In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But in poetry, it’s the exact opposite.
One of them was the main textbook in the field. The other was his own 1 page paper published earlier in the same year. The 1 page paper, in turn, also had 2 citations. One is a different edition of the same textbook and the other is for a theorem he actually used to make his conclusion. So 1 real citation, which isn't even mentioned in the main paper.
@@CliffHanger-fg6uy But he didn't cite them for anything of substance. He cited them simply because they created the field. It's like citing Einstein in a paper on General Relativity for the phrase "general relativity." I mean, yeah, he coined it and yeah, he was a genius, but it isn't really something you're relying on his paper for.
The fact that your content is able to SO consistently live at the intersection of STEM interests and ASMR is the reason i subscribed and it’s such a pleasure to see this continue. Amazing work
Two honorable mentions: Louis de Broglie: In his PhD thesis he postulated the wave nature of electrons and suggested that all matter has wave properties. Hugh Everett III: He proposed the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics in his PhD thesis
about de Broglie - his thesis was close to being rejected, they had to ask Einstein if it was brilliant or nonsense. They only awarded him the degree on Einstein's say-so. And the work later got him the Nobel. 't Hooft proving that non-abelian gauge theories are renormalisable is pretty cool for a post grad, though it didn't shake the world, it was expected to be so. But someone had to prove it, and it also led to the Nobel.
As for many-worlds, to propose a non-verifiable but mathematically solid theory is a breakthrough only because it paved the way to the plague that consumes modern physics.
And still, you have to marvel that Ada Lovelace had developed software even before this discipline was created. I marvel at these geniuses who are decades before their times while 'normal' folk like us would look on them as off-their-rockers.
Shannon's master’s thesis is a cornerstone in the fields of computing and information theory and a massive influence on the foundations of digital circuit design. Thanks Tibbes, great video!
Shannon’s development of information theory came later, primarily in his 1948 paper “A Mathematical Theory of Communication.” You’re totally right, though, that the master’s thesis had a massive influence in the application of Boolean algebra to digital logic design.
Really appreciate that you acknowledge the talent and hard work of those who haven't received a Nobel prize. If a Nobel was the only measure of achievement in science, it would be quite a depressing area to work in.
It is criminal that Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin has been almost ignored by history. She endured such hardships simply because she was a woman in Science (she had to move countries because women weren't allowed to do Phd research, she was ignored, derided, and her findings disbelieved etc etc). Yet, her work has arguably led us to understand more about the Universe than any other human in our entire civilisation. She is simply extradordinary.
Thank you Tibees for your effort in making this video. This motivates me to take my master's project a bit more seriously and work diligently toward make it useful
Feynman:Path integral formulation George Danzig:came late to a class jolted down two problems on the blackboard and solved it in two weeks only to realize they were unsolved math problems.Later published as his thesis
What's wild is that in 1924 while the rest of the world was just beginning to grasp the difficult concept of putting cheese on a hamburger, Dirac was screwing with quantum physics and dropping banger after banger out of the mothership he arrived on. Rutherford trips me out too, bro was shooting alpha particle beams at gold foil in 1909 and 'saw' the particles bouncing back. These days i doubt half the people i see around me could toast a Poptart if their life depended on it.
Rutherford, the guy accused of saying "All science is either physics or stamp collecting"? Yeah, it was his student who did the whole "blasting gold with radiation", not him - he just took the credit with the explanation in 1911.
Resist the urge to pontificate. Strive for an economy of words when expressing admiration. Above all, when paying a compliment, please do so without lambasting huge swaths of humanity. Consider switching to decaf?
Honorable mention to Donald Knuth, one of the fathers of modern computer science, whose Bachelor's thesis got him a Master's Degree. The work was so outstanding that the faculty refused to just award him his bachelor, and awarded him a Master's degree.
Saying Shannon "worked on information theory" is some understatement! He practically single-handedly invented the field and then solved all of its major questions. What a guy.
8:35 It's tragic that gender played a role. I'll never understand why people act like gender matters. IMHO, there is nothing more attractive than a strong woman of science. Hats off.
I like your reflection towards the end on the idea that breakthroughs also have the element of luck " Right topic,right time and right person to seize the opportunity".
This is a fascinating collection. Thank you for providing it in an easy to digest format. As one who took the scenic route through higher ed (and not in anything science-y), it's impressive what was accomplished at a young age.
Already, the Tibees Award (also known as a ‘Toby’) is more prestigious than the Nobel Prize, because she puts the paper and scientist in their correct field!
A slip of the tounge. The Curies and Becherel were awarded the Nobel prize for Physics, not Chemistry. Of course Marie Curie also got a Nobel in Chemistry later, as you say (the only person to win two scientific Nobel prizes in different sciences).
Of course it was the woman that was questioned, and not the man who had doodles and difficult to read work! And I had never even heard of her! Thanks for bringing this to me!
It is encouraging to think that zillions of failures are essential contributions to final outcomes. If, at first, you don't succeed, you won't try again if parachute jumping was your sport.
I'm so glad you talked about these world-impacting works in an easy to understand manner, but ever more grateful that you also introduced similar achievements by people who don't necessarily had the same academic situation as we are used to in the West. And also for the reminder at the end, that a recognition is part hard work, part luck.
This is the first video of yours I have seen. It was excellent and so refreshing to hear such marvelous dictation from someone who sounds like they have spent significant time in Australia or NZ. I didn't know it was possible. I have some catching up on your work to do. luvs frum 'straya haha!
Another influential one in computer science was Roy Fielding's PhD thesis. His description of "representation state transfer" changed the trajectory of the entire industry. The vast majority of web sites and mobile apps communicate with their servers in a way that was influenced by his approach.
Thank you for washing up on my algorithmic shore. I already knew that Dirac and Shannon were quite awesome, but I was pleasantly shocked to also learn about Payne-Gaposchkin and Bell Burnell and their uphill struggles. Whatever your station in life, or in your field, have faith in your hard and earnest work.
I love Physics and wanna pursue it. I'm in absolute love with the subject. I'd love for you to make a video about why you studied Physics, what motivated you and how one might master the subject in a non-academic manner(for instance if an engineer wants to contribute to the world of physics or wanna have the same level of mastery of the subject as a phd student on that subject then what he or she might do). Have a nice day
Louis Victor Pierre Raymond, 7th Duc de Broglie - Nobel prize for his PhD thesis - In his 1924 PhD thesis, he postulated the wave nature of electrons and suggested that all matter has wave properties.
Jocelyn Bell Burnell's being overlooked by the Nobel committee was so notorious that Sir Fred Hoyle raised a stink about it on her behalf--which in some ways is better than a Nobel prize. Also Shannon's thesis is little more than a re-statement of a paper authored by Charles S. Peirce & his Student Allan P Marquand from 50 years earlier.
Another Ph.D. thesis that could qualify: "The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics" by Richard Feynman, which greatly informed the development of quantum electrodynamics.
My old physics professor said he got a master's so he could be the dept head, but he refused to get his PhD. He referred to it as "piled higher and deeper."
It doesn't happen but that's mostly due to the fact that even when the discovery was proven wrong there's still a significant amount of truth in the papers so disproving parts of a concept doesn't reduce the whole.
I was expecting the amazing achievements of Louis de Broglie in his1924 PhD thesis, he postulated the wave nature of electrons and won the Nobel Prize.
Watson needs to address Rosalind Franklin and her contributions before he dies, the fact she was so unrecognized for decades of substantial contributions is an affront to achievement.
Claude E Shannon is one of the most forgotten of the great Geniusses, yet he was arguably one of the most important, for all of us. He belongs in the short list of great names like Alan Turing, Albert Einstein, John Nash, John von Neuman, etc. etc. What many people do not realise is that not only did Shannon lay the groundwork for modern computing theory, but he was also was the inventor of information theory and the modern mathematical concept of "information" (as a reduction in Entropy) as we use it nowadays.
Yes unfortunately some women are unacknowledged and unknown . But science is ofcourse going to reflect the normal society. Up until we improve the issues in the common society it won't be fixed that easily.
In mathematics, the Phd thesis of Carl Gauss is considered as one of the most important results in the field and very impactful to further research. It was a proof that every non-constant single-variable polynomial with complex coefficients has at least one complex root.
If you include Economics, Harry Markowitz wrote a 14 page thesis "Portfolio Selection" in 1952, which resulted in the 1990 Nobel Prize. William F. Sharpe shared the prize for his 1964 thesis "Captial Asset Prices: A theory of market equilibrium under conditions of risk."
22:42 “Who does this list exclude” Is why I LOVE this woman. She realizes that science is very political and a privilege most do not have. Notice how everyone on the list was either white, European or American (I think). While these people can have a blast working on circuits and AI, other places (that the countries these people come from helped destroy) are still recovering from genocides, colonizations, political unrest etc. I’m very happy to see these students make it though and none of the things mentioned above are their faults.
Hi, amazing video! One thing-as a Polish person, I need to stress how important it is to use Maria Skłodowska-Curie's full name. She kept her surname when she got married to Pierre, she named one of her discoveries after Poland (Polonium) as you said, and throughout her entire life, she was attached to her motherland, even though it wasn't on the map then. I think it’s only fair to use her full name.
it's a mundane point but it pleases me disproportionally that you say "theses" instead of "thesises", apart from being technically correct it sounds so much better
Just so you all you folks know, @Tibee does guided meditation videos for her patreon supporters. We're up to #2 now. And they're awesome (mathsy, sciencey, astronomy'y, multidimensional'y, universal'y). So if youre wondering if you get anything out of patreon support, yep, you do. I got a bookmark, and now I get some amazing nearly-ASMR meditation videos, with her smooth sweet voice guiding you through a groovy calm-down and think/ don't-think session. So, yeah. So worth it!
As a plant biotechnologist, I had great respect forShannon. Even though his PhD work isn't as luminary as his masters for computer science, it helps us in computing the population genetics analyses i.e., the Shannon Index.
Yes I’m so glad you mention Roslyn Franklin I read a lot about DNA and how they came to discover it understand it in Roslyn Franklin did x-ray crystallization and she died of cancer without being rewarded for her discovery not even offered to participate in the Nobel prize so sad she does need recognition I’ve been saying that for years God bless you for missing her name
It is truly awe-inspiring that the academic/scientific work of a student/intellectual could create such a profound and profuse global ripple effect where all scientists both amateur and elite, are all now speaking heavily on scientific and mathematical concepts now, more than ever before, where even a television actor has thrown his hat in the ring of mathematics and science. I didn't watch your video, but I am convinced now that the quality of whatever scientific/mathematical information is written on those academic papers, must be beyond extraordinarily influential to have cause such a global reaction! 💯💯💯💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Paul Dirac was amazing. Crazy shy, but brilliant AF. I love that he just included a random drawing of a candle.
Did u know him???
In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But in poetry, it’s the exact opposite.
@@thechessplayer8328
ja,ja,ja!...
that is nuts: 27 pages, only 2 citations and inventing a new field: Nash's PHD's thesis 11:01
One of them was the main textbook in the field. The other was his own 1 page paper published earlier in the same year.
The 1 page paper, in turn, also had 2 citations. One is a different edition of the same textbook and the other is for a theorem he actually used to make his conclusion. So 1 real citation, which isn't even mentioned in the main paper.
@@Sam_on_TH-cam Wow, that is hugely remarkable
Well, he didn’t invent the field of game theory. That came earlier in work by Von Neumann and Morgenstern, which Nash cited.
but the other citation was from someone who towers over nash intellectually.
@@CliffHanger-fg6uy But he didn't cite them for anything of substance. He cited them simply because they created the field. It's like citing Einstein in a paper on General Relativity for the phrase "general relativity." I mean, yeah, he coined it and yeah, he was a genius, but it isn't really something you're relying on his paper for.
Alright, guess I’ll stay up a couple more minutes
Haha in the same situation 🤌🙏
Same😅 about to loose consciousness😅
*virtually tucks you 3 in*
With a smile like that, and a voice telling me some lvl 10 noobs can clear the newest dungeon on accident...
I'm fighting the ambien to be here 😤
The fact that your content is able to SO consistently live at the intersection of STEM interests and ASMR is the reason i subscribed and it’s such a pleasure to see this continue. Amazing work
Two honorable mentions:
Louis de Broglie: In his PhD thesis he postulated the wave nature of electrons and suggested that all matter has wave properties.
Hugh Everett III: He proposed the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics in his PhD thesis
about de Broglie - his thesis was close to being rejected, they had to ask Einstein if it was brilliant or nonsense. They only awarded him the degree on Einstein's say-so. And the work later got him the Nobel.
't Hooft proving that non-abelian gauge theories are renormalisable is pretty cool for a post grad, though it didn't shake the world, it was expected to be so. But someone had to prove it, and it also led to the Nobel.
I thought I would see De Brooglie in this video 🥺
As for many-worlds, to propose a non-verifiable but mathematically solid theory is a breakthrough only because it paved the way to the plague that consumes modern physics.
Yes, de Broglie. I would have assumed he was here.
@@LETIshNickA joke by the drunken Everett on a solution to the “shut up and compute” era. Turns out he was mathematically correct.
As a Computer Science Student, Claude Shannon is my GOAT.
Same here !!
Complementary to the near contemporary work of Alan Turing
And still, you have to marvel that Ada Lovelace had developed software even before this discipline was created.
I marvel at these geniuses who are decades before their times while 'normal' folk like us would look on them as off-their-rockers.
I'm more of a Chaitin guy myself.
@@thechessplayer8328 I'm the Aleph and Omega 😃
The best voice in science. If hot cocoa with marshmallows could talk, it would sound like Tibees.
I concur…great analogy.
Perfectly described!
splendid description 👌👌
💙
Every so often she stabs my ears with the odd skintillation, haitch, and saze.
(Although I'm getting inured to 'saze' now - by repetition)
Shannon's master’s thesis is a cornerstone in the fields of computing and information theory and a massive influence on the foundations of digital circuit design. Thanks Tibbes, great video!
Shannon’s development of information theory came later, primarily in his 1948 paper “A Mathematical Theory of Communication.”
You’re totally right, though, that the master’s thesis had a massive influence in the application of Boolean algebra to digital logic design.
Really appreciate that you acknowledge the talent and hard work of those who haven't received a Nobel prize. If a Nobel was the only measure of achievement in science, it would be quite a depressing area to work in.
your conclusion is spot on, especially the part about being there at the right time. Timing is crucial
It is criminal that Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin has been almost ignored by history. She endured such hardships simply because she was a woman in Science (she had to move countries because women weren't allowed to do Phd research, she was ignored, derided, and her findings disbelieved etc etc). Yet, her work has arguably led us to understand more about the Universe than any other human in our entire civilisation. She is simply extradordinary.
Thank you Tibees for your effort in making this video. This motivates me to take my master's project a bit more seriously and work diligently toward make it useful
Feynman:Path integral formulation
George Danzig:came late to a class jolted down two problems on the blackboard and solved it in two weeks only to realize they were unsolved math problems.Later published as his thesis
What's wild is that in 1924 while the rest of the world was just beginning to grasp the difficult concept of putting cheese on a hamburger, Dirac was screwing with quantum physics and dropping banger after banger out of the mothership he arrived on. Rutherford trips me out too, bro was shooting alpha particle beams at gold foil in 1909 and 'saw' the particles bouncing back. These days i doubt half the people i see around me could toast a Poptart if their life depended on it.
Rutherford, the guy accused of saying "All science is either physics or stamp collecting"?
Yeah, it was his student who did the whole "blasting gold with radiation", not him - he just took the credit with the explanation in 1911.
Ouch! Poptarts catching stray bullets to start the weekend :(
Resist the urge to pontificate. Strive for an economy of words when expressing admiration. Above all, when paying a compliment, please do so without lambasting huge swaths of humanity. Consider switching to decaf?
Both produced many papers that could have been top notch PhD's papers .
Honorable mention to Donald Knuth, one of the fathers of modern computer science, whose Bachelor's thesis got him a Master's Degree. The work was so outstanding that the faculty refused to just award him his bachelor, and awarded him a Master's degree.
People are amazing. it is so incredible inspiring to listen to you and learn about these amazing people. Thanks for making this video.
Saying Shannon "worked on information theory" is some understatement! He practically single-handedly invented the field and then solved all of its major questions. What a guy.
I am pursuing physics and I really love your style in which you make educational content
8:35 It's tragic that gender played a role. I'll never understand why people act like gender matters. IMHO, there is nothing more attractive than a strong woman of science. Hats off.
Thanks Tibees!
Another great video and most importantly great message!❤
Lovely video as usual. I love your calm style and "slow" pace, giving the stuff time to sink in!
1 of Nash's 2 citations is to the main textbook in the field. The other is to his own 1 page paper published earlier that year.
Your voice is so soothing!!! You're literally so pretty, I'm stressing about my finals but your voice just made me happy somehow.
I like your reflection towards the end on the idea that breakthroughs also have the element of luck " Right topic,right time and right person to seize the opportunity".
This is a fascinating collection. Thank you for providing it in an easy to digest format.
As one who took the scenic route through higher ed (and not in anything science-y), it's impressive what was accomplished at a young age.
I loved reading how Jocelyn Bell Burnell discovered pulsars!
As a graduate student many years ago I met Jocelyn Bell Burnell and she was very kind and generous with her time. Thanks for the video Tibees
This video made me cry. Thank you for adding to my love for learning.
Already, the Tibees Award (also known as a ‘Toby’) is more prestigious than the Nobel Prize, because she puts the paper and scientist in their correct field!
A slip of the tounge. The Curies and Becherel were awarded the Nobel prize for Physics, not Chemistry. Of course Marie Curie also got a Nobel in Chemistry later, as you say (the only person to win two scientific Nobel prizes in different sciences).
Of course it was the woman that was questioned, and not the man who had doodles and difficult to read work! And I had never even heard of her! Thanks for bringing this to me!
Wonderful stuff. Did my PhD at Cambridge. Now enjoying obscurity
Thank you, Tibees. Your most riveting work yet. Thank you. And I agree: Luck is always a player.
It is encouraging to think that zillions of failures are essential contributions to final outcomes.
If, at first, you don't succeed, you won't try again if parachute jumping was your sport.
I really like the way you framed your conclusion. It’s somewhat poetic in a way.
@@Archital-_-l Thank you; your comment was very kind.
I'm so glad you talked about these world-impacting works in an easy to understand manner, but ever more grateful that you also introduced similar achievements by people who don't necessarily had the same academic situation as we are used to in the West. And also for the reminder at the end, that a recognition is part hard work, part luck.
Very good. Mentioning the survivorship bias could be emphasized even more! Thank, you, ma'am. :)
So good. Great work Noor and Sarah📌
And you too Tibees.
How about another group of 8 Nobel Prize Winners?
This is the first video of yours I have seen. It was excellent and so refreshing to hear such marvelous dictation from someone who sounds like they have spent significant time in Australia or NZ. I didn't know it was possible. I have some catching up on your work to do. luvs frum 'straya haha!
Please don't drop Skłodowska in her name, her descent was really important to her
In the movie, Nash imagined working as a code-breaker, but he was having hallucinations actually.
Another influential one in computer science was Roy Fielding's PhD thesis. His description of "representation state transfer" changed the trajectory of the entire industry. The vast majority of web sites and mobile apps communicate with their servers in a way that was influenced by his approach.
I love your voice so much. Every night I have to watch your videos just to fall asleep. My major was theoretical physics.
Thank you for washing up on my algorithmic shore. I already knew that Dirac and Shannon were quite awesome, but I was pleasantly shocked to also learn about Payne-Gaposchkin and Bell Burnell and their uphill struggles. Whatever your station in life, or in your field, have faith in your hard and earnest work.
I love your voice and content , what an incredible channel for likeminded peeps
I love this video ❤ It has shown me how small I am compared to such a world of wonders and has motivated me so much
I love Physics and wanna pursue it. I'm in absolute love with the subject. I'd love for you to make a video about why you studied Physics, what motivated you and how one might master the subject in a non-academic manner(for instance if an engineer wants to contribute to the world of physics or wanna have the same level of mastery of the subject as a phd student on that subject then what he or she might do). Have a nice day
Louis Victor Pierre Raymond, 7th Duc de Broglie - Nobel prize for his PhD thesis - In his 1924 PhD thesis, he postulated the wave nature of electrons and suggested that all matter has wave properties.
Jocelyn Bell Burnell's being overlooked by the Nobel committee was so notorious that Sir Fred Hoyle raised a stink about it on her behalf--which in some ways is better than a Nobel prize. Also Shannon's thesis is little more than a re-statement of a paper authored by Charles S. Peirce & his Student Allan P Marquand from 50 years earlier.
Wow!!! Thank You for the fun !! This so good !!!!
Another Ph.D. thesis that could qualify: "The Principle of Least Action in Quantum Mechanics" by Richard Feynman, which greatly informed the development of quantum electrodynamics.
Fantastic video Toby. Very interesting theses.
My old physics professor said he got a master's so he could be the dept head, but he refused to get his PhD. He referred to it as "piled higher and deeper."
2:32 Scrodinger looks like he's seen the exact fate of his cat and it's been haunting him ever since
you are one of my Favorite math Teachers, thanks.
has it ever happened that an award winning paper was written, and then years later proven wrong, and the awards had to be taken back?
No.
@@unclerat2131😂
The dude that invented lobotomies won a Nobel Prize, and it still hasn't been taken back.
It doesn't happen but that's mostly due to the fact that even when the discovery was proven wrong there's still a significant amount of truth in the papers so disproving parts of a concept doesn't reduce the whole.
Yuri Knorozov. He deciphered the Mayan writing system for his thesis.
I was expecting the amazing achievements of Louis de Broglie in his1924 PhD thesis, he postulated the wave nature of electrons and won the Nobel Prize.
Enjoying your fresh & original observations!
Insulin was discovered by a couple of medical students. (Also a couple of operative techniques).
Thank you thank you 🇱🇷🇮🇳🤠☕🧠🤖🇮🇳🧲🧲🧲💯
Great to know how these thesis have contributed to science and by extension to society.
Watson needs to address Rosalind Franklin and her contributions before he dies, the fact she was so unrecognized for decades of substantial contributions is an affront to achievement.
Tibees great video
I think it was despicable of Hewish to accept the Nobel prize for Bell’s work, which he rejected at first.
Why do they wait for sooo long to reward a paper, I understand they wait for tangible proof but I don’t always see the development
Claude E Shannon is one of the most forgotten of the great Geniusses, yet he was arguably one of the most important, for all of us. He belongs in the short list of great names like Alan Turing, Albert Einstein, John Nash, John von Neuman, etc. etc. What many people do not realise is that not only did Shannon lay the groundwork for modern computing theory, but he was also was the inventor of information theory and the modern mathematical concept of "information" (as a reduction in Entropy) as we use it nowadays.
This is one of my favourites, thanks for sharing
The thing I most took away from this video, was the amount of men who dismissed brilliant ideas just because they were from the mind of a woman..
Nah. That’s your unconscience bias.
Yes unfortunately some women are unacknowledged and unknown .
But science is ofcourse going to reflect the normal society.
Up until we improve the issues in the common society it won't be fixed that easily.
it's your ignorance. @@tinytim71301
In mathematics, the Phd thesis of Carl Gauss is considered as one of the most important results in the field and very impactful to further research. It was a proof that every non-constant single-variable polynomial with complex coefficients has at least one complex root.
21:25 You neglected to mention that even a whole class of particles is named after Bose: the bosons.
If you include Economics, Harry Markowitz wrote a 14 page thesis "Portfolio Selection" in 1952, which resulted in the 1990 Nobel Prize. William F. Sharpe shared the prize for his 1964 thesis "Captial Asset Prices: A theory of market equilibrium under conditions of risk."
Look up Bernhard Riemann if you really want to talk about the most dense PhD thesis ever published.
At my university this is the stuff you have to do to get a top mark (1st class- 74% or above) (half satirical half cynical)
Which university
22:42
“Who does this list exclude”
Is why I LOVE this woman. She realizes that science is very political and a privilege most do not have.
Notice how everyone on the list was either white, European or American (I think). While these people can have a blast working on circuits and AI, other places (that the countries these people come from helped destroy) are still recovering from genocides, colonizations, political unrest etc.
I’m very happy to see these students make it though and none of the things mentioned above are their faults.
beautiful and amazing video as always thank you!
Yaaaa new video from tibess
well done Tibees
Dirac's thesis is a work of the intuitionist and real mathematical physicist.
You look great and the lighting/setup looks really nice
I think you forgot to mention Brian Josephson PhD on Superconducting junction which underlies measurement of quantized magnetic field.
Hi, amazing video! One thing-as a Polish person, I need to stress how important it is to use Maria Skłodowska-Curie's full name. She kept her surname when she got married to Pierre, she named one of her discoveries after Poland (Polonium) as you said, and throughout her entire life, she was attached to her motherland, even though it wasn't on the map then. I think it’s only fair to use her full name.
Can you tell us more about the use of the Nash Equilibrium for robotic navigation? I’m intrigued (and baffled)
Nice info but you seem to say Curie won two Chemistry Nobels but actually she won one in physics and one in chemistry. Might be a slip.
I really really enjoyed this video!
Brilliant Toby. Thanks 🙏
it's a mundane point but it pleases me disproportionally that you say "theses" instead of "thesises", apart from being technically correct it sounds so much better
What? The plural is theses.
@@luciedonajova1518that is what the commenter agrees
Also Brian Josephson's work in his PhD later led him to win the Nobel prize in Physics. (Josephson's effect).
Just so you all you folks know, @Tibee does guided meditation videos for her patreon supporters. We're up to #2 now. And they're awesome (mathsy, sciencey, astronomy'y, multidimensional'y, universal'y).
So if youre wondering if you get anything out of patreon support, yep, you do. I got a bookmark, and now I get some amazing nearly-ASMR meditation videos, with her smooth sweet voice guiding you through a groovy calm-down and think/ don't-think session.
So, yeah. So worth it!
As a plant biotechnologist, I had great respect forShannon. Even though his PhD work isn't as luminary as his masters for computer science, it helps us in computing the population genetics analyses i.e., the Shannon Index.
Yes I’m so glad you mention Roslyn Franklin I read a lot about DNA and how they came to discover it understand it in Roslyn Franklin did x-ray crystallization and she died of cancer without being rewarded for her discovery not even offered to participate in the Nobel prize so sad she does need recognition I’ve been saying that for years God bless you for missing her name
1. You're so nice.
2. Who cares?
3. You're such a wonderful human being.
It is truly awe-inspiring that the academic/scientific work of a student/intellectual could create such a profound and profuse global ripple effect where all scientists both amateur and elite, are all now speaking heavily on scientific and mathematical concepts now, more than ever before, where even a television actor has thrown his hat in the ring of mathematics and science. I didn't watch your video, but I am convinced now that the quality of whatever scientific/mathematical information is written on those academic papers, must be beyond extraordinarily influential to have cause such a global reaction! 💯💯💯💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
As a retired bricklayer, I shall not be writing a thesis. However, I am working on color selection for fishing lures at certain times of the day.
One area where student research is invaluable is in eliminating theories that turn out to be wrong.
Thanks for a great video 👍👍👍👍
Thank you so much!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! P. Erika
Hey, I just noticed that the paper at 4:16 had the stamp of the Indian Institute of Astrophysics. How was Dr. Payne related to the IIA?
I think the stamp is there because the example pictured was in the IIA library.
Seriously ❤ Tibees !
Put this on while going to sleep, magical
Awesome video, more Inspiration 🎉