they are tools like everything else, we did not invent cellphones immediately. Progress accumalated and eventually after many advancements in technology by great men we have come down to the cell phone and now we just use it as is. If we spent out time trying to figure out why the phone works, like the proofs in maths then that would be much more difficult than just learning how to use the tool
Definitely makes me feel better when I don't understand their proofs right away. If those guys spent years developing them, why should expect to grasp it in a short hour of study?
Also there’s coming up the ideas in the first place; today the average person is much more learned by comparison, so it’s easier to comprehend the possibility of something like that.
Lebesgue, Godel, Weil, Galois, Jordan, Peano, Kolmogorov Borel, Banach, Liouville, Artin, Klein, Chebyshev, Minkowski, Hausdorff and D’alembert are some mathematicians left out
Yeah a lot of mathematicians were left out. You think this guy could list every mathematician in one attention-keeping video? Just appreciate this for what it is and take a shower.
@@theastuteangler All they did was list out some mathematician's who also deserved a mention. You should take a long hard look at yourself and if you still think you are the "good guy" in this comment section then I suggest you seek therapy.
@@khamisangeth7330 It's used in MRI to change the raw signal from frequency space into image space, that is it makes anatomy sensible to the human eye.
I like how every major civilization had their time to shine for math. It started with the Greeks, then shifted to the Indians. Later the Persians and Muslims took charge until the Chinese began making headway. Then, things would shift into Northern Europe for some time until modern day where Germany and the Americans have their moment. It’s so cool to see everyone contribute in some way from the whole world.
Muslims took charge under the Abbasid, the golden age of islam, then the mongols decided to ruin everything and butcher baghdad/bury throw all the books in the house of wisdom to the river. Mongols very literally set society back hundreds of years by doing that.
1. I did not realize how far back math goes. 2. I did not realize that even men 2600 years ago had a firmer grasp of math than I do today. 3. I find it amazing that these concepts were continued to be built on for thousands of years. Imagine today you make a discovery in math that for the next 2500 years, the most brilliant minds in the world continue to build upon.
I just saw the faces of people whose theories, formulas and methods I have been using for I don't know how long and to realize that they were doing all this back in the 1600s and 1700s is just amazing. In some ways, they are still living through me as I use their ideas. This is inspiring to say the least!😮
I absolutely love Euler. Obviously he was going to be here, but boy was I still happy to see him. His identity, in my opinion, is one of the most amazing displays of mathematics that we have
plus his work, the calculus of variations is probably one of the most usefull math works ever published, which is often dwarfed by his other amazing works which appear to be products of avocation
Shotout to my man Ahmes. He was an ancient Egyptian scribe who lived towards the end of the Fifteenth Dynasty (and of the Second Intermediate Period) and the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty (and of the New Kingdom). He transcribed the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, a work of ancient Egyptian mathematics that dates to approximately 1550 BC; he is the earliest contributor to mathematics whose name is known. He's also the first mathematician to use fractions. Ahmes claimed not to be the writer of the work but rather just the scribe. He claimed the material came from an even older document from around 2000 B.C
For 200 years a portrait was used that turned out to be of the politician Louis Legendre. In 2008 the current portrait was discovered in a book with caricatures of 73 members of the Institut de France.
@@augustin5611 At Legendre's funeral, Poisson commented that Legendre had often expressed the wish that discussions about him would focus on his work, not his person. So it seems likely that Legendre was not interested in having his portrait taken.
I like seeing all the names from different cultures, how different periods of history had their mathematicians coming from different places - first Greece, then India, then Arabia, and so on!
@@霍金本人tf? How could you possibly imagine modern mathematics without the decimal system, the number zero etc etc which all those Indian mathematicians gave. This is ignorant af
I think that the list in incomplete: I couldn't find Galois and Dedekind, Banach, Minkowski. Then for the XX century there would for sure be: Godel, Hall, Weil, Turing, Caccioppoli, Cohen, Serre, Nash, De Giorgi, Langlands, Erdos, Wiles, Perelman, Tao, Green.
Several commentors are pointing out that Galois was omitted from the timeline. For the first half of the 19th century Gauss, Galois, Abel and Cauchy stand out from the rest. Abel and Galois died very young.
Well done, with a few notable exceptions. Not sure if you had a mathematical historian review the presentation before publication, but it's a bit hard to see how you could have missed Evariste Galois (1811-1832), widely regarded as one of the most penetrating mathematicians of all time (for whom Galois Theory is named), as well as Charles Hermite (1822-1901) number theory, quadratic forms, and invariant theory, to name three areas Hermite developed in addition to mentoring Henri Poincare, and Giuseppe Peano (1858-1932), a principal architect of logic and Set Theory.
Evariste Galois (at the front of the line of greats who got shut out). But a terrific list, just the same. Happy to see the Arab and Indian mathematicians!
Interesting how seminal some of the work of those Arabian guys, and quite a few of them, for the era...lots of the Bernoulli family, too. I liked seeing the people behind the names of these crucial works, and the sense of the times when thes ideas came about.
@@NOU-iw3gbIndians* mf "Upper caste brahmin" Do you know that's a shame to our Indian society and all over world we are made fun because of Caste system Before Medival times A person who studies and research and teaches will become brahmin Ofc that's their job Can't expect other 3 varna to pull out some mathematical shit because they have their particular Job to do so There are so many "lower caste" People became brahmin
@@Im.Struggler Haha there's a reason as to why overall average iq of india is 82 and it keeps going down whereas the iq of Indians in usa is much higher. Because majority of Indians in foreign lands are all upper caste whereas the population of upper caste keeps going down in India. All those ceos that Indians keep chirping about are all brahmins. 😁
@@fdc4810 Respectfully, I must disagree with the assertion that the work of Alan Turing and computer science in general is solely "applicational mathematics" and devoid of pure mathematical theories. While it's true that computer science is deeply rooted in practical applications and problem-solving, it also encompasses fundamental mathematical principles and theoretical underpinnings. Alan Turing's contributions, such as the Turing machine and the concept of computability, have had a profound impact on the development of pure mathematical theories. His work led to the exploration of important questions in the foundations of mathematics, logic, and the limits of computation. In fact, Turing's ideas have played a pivotal role in the development of mathematical logic, automata theory, and complexity theory, which are regarded as essential branches of pure mathematics. Computer science isn't just about applying mathematics to real-world problems; it actively contributes to the advancement of mathematical knowledge and theory. While the practical aspects of computer science are undeniable, they coexist with a rich landscape of pure mathematical exploration within the field.
The wild part gotta be the fact that im in my 2nd year of college rn, and Im still catching up on all those years of math. Like if you think about it, all our stuff right now, is just the application of their math.
@@juanjuan5698It's amazing how smart they were. And you realize why they were so smart when you delve deep into their ideas and you see how "simple" they are, how everything fits together and builds a theorem that, of course, you never thought of before. The word genius fully describes them.
@@ac14899 Do you think that people are stupid? 95 percent of these scholars are not Muslims😂😂 and also Muslims would not have any kind of knowledge if it were not for the Indian, Greek, and Persian books.the Islam and the Qur’an contradict Modern science and for your information I am an Arab and a ex Muslim
Im from Brazil and I have respect to India since any mathematicians and physicists like Ramanujan, Bhaskara, Satiendra Bose, and literally the numerical system we use in western contries came from there. I hope that India goes to the same path as China to revive its glory it had on the past and expect other countries from BRICS do the same.
Thanks for your compliment brother Indian civilization is too old Beacuse of constant Islamic invasion after 1200 A.D and European Colonilism India just fell into poverty cycle But we are reviving our glorious history . @@kkkkkk8022
As an astrophysicist I can't even explain how much we owe to so many of them. I had no idea that a lot of them were not only great physicists but also great mathematicians.
Thanks to Galois we have Galois theory, Galois group, Galois field, Galois extension, Galois ring, Galois representation, Galois resolvent, Galois invariant, Galois polynomial, Galois symmetry, Galois closure, Galois geometry, Galois module, Galois descent .... and there is a Galois crater on the moon,
None of those things were developed by Galois but came after. Given the Abel-Ruffini theorem was known already as well as the relationship between the roots of a polynomial and permutations, I don't think it would have been long for what Galois did to have been done by someone else had he not existed (ie. characterizing the solubility of a polynomial equation of a prime degree). The real missing person here is Kummer, who doesn't have as many things named after him as Galois, but made greater contributions to field theory and algebraic number theory.
Srinivas ramanujan had a short life but achieved great heights before his death he is truly a legend what was the number yeah hardy and ramanujan number i forgot what was the no. Though it was a kind of special no. Discovered something great even on his death bed
Anyone else see a pattern here? Also nice to see Weyl here. But what about LEJ Brouwer, Lebesgue, as well as the great non Euclidean mathematicians, Lobachevsky and Bolyai?
They don't count as their contribution to Mathematics is insignificant! As smart as Albert Einstein and Terence Tao are -They are good in math, but I don't see them as greatest to be on this list. No Einstein didn't invent the nuclear bomb, he only was asked by the U.S. to review math equations of Jewish scientist who defected from Germany. After reviewing the math, Einstein agreed that the defectors from Germany had the equation for a 'super bomb'. No doubt Einstein, Tao, Lobachevsky, Bolyai are intelligent, but not in the realm of the greatest mathematicians.
@@kasajizo8963i wouldnt say just french, to me it looks more like the developement in mathematics, and physics for that matter developes in clusters. It started with the greeks, moved to the middle east, to france, with some outliers. Each shift with some diffuse gap between. We are in a kind of a gap now, makes me wonder where the next cluster of great scholars will be
A somewhat random list. Many mathematicians are missing who were more influential than some mentioned here. (Galois, Frobenius, Lebesgue, Kolmogorov, Gödel, Lie, ... just to name a few.) I don't know how Hardy was missed when Ramanujan had been included.
It is amazing how good the portrait of Hasan Muhammad Al-Farisi is. Photo realism in the 13th century. Portrait of a mathematician. I always thought the portrait of Liu Hui is really good too. These guys may have come up with some kind of camera lucida to get their portraits done.
For those who do not know Abu Al-Rayhan Muhammad Ibn Ahmad Al-Biruni, he was not only a great mathematician, but he was a great scholar in almost everything. He was a traveler, philosopher, astronomer, geographer, geologist, mathematician, pharmacist, historian, and translator. He is well-versed in anthropology, chemistry, geodesy, medicine, physics, and many others. Therefore, he is considered the greatest scientist in history due to his comprehensiveness.
@@AJ-nd4nk What distinguishes Al-Biruni is that he is multi-disciplinary. He was an exceptional scholar in almost all the scientific and literary fields that existed at the time. Newton was also an exceptional scholar, almost the most famous scientist in history, but he was distinguished in only one or two fields, unlike Al-Biruni, who presented a lot and in more than one field. An example of some of his achievements, just some of his most notable achievements, is that he accurately determined the longitudes and latitudes of the planet Earth. He made contributions to mathematics by calculating the triangle, the circle, lines of longitude and latitude, the rotation of the Earth, and the difference between the speed of light and the speed of sound. Discuss the question of whether the Earth rotates on its axis or not (preceded by Galileo and Copernicus). He established a mathematical rule for flattening the sphere, in his book “Assimilation in Flattening the Sphere” (i.e. transferring lines and maps from the sphere to a flat surface and vice versa) and thus facilitated the drawing of geographical maps. Al-Biruni's most prominent works: The book “Al-Biruni in investigating whether India has a saying that is acceptable to reason or rejected” is a unique work in scientific literature. In geography, he wrote the book “Correcting the Longitude and Latitude of Dwellings in the World from the Earth,” and “Determining the Ends of Places to Correct Dwelling Distances.” In history, he wrote “Correcting Dates” and “Remaining Antiquities of Past Centuries.” In literature, “Selected Poems and Antiquities.” Explanation of Abu Tammam’s Diwan. He also wrote many books on philosophy. He was also famous for his writings on pharmacy and medicines. Al-Biruni excelled in astronomy. He wrote “The Citation of the Variations of Meteorology,” “The Abbreviation of the Book of Ptolemy al-Qaludhi,” “The Understanding of Possible Aspects in the Making of the Astrolabe,” “The Expression of the Balance for Estimating Times,” and “Al-Masoudi’s Law of Form.” He wrote several books on mathematics, such as “Extracting Heels, Sides, and the Levels of Arithmetic Behind them,” and “The Book of Extracting Strings in a Circle with the Properties of a Curved Line in It.” Al-Biruni was one of the pioneers who said that the Earth has the property of attracting bodies towards its center, and he discussed this in opinions that he published in various books, but his most famous opinions in this regard were contained in his book “The Masoudi Law” (preceding Isaac Newton, the author of the Law of Gravity).
@@chris-kh5lw Rather, it depends on the components on which the list is chosen. It means that if your component is influence, Newton will be first. If your component is revolution, Einstein will be first. My component is pluralism in the fields, because for me, being a great scientist in many fields is something more difficult than being a great scientist in One field, and in the end, these are just estimates for our modern era only because we all know that the most knowledgeable person in history is Adam, peace be upon him. He knew all the names.
@@chris-kh5lw Man, you have completely deviated from the topic I am talking about. Listen, go and research Al-Biruni and his achievements, and then decide for yourself.
I am amazed to see plenty of Indian mathematicians in this list. I've read about Acharya Aryabhatt , Bhaskaracharya and S. Ramanujan but i heard few names for the 1st time for example i had never heard of Apastambh , Brahmagupt and Madhav . And many of the people i know don't know who Bhaskaracharya and Panini were! I am amazed to see how they don't teach about these great men in our schools.
Well researched, notwithstanding minor slip-ups.I am impressed that you featured Brahmagupta who gave the world Algebra first and Bhaskara who gave Calculus prior to Leibnitz and Newton.
@@souptikpal4736 yes, Arabs have translated the Indian mathematical works which they named as Hindisat (Indian knowledge). Arabs used to come India to learn mathematics and astronomy and they too acknowledge it.
I feel that, when you look into the eyes of those who are photographed, you can see that they’ve seen something elusive and rare - it is something that almost no living creature can ever know, see or even understand.
CIE A Level 9702/12/O/N/23, final question contained a Thales of Miletus themed question, which requested us to find the center of a circle, and the coordinates of point B. A Level English 9093/12/O/N/23 also contained a huge text about "Paradise Gardens", which was more or less like an allusion to Thales's philosophy of life, which states "Life is Water." Just what was Cambridge hinting at?
Sometimes I think about all the people in history who were math genius but didn't had the time, money or luck to present them. They could have revolutionised maths but couldn't although they had the talent 😢
Arabs like to claim credit for a things they didn't actually do. Nearly all 'Golden Age' Abassid philosophy is really just warmed over Greek philosophy, being discovered by Arabs for the first time (seized from conquered Byzantine Greek libraries) and applied in a Muslim framework instead of pagan, Jewish, or Christian. Big deal. The advances in medicine they claim were actually done by Persians and Jews. Astronomy, also, as well as regional knowledge that predated them but which they spread. The only honest to God genuine advance I'm sure Arabs invented was actually in cryptography, with al Kindi's breakthrough in using statistics-based cryptanalysis.
Ikr. Us scientists stand on the shoulders of the giants that came before us. I dont care what culture or time a mathematician came from, all we care about is what truth they discovered and what clever tools they used to get there.
The problem is that most of math was invented, explored, popularized, solved, and taught by Europeans. For example, middle easterners get "credit" for algebra, but barely did anything with it. It wasn't until Europeans actually invented algebra that it became useful
@@Akshat699-c3y wrong, the one who made the video just didn't want to continue it for some reason, and people being dumb now a days is not a reason because no matter how stupid people are, there will still be someone who is the least stupid at math, and that person will be the greatest mathematician of his time. All that aside it is proven that the global IQ has been steadily rising in past century or two due to better nutrition and education, people were on average dumber back in the day. AND the number of new inventions per year has not decreased rather it has increased due to our scientific progress in every field of society.
🇮🇳 Altho I know Covering all of them in a single video is really hard but let me just add few more acient and classical Indian Mathematicians (only till 1250s) Baudhayana sutras (fl. c. 900 BCE) Yajnavalkya (700 BCE) Manava (fl. 750-650 BCE) Apastamba Dharmasutra (c. 600 BCE) (mentioned) Pāṇini (c. 520-460 BCE)(mentioned) Kātyāyana (fl. c. 300 BCE) Akṣapada Gautama(c. 600 BCE-200 CE) Bharata Muni (200 BCE-200 CE) Pingala (c. 3rd/2nd century BCE) Bhadrabahu (367 - 298 BCE) Umasvati (c. 200 CE) Yavaneśvara (2nd century) Aryabhata (476-550 CE)(mentioned) Yativrsabha (500-570) Varahamihira (505-587 CE)(mentioned) Yativṛṣabha, (6th-century CE) Virahanka (6th century CE) Brahmagupta (598-670 CE)(mentioned) Bhaskara I (600-680 CE) Shridhara (between 650-850 CE) Lalla (c. 720-790 CE) Virasena (792-853 CE) Govindasvāmi (c. 800 - c. 860 CE) Prithudaka (c. 830 - c. 900CE) Śaṅkaranārāyaṇa, (c. 840 - c. 900 CE) Vaṭeśvara (born 880 CE) Mahavira (9th century CE) Jayadeva 9th century CE Aryabhata II (920 - c. 1000) Vijayanandi (c. 940-1010) Halayudha 10th Century Śrīpati (1019-1066) Abhayadeva Suri (1050 CE) Brahmadeva (1060-1130) Pavuluri Mallana (11th century CE) Hemachandra (1087-1172 CE) Bhaskara II (1114-1185 CE) Someshvara III (1127-1138 CE) Śārṅgadeva (1175-1247) Still there are left like 100s but i think early mathemaricians had more contribution since they built the Basic Concepts Glad People of my country were able to contribute in world, Thank you for reading 🙏
Srinivasa Ramanujan is my inspiration, he used to say that lorddess shri Lakshmi used to sit in his mouth and he used to write equations, that man really have given all the equations in around 1900 which are literally underived after 100 years also but once this comes out by scientists then it's literally gonna help in future technology alot
@1:20 looks like Omar al-Khayyam invented Pascal triangle centuries before Pascal. Btw, there is a little mistake: k in sum does not go from 0 to infinity, but from 0 to v.
And they claim that, they made pyramids and all, I am quite sure they were living mostly in small groups and huts, if they really made pyramid, that would be too surprising.
Not really because the incompleteness thereom doesn’t currently have any application in the real world. It could just turn out that it’s a logical puzzle game that prevents math from perfectly explaining recursive statements, but that doesn’t have any bearing on the real world
on the contrary: gödels results actually have a bigger impact on the real world than most other modern mathematics. gödel did way more than just incompleteness.@@parmenides2576
I was moved by the fact that the life of a great man in history was spent for each of the theorems we have learned easily.
they are tools like everything else, we did not invent cellphones immediately. Progress accumalated and eventually after many advancements in technology by great men we have come down to the cell phone and now we just use it as is. If we spent out time trying to figure out why the phone works, like the proofs in maths then that would be much more difficult than just learning how to use the tool
@@I61void Yeah, but I think learning proof is quite easier than understanding the system of smartphones
Definitely makes me feel better when I don't understand their proofs right away. If those guys spent years developing them, why should expect to grasp it in a short hour of study?
Also there’s coming up the ideas in the first place; today the average person is much more learned by comparison, so it’s easier to comprehend the possibility of something like that.
It's like philosophy my friend
It's criminal to not put Galois and Gödel there, both probably top 10 most influential mathematicians.
id like to add alan turing, life in 21st century would be effing different without him
Evariste was on a different level. Too bad he left this world way too early.
@@guerreromendietaso true
what did they even accomplish to benefit society
@@learnergrowthmindthey contributed to mathematics, and this video is not a list of Nobel Peace Prize winners.
Lebesgue, Godel, Weil, Galois, Jordan, Peano, Kolmogorov Borel, Banach, Liouville, Artin, Klein, Chebyshev, Minkowski, Hausdorff and D’alembert are some mathematicians left out
D'Alembert was mentioned at 3:09
Yeah a lot of mathematicians were left out. You think this guy could list every mathematician in one attention-keeping video? Just appreciate this for what it is and take a shower.
@@theastuteangler All they did was list out some mathematician's who also deserved a mention.
You should take a long hard look at yourself and if you still think you are the "good guy" in this comment section then I suggest you seek therapy.
@@archiebrew8184 I'm not a good guy. My job is to correct people. Pedants, usually.
@@theastuteanglerbruh
My most 'Advanced' University Undergrad Mathematics that i learnt was invented around the 1800s, imagine how much more Math there is to learn.
What was it that you learnt?
@@khamisangeth7330 Fourrier transform i guess
@@lucal2153 what is that in layman's terms? And does it have any practical uses?
@@khamisangeth7330 It's used in MRI to change the raw signal from frequency space into image space, that is it makes anatomy sensible to the human eye.
@@khamisangeth7330your computer does it a lot, anything with signal transmission and anything to do with audio uses it.
I like how every major civilization had their time to shine for math. It started with the Greeks, then shifted to the Indians. Later the Persians and Muslims took charge until the Chinese began making headway. Then, things would shift into Northern Europe for some time until modern day where Germany and the Americans have their moment. It’s so cool to see everyone contribute in some way from the whole world.
I feel hurt that you completely disregarded the massive presence of french mathematicians here.
Muslims took charge under the Abbasid, the golden age of islam, then the mongols decided to ruin everything and butcher baghdad/bury throw all the books in the house of wisdom to the river.
Mongols very literally set society back hundreds of years by doing that.
@@aahhhhhhhhhhhhhtypical butthurt French, the English and Arabs didn't get mentioned.
Relax and stop being butthurt.
@@aahhhhhhhhhhhhh I think he was including it with Northern Europe, which North France is often a part of from a geographic sense.
Africa?
from arithmetic, to geometry, to trigonometry, to calculus. just wow
to sets, to categories, to ...
@@avenue328Final boss: Primes
@@gdmathguy there shall be no final boss as this will continue till the sun keeps shining as maths is infinite
What about algebra
Calculus is like reaching the 20% of knowledge in mathematics
1. I did not realize how far back math goes.
2. I did not realize that even men 2600 years ago had a firmer grasp of math than I do today.
3. I find it amazing that these concepts were continued to be built on for thousands of years. Imagine today you make a discovery in math that for the next 2500 years, the most brilliant minds in the world continue to build upon.
Math does way further back then 2600 years ago lol
Thats humanity for you, as long as we don't destroy ourselves, we shall continue to build on the shoulders of past giants
I just saw the faces of people whose theories, formulas and methods I have been using for I don't know how long and to realize that they were doing all this back in the 1600s and 1700s is just amazing. In some ways, they are still living through me as I use their ideas. This is inspiring to say the least!😮
Ideas never die
@@blacklight8932 certainly
Lies again? God Mode General Manager
come again@@NazriB
I absolutely love Euler. Obviously he was going to be here, but boy was I still happy to see him. His identity, in my opinion, is one of the most amazing displays of mathematics that we have
plus his work, the calculus of variations is probably one of the most usefull math works ever published, which is often dwarfed by his other amazing works which appear to be products of avocation
No__ Shri nivas Ramanujan❤❤❤
I cant believe there was a super saiyan mathematician in 1752… the world is full of surprises
And it's mix of Beethoven
Who r u talking about?
@@Kaneeren legendre
@@oni8337 yeah, that was the joke... look at my pfp
@@Kaneeren oh haha didnt notice
Shotout to my man Ahmes. He was an ancient Egyptian scribe who lived towards the end of the Fifteenth Dynasty (and of the Second Intermediate Period) and the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty (and of the New Kingdom). He transcribed the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, a work of ancient Egyptian mathematics that dates to approximately 1550 BC; he is the earliest contributor to mathematics whose name is known. He's also the first mathematician to use fractions. Ahmes claimed not to be the writer of the work but rather just the scribe. He claimed the material came from an even older document from around 2000 B.C
Legendre's portrait is legendary.
His alter ego is sweety bitch😂
Funny enough, if you take the "r" from Legendre's name, he becomes legendary (légende=legend)
It's a "portrait-charge": something between a genuine portrait and a caricature.
So no one is talking about the elephant in the room? Adrien Legendre portrait? Its absolutely hilarious
Yeah how did that establish 😂
For 200 years a portrait was used that turned out to be of the politician Louis Legendre. In 2008 the current portrait was discovered in a book with caricatures of 73 members of the Institut de France.
Yeah, I saw on wikipedia it is the only portrait of him lol
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrien-Marie_Legendre
Was a famous scientist and mathematician from prestigious schools and rich family but have for only portrait a caricature of himself
@@augustin5611 At Legendre's funeral, Poisson commented that Legendre had often expressed the wish that discussions about him would focus on his work, not his person. So it seems likely that Legendre was not interested in having his portrait taken.
I like seeing all the names from different cultures, how different periods of history had their mathematicians coming from different places - first Greece, then India, then Arabia, and so on!
Uh yeah no
@@nuckingfuts811 bruh wdym no
@@nuckingfuts811 can you repeat that in english?
@@hurricane3518 He's probably high
When greeks came to india they learned many things here , credit goes to Macedonian empire
I was surprised to see the later theories are not necessarily the most complicated ones. Cantor and Poincare for example.
Sadly, you won't find anything not complicated in today's research math.
A little disappointed Galois wasn't here.
@@霍金本人tf? How could you possibly imagine modern mathematics without the decimal system, the number zero etc etc which all those Indian mathematicians gave. This is ignorant af
@@霍金本人 I saw like 1 Indian and it was Ramanujan himself…
@@screaming_soul dont get baited lol
@@霍金本人says the dude in a wheelchair
@@霍金本人blud got frustrated 😌
Among modern mathematicians, you'll have to add Andrew Wiles and Grigori Perelman.
and Terence Tao.
I think that the list in incomplete:
I couldn't find Galois and Dedekind, Banach, Minkowski.
Then for the XX century there would for sure be:
Godel, Hall, Weil, Turing, Caccioppoli, Cohen, Serre, Nash, De Giorgi, Langlands, Erdos, Wiles, Perelman, Tao, Green.
@@vortanoise.2625 I was only mentioning people who're alive right now.
@@vortanoise.2625Lobachevski
And me
3:22 Adrien Marie Legendre looks like Disney villain.
As Japanese, I'm glad to see Takakazu Seki here.
He found significant rules in calculus and circle racio π
'Havard called...'@freaked78
Its crazy that there are so many rules and theorems of mathematics that are built on each other. Only for me to use it on a random high school test
Several commentors are pointing out that Galois was omitted from the timeline. For the first half of the 19th century Gauss, Galois, Abel and Cauchy stand out from the rest. Abel and Galois died very young.
Group theory out here killing people smh
@@fahrenheit2101Mathieu right now:
Truely outstanding video - no other video had this much detail in such a concise way
Well done, with a few notable exceptions. Not sure if you had a mathematical historian review the presentation before publication, but it's a bit hard to see how you could have missed Evariste Galois (1811-1832), widely regarded as one of the most penetrating mathematicians of all time (for whom Galois Theory is named), as well as Charles Hermite (1822-1901) number theory, quadratic forms, and invariant theory, to name three areas Hermite developed in addition to mentoring Henri Poincare, and Giuseppe Peano (1858-1932), a principal architect of logic and Set Theory.
Evariste Galois (at the front of the line of greats who got shut out). But a terrific list, just the same. Happy to see the Arab and Indian mathematicians!
Interesting how seminal some of the work of those Arabian guys, and quite a few of them, for the era...lots of the Bernoulli family, too.
I liked seeing the people behind the names of these crucial works, and the sense of the times when thes ideas came about.
Not Indians. Upper caste brahmins more like. 😉
@@NOU-iw3gbIndians* mf
"Upper caste brahmin"
Do you know that's a shame to our Indian society and all over world we are made fun because of Caste system
Before Medival times
A person who studies and research and teaches will become brahmin
Ofc that's their job
Can't expect other 3 varna to pull out some mathematical shit because they have their particular Job to do so
There are so many "lower caste" People became brahmin
@@NOU-iw3gbThey are Indians who taught musalman how to count
@@Im.Struggler
Haha there's a reason as to why overall average iq of india is 82 and it keeps going down whereas the iq of Indians in usa is much higher. Because majority of Indians in foreign lands are all upper caste whereas the population of upper caste keeps going down in India. All those ceos that Indians keep chirping about are all brahmins. 😁
Galois, Godel, Erdos and Turing absolutely should have been on this list.
@@fdc4810
Respectfully, I must disagree with the assertion that the work of Alan Turing and computer science in general is solely "applicational mathematics" and devoid of pure mathematical theories. While it's true that computer science is deeply rooted in practical applications and problem-solving, it also encompasses fundamental mathematical principles and theoretical underpinnings.
Alan Turing's contributions, such as the Turing machine and the concept of computability, have had a profound impact on the development of pure mathematical theories. His work led to the exploration of important questions in the foundations of mathematics, logic, and the limits of computation. In fact, Turing's ideas have played a pivotal role in the development of mathematical logic, automata theory, and complexity theory, which are regarded as essential branches of pure mathematics.
Computer science isn't just about applying mathematics to real-world problems; it actively contributes to the advancement of mathematical knowledge and theory. While the practical aspects of computer science are undeniable, they coexist with a rich landscape of pure mathematical exploration within the field.
Turing and that other guy with lambda calculus
Isn't Turing more related to Computer Science?
@@alihijazi8583His most famous contributions are in computer science, but he was a brilliant mathematician in general.
@ayyleeuz4892 Turing is a mathematician.
The wild part gotta be the fact that im in my 2nd year of college rn, and Im still catching up on all those years of math.
Like if you think about it, all our stuff right now, is just the application of their math.
They are so ridiculously smart. I am in college too and it’s ridiculous how they came up with these ideas.
"Standing on the shoulders of giants"
@@juanjuan5698It's amazing how smart they were.
And you realize why they were so smart when you delve deep into their ideas and you see how "simple" they are, how everything fits together and builds a theorem that, of course, you never thought of before.
The word genius fully describes them.
This world is nothing without maths
Respect from heart ❤❤ to every genius
From India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
All of them muslim😂
@@ac14899 😐😐😐 watch video carefully brooo
> 70% of tham are non Muslim
And why are you comparing talent with religion???
@@ac14899 Do you think that people are stupid? 95 percent of these scholars are not Muslims😂😂 and also Muslims would not have any kind of knowledge if it were not for the Indian, Greek, and Persian books.the Islam and the Qur’an contradict Modern science and for your information I am an Arab and a ex Muslim
Im from Brazil and I have respect to India since any mathematicians and physicists like Ramanujan, Bhaskara, Satiendra Bose, and literally the numerical system we use in western contries came from there. I hope that India goes to the same path as China to revive its glory it had on the past and expect other countries from BRICS do the same.
Thanks for your compliment brother
Indian civilization is too old
Beacuse of constant Islamic invasion after 1200 A.D and European Colonilism India just fell into poverty cycle
But we are reviving our glorious history .
@@kkkkkk8022
As an astrophysicist I can't even explain how much we owe to so many of them. I had no idea that a lot of them were not only great physicists but also great mathematicians.
let us all never forget Late Sir Ramanujan!
A lot of Russian and Japanese mathematicians have been left out
especially in the field of statistics
ito kolmogorov etc
Wow, all these mathematical theorems were discovered a lot earlier than I thought! And not always by the person they're named after...
I haven’t seen anyone comment about James Clerk Maxwell- he added time dependency to the electrostatic equations.
Yea i think he is more physicist
@@seeprr well newton is heree too
@@sreekar47807 hes kinda in middle bcs of calculus
Thanks to Galois we have Galois theory, Galois group, Galois field, Galois extension, Galois ring, Galois representation, Galois resolvent, Galois invariant, Galois polynomial, Galois symmetry, Galois closure, Galois geometry, Galois module, Galois descent .... and there is a Galois crater on the moon,
None of those things were developed by Galois but came after. Given the Abel-Ruffini theorem was known already as well as the relationship between the roots of a polynomial and permutations, I don't think it would have been long for what Galois did to have been done by someone else had he not existed (ie. characterizing the solubility of a polynomial equation of a prime degree).
The real missing person here is Kummer, who doesn't have as many things named after him as Galois, but made greater contributions to field theory and algebraic number theory.
Srinivasha Ramanujan real goat. Such a great mathematician without any formal education.🎉🎉🎉🎉
Srinivas ramanujan had a short life but achieved great heights before his death he is truly a legend what was the number yeah hardy and ramanujan number i forgot what was the no. Though it was a kind of special no. Discovered something great even on his death bed
Can't believe you missed Gödel!
This is mathematics, newton is basically my entire syllabus of physics , idk how smart he was to research of kinematics and calculus but damn
he also studied optics
How the hell Galois isn't here
Anyone else see a pattern here?
Also nice to see Weyl here. But what about LEJ Brouwer, Lebesgue, as well as the great non Euclidean mathematicians, Lobachevsky and Bolyai?
I see a pattern that math is a male dominant subject
What is the pattren ?
They don't count as their contribution to Mathematics is insignificant! As smart as Albert Einstein and Terence Tao are -They are good in math, but I don't see them as greatest to be on this list. No Einstein didn't invent the nuclear bomb, he only was asked by the U.S. to review math equations of Jewish scientist who defected from Germany. After reviewing the math, Einstein agreed that the defectors from Germany had the equation for a 'super bomb'. No doubt Einstein, Tao, Lobachevsky, Bolyai are intelligent, but not in the realm of the greatest mathematicians.
What pattern? That loads of them are French?
@@kasajizo8963i wouldnt say just french, to me it looks more like the developement in mathematics, and physics for that matter developes in clusters. It started with the greeks, moved to the middle east, to france, with some outliers. Each shift with some diffuse gap between. We are in a kind of a gap now, makes me wonder where the next cluster of great scholars will be
Where are the women? Hypatia of Alexandria, Sophie Germain, Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Sofia Kovalevskaya, Florence Nightingale, Nina Bari, Ada Byron?
Noether was my favourite mathematecian woman
A somewhat random list. Many mathematicians are missing who were more influential than some mentioned here. (Galois, Frobenius, Lebesgue, Kolmogorov, Gödel, Lie, ... just to name a few.) I don't know how Hardy was missed when Ramanujan had been included.
It is amazing how good the portrait of Hasan Muhammad Al-Farisi is. Photo realism in the 13th century. Portrait of a mathematician. I always thought the portrait of Liu Hui is really good too. These guys may have come up with some kind of camera lucida to get their portraits done.
I do not think each of the images is a contemporary portrait.
"Mathematics is the music of reason"
Paul Erdos, Andrew Wiles, Gregori Perelman and Terence Tao can also be added to the list
greece india china arabia italia germany england france usa
thats the order of known mathematicians i noticed
Studying 2500 years old theorems to get the pass mark 50 😅
Imagine getting them all into one room. I wonder what they would all think of eachothers achievements.
For those who do not know Abu Al-Rayhan Muhammad Ibn Ahmad Al-Biruni, he was not only a great mathematician, but he was a great scholar in almost everything. He was a traveler, philosopher, astronomer, geographer, geologist, mathematician, pharmacist, historian, and translator. He is well-versed in anthropology, chemistry, geodesy, medicine, physics, and many others. Therefore, he is considered the greatest scientist in history due to his comprehensiveness.
@@chris-kh5lw
What are you talking about ??
Greatest scientist by who? I think most would agree that Newton was number 1.
@@AJ-nd4nk
What distinguishes Al-Biruni is that he is multi-disciplinary. He was an exceptional scholar in almost all the scientific and literary fields that existed at the time. Newton was also an exceptional scholar, almost the most famous scientist in history, but he was distinguished in only one or two fields, unlike Al-Biruni, who presented a lot and in more than one field. An example of some of his achievements, just some of his most notable achievements, is that he accurately determined the longitudes and latitudes of the planet Earth.
He made contributions to mathematics by calculating the triangle, the circle, lines of longitude and latitude, the rotation of the Earth, and the difference between the speed of light and the speed of sound.
Discuss the question of whether the Earth rotates on its axis or not (preceded by Galileo and Copernicus).
He established a mathematical rule for flattening the sphere, in his book “Assimilation in Flattening the Sphere” (i.e. transferring lines and maps from the sphere to a flat surface and vice versa) and thus facilitated the drawing of geographical maps.
Al-Biruni's most prominent works:
The book “Al-Biruni in investigating whether India has a saying that is acceptable to reason or rejected” is a unique work in scientific literature.
In geography, he wrote the book “Correcting the Longitude and Latitude of Dwellings in the World from the Earth,” and “Determining the Ends of Places to Correct Dwelling Distances.”
In history, he wrote “Correcting Dates” and “Remaining Antiquities of Past Centuries.”
In literature, “Selected Poems and Antiquities.”
Explanation of Abu Tammam’s Diwan. He also wrote many books on philosophy.
He was also famous for his writings on pharmacy and medicines.
Al-Biruni excelled in astronomy. He wrote “The Citation of the Variations of Meteorology,” “The Abbreviation of the Book of Ptolemy al-Qaludhi,” “The Understanding of Possible Aspects in the Making of the Astrolabe,” “The Expression of the Balance for Estimating Times,” and “Al-Masoudi’s Law of Form.”
He wrote several books on mathematics, such as “Extracting Heels, Sides, and the Levels of Arithmetic Behind them,” and “The Book of Extracting Strings in a Circle with the Properties of a Curved Line in It.”
Al-Biruni was one of the pioneers who said that the Earth has the property of attracting bodies towards its center, and he discussed this in opinions that he published in various books, but his most famous opinions in this regard were contained in his book “The Masoudi Law” (preceding Isaac Newton, the author of the Law of Gravity).
@@chris-kh5lw
Rather, it depends on the components on which the list is chosen. It means that if your component is influence, Newton will be first. If your component is revolution, Einstein will be first. My component is pluralism in the fields, because for me, being a great scientist in many fields is something more difficult than being a great scientist in One field, and in the end, these are just estimates for our modern era only because we all know that the most knowledgeable person in history is Adam, peace be upon him. He knew all the names.
@@chris-kh5lw
Man, you have completely deviated from the topic I am talking about. Listen, go and research Al-Biruni and his achievements, and then decide for yourself.
I am amazed to see plenty of Indian mathematicians in this list. I've read about Acharya Aryabhatt , Bhaskaracharya and S. Ramanujan but i heard few names for the 1st time for example i had never heard of Apastambh , Brahmagupt and Madhav . And many of the people i know don't know who Bhaskaracharya and Panini were! I am amazed to see how they don't teach about these great men in our schools.
Guys, i think my name would be there in the next century
Best of luck
For me it's really cool how math was evolving to this time.
I like imagining what would happen if I got a Time Machine and taught everything I knew to the ancient Greeks, how far would mathematics be now
"ok that's very interesting but could you explain to me one more time what gravity is?"
Will they understand us ?
Every time you use a theorem by any of these mathematicians, you summon their spirit down from heaven to guide you with your proofs.
Thank you for all to these great mathematicians 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
You missed so many, for example, Klein and Hausdorff, Schönfinkel, Herbrand, Markov, Kolmogorov and even Russell. And many more.
A lot of great mathematicians are missing here, especially from the later years. But as a logician, Godel and Turing are the biggest omissions for me.
Well researched, notwithstanding minor slip-ups.I am impressed that you featured Brahmagupta who gave the world Algebra first and Bhaskara who gave Calculus prior to Leibnitz and Newton.
Not true ! Al Khawarazmi invented Algebra , Arabic as it sounds , Al jaber الجبر : completion ! We don’t buy that
Bhaskara and his formula
@@riadhrr5892yup guy translated the Indian hindu script convinently 😂😂😂💀
Brahmagupta was not the person who gave the world algebra. Indians love to claim it but it's not true. it can be traced to the ancient babylonians
@@souptikpal4736 yes, Arabs have translated the Indian mathematical works which they named as Hindisat (Indian knowledge). Arabs used to come India to learn mathematics and astronomy and they too acknowledge it.
Where is Lobachevsky and Kolmogorov?
They didn't made anything grounbreaking here
@@truebender ahahahahah, really)?
I believe, that it is a joke)
@@truebenderkolmogorov is just a creator of probability theory, nothing special
Someday my picture will be on that list.
The Music and these great Mathematicians both have huge majesty and royalty.❤❤
As a Statistician, i have to say, that Ronald Fisher should be on here!
And kolmogorov
What kind of picture is of Adrien Marie Legendre 3:22
It was a caricature found along with one of Joseph Fourier
This was the only known portrait for Adrian Marie Legendre
Al khawarizimi, The father of Algebra, All the Mathematicial Equation are in the form of Algebra.. Khawarizmi led the revolution in another steps..
Yes True Brother
I love the way it moves and the aided you add to present it.
I feel that, when you look into the eyes of those who are photographed, you can see that they’ve seen something elusive and rare - it is something that almost no living creature can ever know, see or even understand.
Where is Lobachevsky?
Math: it's so boring
math lore:
Due to these people, thousands of high schoolers are becoming suicidal and depressed
@@Akshat699-c3yIt's the high schoolers problem
No one told them to give up and attempt to commit suicide
@@Akshat699-c3y yeah, it's totally not the politician's fault.
1:04 so it wasn't wilson's theorem after all.....
ya i always read tht in books mentioned as wilsons theorem today i found out the real origin
Legend has it that when Legendre wrote the name of fellow mathematicians in his notes, they would die the next day.
newton is in our age know for physics. but i like he is recognized for his math skills too
Correction at 589. That's actually Dhalsim.
3:16 who tf did my boy Adrien like that? 😂
Bros the grinch
Bros penywise
@@Jack-porter745stop 💀
is it even a bro or a sis ? Or trans
You missed Stefan Banach, one of the greatest mathematicians ever to live
The greatest mathematician bar none, and yet not even half the mathematician that Alfred Tarski was
he is best because he and yoy polish man xD, he not even greatest
Why do I feel like I'm walking through the imperial city
video is a perfect example of why equality is not a thing
CIE A Level 9702/12/O/N/23, final question contained a Thales of Miletus themed question, which requested us to find the center of a circle, and the coordinates of point B.
A Level English 9093/12/O/N/23 also contained a huge text about "Paradise Gardens", which was more or less like an allusion to Thales's philosophy of life, which states "Life is Water."
Just what was Cambridge hinting at?
1:05
Arabs then : 🗿
Arabs now : 🤡
Not just arabs but also persians and turks
you have a rapper in your pfp 🤡🤡plus these guys were not only arabs but of different ethnicities just during the Islamic golden age
As an Arab I agree
@@scarymonster5541 yes but most of them learned mathematics and physics and other Sciences in Baghdad and Damascus.
@@1_Folderall of that changed when the baghdad house of wisdom got burnt down
as Italian, I suggest to add Peano (1858 - 1932).
Are you telling me that man Thales of Miletus is the source of my frustration in goddamn geometry?!
Geometry is good
@@thichchuiantigeometry is disgusting Calculus>trigonometry>algebra > geometry
@@JustCoding. bruh if you bad at something doesn't mean is bad
@@thichchuianti geometry is stupid and Unintresting
@@JustCoding. read my comment agian
Sometimes I think about all the people in history who were math genius but didn't had the time, money or luck to present them. They could have revolutionised maths but couldn't although they had the talent 😢
for those calling the Arab mathematicians Persians, that’s like calling japanese people Chinese.
average smart iq arab in youtube
But a lot of those Islamic Golden Age Mathematicians were in fact Persians.
Arabs like to claim credit for a things they didn't actually do. Nearly all 'Golden Age' Abassid philosophy is really just warmed over Greek philosophy, being discovered by Arabs for the first time (seized from conquered Byzantine Greek libraries) and applied in a Muslim framework instead of pagan, Jewish, or Christian. Big deal.
The advances in medicine they claim were actually done by Persians and Jews. Astronomy, also, as well as regional knowledge that predated them but which they spread.
The only honest to God genuine advance I'm sure Arabs invented was actually in cryptography, with al Kindi's breakthrough in using statistics-based cryptanalysis.
@@clarencejohncabahug5466 exactly u said it yourself most not all
@@clarencejohncabahug5466 but not all of them most of muslims in this video are arabs 😂😂
Lobachevsky is fainted
2:32 the picture of gilles personne's is wrong, that is of langrage's
You are right
BC 505 Pythagoras demonstrates c = sqrt(a²+b²) for any right triangle
BC 369 Theaetetus of Athens demonstrate the specific case of a=1 and b=1.
Its good to know my math understanding is at a 70 BC level
Finally, a REAL lisf of great mathematicians, not just great European Mathematicians.
Ikr. Us scientists stand on the shoulders of the giants that came before us. I dont care what culture or time a mathematician came from, all we care about is what truth they discovered and what clever tools they used to get there.
The problem is that most of math was invented, explored, popularized, solved, and taught by Europeans. For example, middle easterners get "credit" for algebra, but barely did anything with it. It wasn't until Europeans actually invented algebra that it became useful
@@t_c5266nice joke. You clearly aren’t a scientist or mathematician.
@@t_c5266lmao. The quadratic formula and the entirety of trigonometry came from the east.
@@Limabean1125You make fun of him but he is right.
Its crazy to see that math stopped being updated in 1928
The math stopped mathing
Because people nowadays have become too dumb, many people don't know basic questions forget inventing something new
thats literally completely false lmao@@Akshat699-c3y
@@Akshat699-c3y wrong, the one who made the video just didn't want to continue it for some reason, and people being dumb now a days is not a reason because no matter how stupid people are, there will still be someone who is the least stupid at math, and that person will be the greatest mathematician of his time.
All that aside it is proven that the global IQ has been steadily rising in past century or two due to better nutrition and education, people were on average dumber back in the day.
AND the number of new inventions per year has not decreased rather it has increased due to our scientific progress in every field of society.
1:34 who drew that
Very realistic looking
The first mathematician was Bodhyan original inventor of Pythagoras theorem in 850 Bce
You know it's bad when you don't understand anything after 500 BC
This is wonderful and quite well done, but there are many more great mathematicians to add.
🇮🇳 Altho I know Covering all of them in a single video is really hard but let me just add few more acient and classical Indian Mathematicians (only till 1250s)
Baudhayana sutras (fl. c. 900 BCE)
Yajnavalkya (700 BCE)
Manava (fl. 750-650 BCE)
Apastamba Dharmasutra (c. 600 BCE) (mentioned)
Pāṇini (c. 520-460 BCE)(mentioned)
Kātyāyana (fl. c. 300 BCE)
Akṣapada Gautama(c. 600 BCE-200 CE)
Bharata Muni (200 BCE-200 CE)
Pingala (c. 3rd/2nd century BCE)
Bhadrabahu (367 - 298 BCE)
Umasvati (c. 200 CE)
Yavaneśvara (2nd century)
Aryabhata (476-550 CE)(mentioned)
Yativrsabha (500-570)
Varahamihira (505-587 CE)(mentioned)
Yativṛṣabha, (6th-century CE)
Virahanka (6th century CE)
Brahmagupta (598-670 CE)(mentioned)
Bhaskara I (600-680 CE)
Shridhara (between 650-850 CE)
Lalla (c. 720-790 CE)
Virasena (792-853 CE)
Govindasvāmi (c. 800 - c. 860 CE)
Prithudaka (c. 830 - c. 900CE)
Śaṅkaranārāyaṇa, (c. 840 - c. 900 CE)
Vaṭeśvara (born 880 CE)
Mahavira (9th century CE)
Jayadeva 9th century CE
Aryabhata II (920 - c. 1000)
Vijayanandi (c. 940-1010)
Halayudha 10th Century
Śrīpati (1019-1066)
Abhayadeva Suri (1050 CE)
Brahmadeva (1060-1130)
Pavuluri Mallana (11th century CE)
Hemachandra (1087-1172 CE)
Bhaskara II (1114-1185 CE)
Someshvara III (1127-1138 CE)
Śārṅgadeva (1175-1247)
Still there are left like 100s but i think early mathemaricians had more contribution since they built the Basic Concepts
Glad People of my country were able to contribute in world, Thank you for reading 🙏
You are Still lacking early Vedic Mathematicians 🇮🇳
add my professor name too he is a mathmatecian
@@strikeshot35 Sorry Kid, Unfortunately You have to Add it yourself
@@Indo-Aryan9644 Tu pehle 10th pass krle chodu point ye he ki har jagha mathmatecians he par this list is for the influential mathmathecians only
@@strikeshot35 Koi Sirfira hi ye Sochta hoga ki Baudhyāna,Pingalā,Bhakskara || etc Jaise mathematicians Influential nhi hai 😂
Srinivasa Ramanujan is my inspiration, he used to say that lorddess shri Lakshmi used to sit in his mouth and he used to write equations, that man really have given all the equations in around 1900 which are literally underived after 100 years also but once this comes out by scientists then it's literally gonna help in future technology alot
1752 looks like an angry flame.
Can't believe Gaston Julia isn't on the list!
Because he isn't popular
Imagine not including Godel.
why are you a extreme demon
I thought you meant on the demon's list
@1:20 looks like Omar al-Khayyam invented Pascal triangle centuries before Pascal.
Btw, there is a little mistake: k in sum does not go from 0 to infinity, but from 0 to v.
Ok
Question: How many women did you see in this video?
What about black people?
@@averax9875 what about *black woman* ))))
@@averax9875 2 or 3
@@averax9875yea I also noticed, not a single black person, but they claim that they made pyramids, it's impossible to make without advanced math.
Well black people claim everything so .@@BhushanPatil-gz5fk
Adrien Marie Legendre: *[Angry Beethoven face]*
Exactly what i saw
Netflix is soon gonna produce a documentary about a genius black woman mathematician that the patriarchy hid for decades
I hate woke
You're literally describing the film hidden figures. A film about the incredibly invaluable work done by black women at NASA.
You can expect anything idiotic from these racist perverts
And they claim that, they made pyramids and all, I am quite sure they were living mostly in small groups and huts, if they really made pyramid, that would be too surprising.
Godël is the most underrated mathematician of all time .
mathematical logic as a whole field is kind of ignored by community
Not really because the incompleteness thereom doesn’t currently have any application in the real world. It could just turn out that it’s a logical puzzle game that prevents math from perfectly explaining recursive statements, but that doesn’t have any bearing on the real world
@@parmenides2576its pretty far reaching actually. Just because youre not part of a field doesnt mean it cant be influential
on the contrary: gödels results actually have a bigger impact on the real world than most other modern mathematics. gödel did way more than just incompleteness.@@parmenides2576
@@fahrenheit2101Exactly 💯