@4:44 When you're explaining Gauss's groundbreaking math but can't pick the right compass...TOTAL brain fart Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and get 20% off your annual premium subscription
Euler, and GH Hardy. Georgie greens biography makes for a fantastic story the genius baker who revolutionised our understanding of the electromagnetic field. I also believe he was the oldest wrangler as well
Now its all about memorization for general public So memorize it: n(n+1)/2 sum of n natural no. n(2n+1)(n+1)/6 sum of square of n natural no. Memorization = general public.
@@kartikgkalita It is sad that he died at such a young age. Perhaps he would've become one of the greatest mathematicians in history if he lived a full life, but it's simply incorrect to place him amongst the greatest mathematicians in history.
Abel and Galois (and Ramanujan (already mentioned)). All three with interesting biographies, though they all three died very young the contributed more than a lifetime of brilliance.
I would add Newton and Riemann to the list as well. Come to think of it it's kind of unfair to make such a list, for many reasons. What is harder? Standing on the shoulders of titans and using the knowledge they created to try and solve more and more complex problems that remain unsolved or be an early pioneer? Euler was undoubtedly a genius but he tried to prove Fermat's theorem and failed. (He proved it for n=3 but couldn't for n>3). Andrew Wiles, a contemporary of ours, proved it. Does that mean Wiles>Euler? I don't think it does, I would bet Wiles himself would dismiss the comparison as ridiculous. He had mathematical tools at his disposal Euler could never have dreamed of. But technically he did succeed where Euler failed, so what do we do with that? The answer is nothing. We don't make top 10's mathematics is not a pop music chart.
I like how he says, "if anyone would think about math as deeply as I, they would discover these things too" but he told his son who clearly wanted to get right into math, he doesn't have the aptitude 🤣
Agreed, sadly he was closer to his father than he was to the duke in this regard. And to picture what he said to Johan upon the discovery of non-Euclidian Geometry as praise is kind of ridiculously naive. He seemed jealous and regretful of not have the courage to make his discoveries public. But, you know, everybody has flaws, and he seemed to be in a bad moment of his life... maybe when he spoken about handwork he repented of his pride, who knows?...
One of the most amazing contributions of Gauss to science was non-Euclidean geometry. Non-Euclidean geometry describes spaces with curvature, like the surface of a sphere. Gauss had the insight that space may be curved, and even conducted experiments to find out. Einstein much later used non-Euclidean geometry for his theory of General Relativity, which states that gravity is caused by the curvature of space-time. Gauss's intuition that space may be curved was pure genius!
you haven't learned enough math then. There are other big names like Euler, Cauchy, Fourier, Legendre, Lagrange, Riemann, Borel, Lebesgue, Poincare, etc. Math is not built by only a few.
@@cuervo-u6ris the guy supposed to know all of that or what? Cuz as a math major myself i gotta admit math is just so spread out now that i don't think anyone should know everyone. I mainly focused on operation research and i gotta admit the only guy i remember is danzig and that's it.
@@cuervo-u6r of course and i can name even more mathematicians that have contributed to my learning starting with euclid, i was just generalizing , relax guys edit: I probably should have said Pythagoras since he came about 200 years before euclid and i could keep naming mathematicians from them until Galois and even further.
With all due respect, the title of Greatest Ever Mathematician thus far should go to Leonhard Euler. Euler worked in almost all areas of mathematics, including geometry, infinitesimal calculus, trigonometry, algebra, and number theory. Besides, he made significant contributions to Physics as well. In many ways, Euler was to Mathematics what Newton was to Mathematics. Gauss was the prince, while Euler was the benevolent Emperor in the Kingdom of Mathematics !
The greatest ever is just a title which is different for person to person , it's very hard to find the objective answer to this , it's like asking who is the most prettiest person who ever lived . There are few great contender to this title and you can argue for any of them . But this argument is kind of pointless because you it have no use and neither can you ever verify your answer to be correct. For example if I ask you which religion is best / which god is best . There is no definite answer to this questions. So you can think who is the greatest mathematicians as same question as this .
@@gaurabdahal2 " There are few great contender to this title and you can argue for any of them ." Uhh no. There are only two so far Euler & Gauss. And Euler comes out on the top because his contribution to mathematics. The sheer number of both quantity & quality work Euler has done in Mathematics is mind boggling. A fun fact: In one of the Mathematicians polls for the most beautiful math equation, 3 out of top 5 were Euler's.
"Cindy Pom is an amazing narrator with a voice and accent that's so clear and easy to understand. The storytelling is captivating, and the editing is absolutely top-notch-it keeps viewers engaged throughout! I love every bit of the content you create. Sending lots of love and support from Pakistan! 💖"
She slurs her words sometimes and it sounds like something completely different. It's apparent in this video at the beginning when she talks about the potatoes and Carl counting them.
Having done a LOT of math in the past few decades, Gauss surely stands out as one of the greatest. But I must say, in my opinion, looking back, Euler just takes the cake - clearly. To me he body of work is just absolutely mind-blowing. His reach and variety is just almost infinite - and he never stopped. During a time when people died young, he was still pumping out quality work into his 70s. If I have to pick a favourite of their work, to me Gauss is easy, the Theorema Egregium is really remarkable. When it comes to Euler, I could not even know where to start. Probably 100 times I just sat there and was in awe how he managed to dream these things up. It just feels like they may have had the same intellect, but Eulers imagination stretched quite a bit farther. There was just no limit to where he could go. He lives in a league of his own - there will never be another like him. There is a reason where there are like a million constants, identities, formulas, equations etc named after him. He was the one and only god-king. Just my thoughts.
"I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops." If it wasn't for the Duke, Gauss would have been lost. And like him millions. It's time to move towards a post-capitalist society.
@@jaygin6518a collectivist ideology/economic system or socially orientated system, one which prioritises the development of a society at all levels and not shareholder profits
Gauss's life story is impressive, but your narration and voice brought it to a new dimension, like a great actress bringing a character to life. It was simply wonderful to hear you tell this story. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart.
9:15 "He didn’t just predict the stars... he became one." Carl Gauss wasn't just a mathematician; he was a true visionary. When astronomers couldn't find the missing planet Ceres, it was Gauss who cracked the code. His precise calculations led to the planet's reappearance-just as he had predicted. A celebrity mathematician-but the world didn't fully understand his genius yet...
Germany as a region did exist though. More as a linguistic and cultural region, that was politically fractionalized but still very much identifiable. This is simply supposed to show where Braunschweig is in nowadays Germany.
CG (the prince of mathematics and a king of number theory) was a creative and incomparable genius of pure and applied mathematics. 🖐️🖐️ And he knew numbers especially prime numbers... His great conjecture on the distribution of primes that later became the Prime Number Theorem is mind-boggling for which the great Euler could not imagined possible. Go CG! 👍👍
Gauss was incredible! One thing I learned about his family was that he only has a handful of descendents in Germany but hundreds in America. His son Eugen that he did not think highly of prospered and had many children, grandchildren, etc.
Forgive me, doesn’t the fundamental theorem of of arithmetic (@ 6:36) talk about composite rather than whole numbers? A non-composite whole number is basically a prime number and that means it cannot be factorises by 2 or more prime numbers, right? Please do correct me if I’m wrong
Don't forget Archimedes. He developed the first steps of calculus 2000 years before Newton and Leibnitz. I really like his solutions - I always say it looks like calculus done by aliens.
At 4:50, that is not the compass from geometry. That is a magnetic compass, not the same thing at all. This is a compass: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compass_(drawing_tool)
As a medical student, I still love watching videos like this about Maths and Physics, and also understand some advanced concepts that I've never learned in school because I went to the path of medicine instead of Maths and Physics.
Ascension Day is always Thursday, so the Wednesday before it is the previous day. You might rather have said, "Wednesday of the previous week" to land on April 30th.
If there was one flaw in Gauss' rich mathematical life, it was that he refused to read Abel's proof for the insolvability theorem of quintic equation and just tossed it to the trash bin. Sadly Abel died too young, if only Gauss was willing to listen to him.
Now that's what you call a real man! 1.) Contributed a lot to the world , so much that anyone who is a science student or engineer, cannot escape his name. 2.)) Chose his passion over money and made it his profession. 3.)) Loved his wife , and raised a family. 4.) Though things did not turn out to be good with his personal life , he didn't cry about , and focused on producing ground breaking works .
Time stamp (4:42) • Either the youtuber has an odd sense of humour or the 'compass' illustrated is the wrong one. It should be a divider also known as a compass. A compass is a drafting instrument used to draw circles, arcs, and curves. Actually, the correct term would be a ‘divider’, a tool used to measure and mark distances, typically used in conjunction with a straightedge or ruler. Examples of dividers include the traditional two-legged divider, the adjustable lockable divider, and the joint calipers & dividers.
@@Newsthink 🤣🤣Indeed, face palm situation for sure! But both? Nope. With a straignt edge and compass divider you tend to construct, while with a magnetic compass you will probably be navigatjing.
Carl said that anyone can make his discoveries if they spent as much hours thinking about maths as he did, contradicting himself when he told his son that he did not have the aptitude for maths, but rather to do law. It is one of the biggest lies to think of human intelligence in terms of certain distinct fields e.g maths, language...Don't even talk about IQ tests, as they really only confirm extremes which needed no IQ tests to begin with. Just a circular way to confirm garbage. Everybody has intellectual power in one field/area or another, which are made visible to the public when they become more developed, are demanded or meet opportunity. Then, we have fields like maths that is a demand, because of the important role it plays in our lives in building, construction, aero-dyamics, space travel and so much more. So, proud people at these universities have taken smarts in these fields/areas to mean that they are more intelligent then others. This has fostered intellectual arrogance. Prodigies are normally gifted in more then one field/area, and with extremely high development in those areas from an early age, but the rest of us need to develop the gift/s and if they discover their own intellectual giftings, no maths genius will be able to own them. No math wiz will be able to beat Magnus Carlsen at chess, Warren Buffett at business, Adam Worth at crime, Micki Maze at gambling, Napoleon at war, Thomas Edison at inventing, Meyer Langsky at organised crime, Albert Gonzalez at hacking, Vincent Van Gogh at painting, Thomas Wolf at writing, Steve Jobs at leadership, Elon Musk at engineering, Michael Jackson at dancing, 2pac at rapping, Shakespeare at poetry, Richard Feynman at physics, James Watson at biology, Michael Faraday at electrical science and so much more. These are the tip of the iceburg for giftings that are more easily measurable. There are those gifting that are very hard to measure and who not recognised. Examples are those who have speaking gifts, manipulation gifts, extreme logical thinking gifts, real world strategy gifts, spacial and imaginative gifts, etc. It's crazy how a poor guy can walk into a casino for the first time and notice things no-one has seen in decades, and use those observations to win crazy amount of money even to get kicked out of the casino(check out Micki Maze). Be yourself to the fullest extent and you will learn your giftings.
@4:44 When you're explaining Gauss's groundbreaking math but can't pick the right compass...TOTAL brain fart
Try brilliant.org/Newsthink/ for FREE for 30 days, and get 20% off your annual premium subscription
Euler, and GH Hardy. Georgie greens biography makes for a fantastic story the genius baker who revolutionised our understanding of the electromagnetic field. I also believe he was the oldest wrangler as well
Neil bhor Erwin Schrodinger
This isn't a small mistake. Did you outsource the video's graphics to Indians? I'm shocked.
@@markshiman5690are you talking about American Indians or Asian Indians?
@@Sciencechem1997 "Neil bhor"??? I guess you mean Niels Bohr (Danish). Misspelling both of his names you are probably American?
Bro made a candle out of a potato so he could do algebra in the dark
That while I was procasinating algebra
😭 he really is different no wonder his the prince of mathematics
@乙乇尺-k4z we have lost. . . . . . Genetically
meanwhile kids can't figure out 1 + 1 with light, teachers, an entire global network of computers and available AI to teach them 😂
My math teacher in HS told me the story of Gauss adding the numbers 1-100 using his simple observation…and I thought that’s exactly what genius is.
yeah he was TEN years old, this story is included in appendix E of james stewarts calculus
Now its all about memorization for general public So memorize it: n(n+1)/2 sum of n natural no.
n(2n+1)(n+1)/6 sum of square of n natural no.
Memorization = general public.
Leonhard Euler (April 15, 1707 - September 18, 1783) and Carl Gauss (April 30, 1777 - February 23, 1855) were Mathematical Monsters!
don't ever forget Newton the goat
Euler was a savage beast....I think he saw numbers everywhere....he breathed mathematics.
lol I saw the title of the video before the thumbnail. the answer is always either Euler or Gauss
Gauss was a great mathematician, but I think we all know a video with this title should've been about Euler.
@@lanevalhalla1225 In math Newton was a toddler compared to Euler or Gauss.
Gauss and Euler the greatest mathematicians of the last 300 years.
Ramanujan is up there too
@@kartikgkalita wanted to name him to. He was truly a magician who saw infinite sums for what they were.
@@kartikgkalita It is sad that he died at such a young age. Perhaps he would've become one of the greatest mathematicians in history if he lived a full life, but it's simply incorrect to place him amongst the greatest mathematicians in history.
Abel and Galois (and Ramanujan (already mentioned)). All three with interesting biographies, though they all three died very young the contributed more than a lifetime of brilliance.
I would add Newton and Riemann to the list as well. Come to think of it it's kind of unfair to make such a list, for many reasons. What is harder? Standing on the shoulders of titans and using the knowledge they created to try and solve more and more complex problems that remain unsolved or be an early pioneer?
Euler was undoubtedly a genius but he tried to prove Fermat's theorem and failed. (He proved it for n=3 but couldn't for n>3). Andrew Wiles, a contemporary of ours, proved it. Does that mean Wiles>Euler? I don't think it does, I would bet Wiles himself would dismiss the comparison as ridiculous. He had mathematical tools at his disposal Euler could never have dreamed of. But technically he did succeed where Euler failed, so what do we do with that?
The answer is nothing. We don't make top 10's mathematics is not a pop music chart.
I like how he says, "if anyone would think about math as deeply as I, they would discover these things too" but he told his son who clearly wanted to get right into math, he doesn't have the aptitude 🤣
Maybe the son didn't think as deeply as him and just made empty claims to be as good as his father one day. That'd upset anyone.
How unfortunate that he lacked the compassion to support his son the same way his father did not support him.
Agreed, sadly he was closer to his father than he was to the duke in this regard. And to picture what he said to Johan upon the discovery of non-Euclidian Geometry as praise is kind of ridiculously naive. He seemed jealous and regretful of not have the courage to make his discoveries public. But, you know, everybody has flaws, and he seemed to be in a bad moment of his life... maybe when he spoken about handwork he repented of his pride, who knows?...
Your compassionate relating of real humans doing amazing things in science is very much appreciated.
One of the most amazing contributions of Gauss to science was non-Euclidean geometry.
Non-Euclidean geometry describes spaces with curvature, like the surface of a sphere.
Gauss had the insight that space may be curved, and even conducted experiments to find out.
Einstein much later used non-Euclidean geometry for his theory of General Relativity, which states that gravity is caused by the curvature of space-time.
Gauss's intuition that space may be curved was pure genius!
Poor father probably thought it was all magic in Carl’s mind.
im a 3rd year math major and the majority of everything ive learned come from gauss, bernoulli or newton
euler??
you haven't learned enough math then. There are other big names like Euler, Cauchy, Fourier, Legendre, Lagrange, Riemann, Borel, Lebesgue, Poincare, etc. Math is not built by only a few.
@@cuervo-u6ris the guy supposed to know all of that or what? Cuz as a math major myself i gotta admit math is just so spread out now that i don't think anyone should know everyone. I mainly focused on operation research and i gotta admit the only guy i remember is danzig and that's it.
@@cuervo-u6r don't forget Descartes
@@cuervo-u6r of course and i can name even more mathematicians that have contributed to my learning starting with euclid, i was just generalizing , relax guys
edit: I probably should have said Pythagoras since he came about 200 years before euclid and i could keep naming mathematicians from them until Galois and even further.
With all due respect, the title of Greatest Ever Mathematician thus far should go to Leonhard Euler. Euler worked in almost all areas of mathematics, including geometry, infinitesimal calculus, trigonometry, algebra, and number theory. Besides, he made significant contributions to Physics as well. In many ways, Euler was to Mathematics what Newton was to Mathematics. Gauss was the prince, while Euler was the benevolent Emperor in the Kingdom of Mathematics !
The greatest ever is just a title which is different for person to person , it's very hard to find the objective answer to this , it's like asking who is the most prettiest person who ever lived . There are few great contender to this title and you can argue for any of them . But this argument is kind of pointless because you it have no use and neither can you ever verify your answer to be correct. For example if I ask you which religion is best / which god is best . There is no definite answer to this questions. So you can think who is the greatest mathematicians as same question as this .
@@gaurabdahal2It's very easy to be objective about this. Just count the theorems each mathematician has rigorously proven.
@@gaurabdahal2 " There are few great contender to this title and you can argue for any of them ."
Uhh no. There are only two so far Euler & Gauss. And Euler comes out on the top because his contribution to mathematics. The sheer number of both quantity & quality work Euler has done in Mathematics is mind boggling.
A fun fact: In one of the Mathematicians polls for the most beautiful math equation, 3 out of top 5 were Euler's.
Not to mention that Euler was blind!
how about Ramanujan ?
Thanks!
Wow, thank you so much for your generosity. You’ve made my day!!
"Cindy Pom is an amazing narrator with a voice and accent that's so clear and easy to understand. The storytelling is captivating, and the editing is absolutely top-notch-it keeps viewers engaged throughout! I love every bit of the content you create. Sending lots of love and support from Pakistan! 💖"
Appreciate your sarcasm
AI slop hahaha
She slurs her words sometimes and it sounds like something completely different. It's apparent in this video at the beginning when she talks about the potatoes and Carl counting them.
4:44 Are you sure that's the right compass? 😂
I think it is the wrong compass.
The video is AI generated, that’s why. She’s just a narrator and doesn’t even understand the subject matter.
Not true, I'm pretty sure I'm human
Gauss must be rolling in his grave. My bad, so embarassing
@@marcolam5530 i mean no one that hasnt studied math rigorously cant grasp his genius to be fair, this videos just made for the general public
You called Gauss the Prince of mathematics. I did a quick Google for the King. It's Euler.
Makes sense they'd form the King and Prince of maths.
Euler downvoted this video
Having done a LOT of math in the past few decades, Gauss surely stands out as one of the greatest. But I must say, in my opinion, looking back, Euler just takes the cake - clearly. To me he body of work is just absolutely mind-blowing. His reach and variety is just almost infinite - and he never stopped. During a time when people died young, he was still pumping out quality work into his 70s. If I have to pick a favourite of their work, to me Gauss is easy, the Theorema Egregium is really remarkable. When it comes to Euler, I could not even know where to start. Probably 100 times I just sat there and was in awe how he managed to dream these things up. It just feels like they may have had the same intellect, but Eulers imagination stretched quite a bit farther. There was just no limit to where he could go. He lives in a league of his own - there will never be another like him. There is a reason where there are like a million constants, identities, formulas, equations etc named after him. He was the one and only god-king. Just my thoughts.
3:01 Man, fifth postulate is a big puzzle for mathematicians at that time before Non-euclidean geometry was born even Gauss knew about that stuff...
Was impressed with the adding the numbers from 1 to 100 so quickly.
By how he did it.
And he was only 9
This tale is like the apple and the Newton story, who knows if it's true.
What an absolutely charming story! Of course I knew Gauss from his work but never his actual story! Thank you!
You called Gaus the greatest Mathematician and again, EULER got mentioned cause you can't talk about math anymore without this guy
"I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops."
If it wasn't for the Duke, Gauss would have been lost. And like him millions.
It's time to move towards a post-capitalist society.
And replace it with what ?
@@jaygin6518 Solidarity
@@jaygin6518a collectivist ideology/economic system or socially orientated system, one which prioritises the development of a society at all levels and not shareholder profits
What a childish worldview
Your observation and analysis of a portion of the 'human condition', is both true and brilliant.
Gauss's life story is impressive, but your narration and voice brought it to a new dimension, like a great actress bringing a character to life. It was simply wonderful to hear you tell this story. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart.
Amazing video!
Could you do something on Andrey Kolmogorov and Robert Langlands? 😅
9:15 "He didn’t just predict the stars... he became one."
Carl Gauss wasn't just a mathematician; he was a true visionary. When astronomers couldn't find the missing planet Ceres, it was Gauss who cracked the code. His precise calculations led to the planet's reappearance-just as he had predicted. A celebrity mathematician-but the world didn't fully understand his genius yet...
0:45 The map of germany looks very different at that time. At that time there wasnt even a thing of what we call "modern-day germany".
Germany as a region did exist though. More as a linguistic and cultural region, that was politically fractionalized but still very much identifiable.
This is simply supposed to show where Braunschweig is in nowadays Germany.
No words for this video , because its a masterpiece , and a masterpiece can't match a description ❤
Oh good, I didn’t quite feel dumb enough today.
Incredible story though! Genius got him started but perseverance seems to be the real story here.
I think one special thing about the past is that when Carl was around, there was less right or wrong. There was a chance to discover
When i see a release from this channel, i am delighted knowing it will be brilliant.
Can you please make a video of Georg Cantor?
These videos are so great! Very inspiring :D
CG (the prince of mathematics and a king of number theory) was a creative and incomparable genius of pure and applied mathematics. 🖐️🖐️ And he knew numbers especially prime numbers... His great conjecture on the distribution of primes that later became the Prime Number Theorem is mind-boggling for which the great Euler could not imagined possible. Go CG! 👍👍
Gauss was incredible! One thing I learned about his family was that he only has a handful of descendents in Germany but hundreds in America. His son Eugen that he did not think highly of prospered and had many children, grandchildren, etc.
I'm waiting for this thank you❤❤❤❤
I was going guess Gauss , but Euler wrote 3/4 of the maths published in the 18th century!
I'm very very thankful to you 🙏 🤗 you are Great, you after all made the video I requested 😊.
Fantastic video! Thank you so much 👍
Thank you again for a wonderful video treatise, Ms Pom. Don’t forget Euler. 😉
Carl's parents couldn't afford candles
i am loving that people here in comment section are praising guass and euler, not many people appreciate genuises other than newton or einstein.
I must say Gauss is the God of Mathematics.....The simplicity of his Mathematical ideas is unprecedented.
A sensitive, fitting tribute to a great mathematician. Thanks.
During the video I checked four times whether I had liked The video or not. That's how good the video is and Inspiring as well.
A friend of mine studying to be an engineer, made it all the way up to Numerical Analysis. He got straight 100's on every single test.
Great video 👍🏻 I would have appreciated a map of Germany from back then
Great video, you guys are awesome keep up the great work.
See , how beautiful the maths is..😭😭
Please make next video on Sir Leonard Euler🙏
Here is a man who used this God-given abilities to serve his country, and the world. It was a pleasure to learn of him and his genius.
The greatest mathematician was, perhaps, Euler.
If I could bring anyone from history back to life, there’s no doubt in my mind that I’d choose Carl Friedrich Gauss.
Forgive me, doesn’t the fundamental theorem of of arithmetic (@ 6:36) talk about composite rather than whole numbers?
A non-composite whole number is basically a prime number and that means it cannot be factorises by 2 or more prime numbers, right?
Please do correct me if I’m wrong
European, Euler but definitely the Indian mathematicians of the year 500 and 700.
Don't forget Archimedes. He developed the first steps of calculus 2000 years before Newton and Leibnitz. I really like his solutions - I always say it looks like calculus done by aliens.
At 4:50, that is not the compass from geometry. That is a magnetic compass, not the same thing at all. This is a compass: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compass_(drawing_tool)
why do they always do my
man Euler so dirty?
The sudden transition to brilliant ads caught me off guard 😂
As a medical student, I still love watching videos like this about Maths and Physics, and also understand some advanced concepts that I've never learned in school because I went to the path of medicine instead of Maths and Physics.
4.45 I am pretty sure the instrument was a pair of compasses not a magnetic compass!
At 1:00 21 is there twice to see who is paying attention. It was corrected at 1:23.
lovely content
@4:45 This isn't the compass you're looking for.
Ascension Day is always Thursday, so the Wednesday before it is the previous day. You might rather have said, "Wednesday of the previous week" to land on April 30th.
If there was one flaw in Gauss' rich mathematical life, it was that he refused to read Abel's proof for the insolvability theorem of quintic equation and just tossed it to the trash bin. Sadly Abel died too young, if only Gauss was willing to listen to him.
Euler would like to have a word with you. Nah but for real this guy was a beast.
*Euler left the chat*
I think it was Neumman but Gauss is a legend
Make a video on Cauchy too
Make a video on Euler, plz?
Coming up soon
Why isn't this video about Archimedes?
Please also make a video on Bernhard Riemann, whose mathematics helped Einstein to develop his general relativity.🎉🎉
9:27 I didn't realise joey was a mathematician
The compass you pictured is not the compass used in geometry... It's the one you use to make circles, not the one you need to find the north pole...
Gauss is rolling in his grave (face palm incident)
Error, there’s 21 twice in the graphic at min 1:13
Good eye
The sum is 101*50 +1/2 +/- 1/2
eular and gauss are literally the goat, for me they are above newton.
Gauss is the person you read about whenever you want to feel bad about yourself.
Ramanujan could've become the modern day Gauss had he not died so premature.
OMG...Congrats on reaching 1M.. 🎉🎉
Party?😁
We know all it was euler
Gauss despite his genius was not an easy person to deal with. He used to bitch down many of his students and people that surrounded him.
Now that's what you call a real man!
1.) Contributed a lot to the world , so much that anyone who is a science student or engineer, cannot escape his name.
2.)) Chose his passion over money and made it his profession.
3.)) Loved his wife , and raised a family.
4.) Though things did not turn out to be good with his personal life , he didn't cry about , and focused on producing ground breaking works .
This shit is bussing. Eating chips(crisps or however you wanna call it) and watching this is literally peak
4:44 They meant a drawing compass, not a magnetic on...
That is a silly mistake....
Yup indeed a silly mistake
That 5050 story probably isn't true, because the original source isn't even remotely trustworthy.
I felt the same thing about his mom not knowing what was after 6. 😂 I think this video has sketchy info mixed with facts.
Leonhard Euler
Weird that Carl Gauss could come from such a short-sighted father.
Euler, Grothendeick... hold my beer
Euler smiling in the corner. :D
Imagine your father that you looked up to telling you that you’re not smart enough to do what he does 😢😢 that would break most people
Oh, I thought this video was going to be about Euler
Time stamp (4:42) • Either the youtuber has an odd sense of humour or the 'compass' illustrated is the wrong one. It should be a divider also known as a compass. A compass is a drafting instrument used to draw circles, arcs, and curves. Actually, the correct term would be a ‘divider’, a tool used to measure and mark distances, typically used in conjunction with a straightedge or ruler.
Examples of dividers include the traditional two-legged divider, the adjustable lockable divider, and the joint calipers & dividers.
Could it be both? Gauss would definitely not approve. Terribly face palm moment for sure
@@Newsthink 🤣🤣Indeed, face palm situation for sure! But both? Nope. With a straignt edge and compass divider you tend to construct, while with a magnetic compass you will probably be navigatjing.
sure!
Gauss' love letters sound as sweet as a 5 year olds haha
At 4:48 That's the wrong type of compass.
The number table is wrong, 21 followed 21. 😁😁😁
One day you will make video on me as greatest theoretical physicist❤
I feel bad watching this video for free❤
Carl said that anyone can make his discoveries if they spent as much hours thinking about maths as he did, contradicting himself when he told his son that he did not have the aptitude for maths, but rather to do law. It is one of the biggest lies to think of human intelligence in terms of certain distinct fields e.g maths, language...Don't even talk about IQ tests, as they really only confirm extremes which needed no IQ tests to begin with. Just a circular way to confirm garbage. Everybody has intellectual power in one field/area or another, which are made visible to the public when they become more developed, are demanded or meet opportunity. Then, we have fields like maths that is a demand, because of the important role it plays in our lives in building, construction, aero-dyamics, space travel and so much more. So, proud people at these universities have taken smarts in these fields/areas to mean that they are more intelligent then others. This has fostered intellectual arrogance. Prodigies are normally gifted in more then one field/area, and with extremely high development in those areas from an early age, but the rest of us need to develop the gift/s and if they discover their own intellectual giftings, no maths genius will be able to own them. No math wiz will be able to beat Magnus Carlsen at chess, Warren Buffett at business, Adam Worth at crime, Micki Maze at gambling, Napoleon at war, Thomas Edison at inventing, Meyer Langsky at organised crime, Albert Gonzalez at hacking, Vincent Van Gogh at painting, Thomas Wolf at writing, Steve Jobs at leadership, Elon Musk at engineering, Michael Jackson at dancing, 2pac at rapping, Shakespeare at poetry, Richard Feynman at physics, James Watson at biology, Michael Faraday at electrical science and so much more. These are the tip of the iceburg for giftings that are more easily measurable. There are those gifting that are very hard to measure and who not recognised. Examples are those who have speaking gifts, manipulation gifts, extreme logical thinking gifts, real world strategy gifts, spacial and imaginative gifts, etc. It's crazy how a poor guy can walk into a casino for the first time and notice things no-one has seen in decades, and use those observations to win crazy amount of money even to get kicked out of the casino(check out Micki Maze). Be yourself to the fullest extent and you will learn your giftings.
At 4:44 the creator of the video doesn't know what a geometric compass is.