas las otras ramas, por eso es tan pesado el curso al igual que la geometria algebraica
There are too many Frenchmen doing math
I too happen to be very bad at number theory.
Part 2 plz
i dont agree poersonawally
Linear algebra is the best math subject
googology - S tier
i have now -20 IQ just watching this !
I love you so much
Bro anyone who studies math at grad level or above will be so annoyed with this video lol. The lack of knowledge
First year 😅
Bro gonna delete this video in a year
Aint no way functional analysis is that low
Honey wake up funny guy dropped a new video!!
You did only ranke 50%, poor Job
the rest is left as an excercise for the viewer
Wtf the lore
y'all need to touch grass
before i touch u myslef
So the thumbnail is just a suggestion? Disliked + reported + do not recommend from this creator