When doing mathematics, you don't just look at a wall, while sitting alone in a room. There are times when you also bang your head against it. But then you go for a walk on your own without music, observe nature, then come back and sit down again. Alone looking at the wall. And you finally find your way through the problem. That's how one mathematically grows
I've realized recently how distracting my world is - clutter, electronic and human interruptions. I'm not sure how I would react to a clean room with a math book, a desk, a chair, a pencil and paper, and no electronics.
And if anyone wants the original in French and not google it, voilà: "Tout le malheur des hommes vient d'une seule chose, qui est de ne pas savoir demeurer en repos, dans une chambre."
Covid spurred my continuing math education. It taught me to use and relish solitude. I had an old Algebra 1 textbook. I worked every problem in it -- and kept going. I'm working at Calculus 2 now.
I am doing algebra 1 now and you have inspired me to continue. Did you do algebra 2 and calculus 1. Would you mind sharing your progression so I can maybe learn from it?
@@TempoAbe-c6z Yes. I did Algebra 2 AND Pre Calculus before tackling Calculus 1. There are NO shortcuts. I am a 3 a.m. bookworm, two hours every day. I recommend you claim math as your hobby. I often draw a parallel with my wife, who does crossword puzzles. These are my number puzzles. 😎
Thanks so much I plan to do the same. If you get time could you share which textbooks you used on your journey. Otherwise best of luck to you. I plan on doing discrete math after calculus but maybe you plan on doing physics or something.
Reminds me of a quote from Albert Camus "The Absurd rises out of two contrasting stances:-The human need for meaning and the apparent meaningless of the universe"
My favorite quote from Pascal (well I think he said this) is "The heart has its reasons, which reason does not know." He was a man who loved to think, whether it was doing math or philosophizing. But he realized not only that emotions and feelings gave meaning to what we discover through reason, but that some things lie completely beyond our powers of thinking--and lie only in the heart. Which are those things? Maybe it takes sitting quietly in a room to find out.
My tips for learning math: 1) Be consistent. You have to have a good reason not to learn math. Every art needs consistency, including the art of learning. 2)Use your tools. You must be able to do math with pen and paper. But you should also be able to use a CAS efficiently.
I sometimes do math when I'm out walking. It's not easy to do math without pen and paper, but it's a fun exercise. When I get home I reach for a notebook, and then I correct all the mistakes I made in my head. It's a humbling experience.
I love this concept or philosophy, not because I support that, but because I tried this myself (in reality, everyone tried without noticing) and by being "bored" you're able to know yourself more, get in touch with your thoughts and big ideas come in this state of mind, even though doing math maybe is not the same as what I'm talking about, I really found a similarity between these two. I really enjoyed hearing you and sharing it! Great content great channel great person. ❤
actually indians have known this since 1500+ bce. They have a book called "The Upanishads" which talks about how to obtain a better knowledge of oneself that revolves around meditation. It's really more about controlling your mind and being able to slow it down enough to individually see each thought and process through it. allowing one to increase their ability to concentrate and focus on an individual thought, idea or action for longer. greeks also were approaching this till socratic thinking was the major philosophy, though, i believe the stoics stoics were the closest western civilization that had the same ideas or close to it.
True, in Hinduism and other indic religions(most popular among the westerners being Buddhism), the utmost priority of saints, rishis is to meditate, as long as they possibly can, breaking the limits of the human body which craves stimuli at all times. Many a times through this, they are able to achieve higher levels of thinking. People normally like to pass it off as superstition or myth, but I have seen priests break what is humanly possible by meditating alone for days without food, which requires a level of concentration which I can't even imagine. Math is the closest thing there is to this sort of a tradition, for rather than just using your mind, you have paper to visualize even more creatively, your thoughts.
Hi math sorcerer, one of marcus aurelius's ideas is that the mind can serve as a refuge where you can access an internal calm while other things may be happening externally (less expensive than a beach vacation). I think a great analogy is crate training with dogs. I don't want to describe the crate training process here but I have seen a dog be able to change how it sees its kennel as a place where it is confined to a place where goes willingly and often
Please be mindful, in 2021, 3,522 people were killed in motor vehicle crashes involving distracted drivers, representing 8% of all traffic fatalities just in the U.S.A. Please be careful, driving is one of the most dangerous activities people do, and the statistics reflect that. When you do something like miss a turn, you should see it as a warning . . . . be safe! Former truck driver here . . . . getting careless can be fatal.
yeah but america made the first car with a cup holder. other countries were outraged because they said driving a serious you shouldn’t be casually dining while driving. i think being distracted while driving is a part of the American culture tbh
In Psalms it is written "be still and know that I am God". I've always thought that what that verse was trying to convey was that we can only reach our highest potential, our highest consciousness when we "sit quietly alone in a room" and focus on pure things with complete focus. What's more pure in our reality than mathematics!? It truly is the language of "God". The language that underlies everything. It is a path to our highest self.
to me, doing math is very much like creating art and surfing... yes surfing... you have to find your muse and catch the wave of inspiration to make the most out of it...
It's all their habit. Some people hesitate to sit alone and study. Others, like to sit alone and study as they don't like any kind of disturbance. But being a professional, you need to balance it.
I think that it’s necessary to be capable of both profound stability in isolation and shameless breadth of connection with the very world of fomentation we substantiate.
Sir, your fan from India. I appreciate ur work towards bringing human minds back to it's fundamental essence and their greatest achievement i e. Mathematics. Would appreciate if u could make a video on indian Mathematician Ramanujan, his works and his achievements. Even As Indians we only have a faint idea about his mathematical achievements.
I'm not sure if all of humanity's problems come from that, but it's a good skill to have. I think most people who love math are able to do that, almost by definition, since that's kind of what learning math requires. A related question is, what percentage of mathematicians (or people who love math generally) are introverts?
We would be much better off if we could sit quietly. I am taking a one day digital vacation this week. I think this will give me a reset for the day after vacation to be alone with my thoughts, textbook, pen and paper.
a tip for people: just study one whole day in your room to prove to yourself that you can do it. lock yourself in, throw your phone out. After this, you know you can do it and the next time its gonna be less hard.
My interpretation of Pascal’s phrase is that people keep themselves too busy and distracted all the time. Just sitting and doing nothing makes us uncomfortable. (Scrolling shit on your phone is doing something, even if it’s not useful.) The people who have the presence of mind to just stop and examine their inner world for a while are more likely to be happy as well, I think.
I think he means Blaise Pascal. Trying to remember. There's something in math and I think its called Pascal's triangle. Numbers are arranged on it in shape of a triangle.
I think that his quote adresses to the Humanity. We are always drove by ennui to commit useless acts sometimes. We sometimes act against our interest by pure boredom. So this fundamental quote is stating that we shall just lay and rest in a room instead of doing all this purposeless stuff. The meaning of life in itself.
Sometimes, when a mathematician toils quietly in his room, the sound that you mentioned, the sound of a pencil scratching away on paper becomes a 'divine' whisper. How else can we account for the provenance of such ideas?
Sounds like Pascal was thinking about meditation. Perhaps breath counting meditation could be used as a way to prepare for a math study session. Many people who work on their own, writers and visual artists, use warm-up sessions prior to doing creative work. Writers will keep a journal, do timed daily writing sessions, or write to a prompt. Artists will do sketches or color studies. What do you think Mr. Math Sorcerer? Are you willing to do a meditation session prior to doing a math study session? Report back to us if you think it is helpful?
It could be reading and other things. Also old people tend to just sit in a chair alone looking at their sorroundings. They start at morning till the sun dies. It kinda crazy how they just sit there all day
Sitting quietly in a room is a good habit. A good way to study Mathematics. A good way to seek out God. I just discovered your channel few minutes ago.
What about Rokos Basilisk? One one hand we have "Don't Use Science and Eat the Fruit of Knowledge or you will go to Hell" and on the other hand its "Contribute to Science or i Torture you, Motivating you to Build Me"
i find it interesting that nearly-if not actually-all the great mathematicians and scientists of yesteryear were also at least amateur philosophers, and-conversely-that there haven't been any ground-breaking, paradigm-shifting developments in science since it became trendy for scientists to, at best, ignore philosophy. i'm not saying what i haven't explicitly said here, just noting an interesting double-sided correlation.
hi, my name is Mohammad and i am 25 years old living in Norway. i did take a math and physics cours, last year. but i fail. my education background is not strong. especially in science. and now i am doing it on my on to retak it and hopefully pass the courses to get a degree from uni. thank u
Same bro I'm not good at science. But I'm doing a math & science degree.... But I love classical mechanics and thermodynamics of physics. I couldn't understand physics properly. I love doing mathematics but social media distracted me .. I have no focus & concentration.... Screen time is long and the study😢 time is 0 %
Yes, this is pretty much the case, and the “mobile device” has made it much worse. It rewires our brains and shortens our already limited attention spans. On the other hand, the mobile device has opened up an unprecedented portal to knowledge for anyone who wants to learn about ANYTHING. You just have to have the discipline to eschew the distractions. One of the most despised habits is that of “discipline,” or rational control of one’s behavior. If we took more time to think, we would make fewer bad choices in our lives. Discipline is the mortal enemy of the “consumer” economy built on 3-seconds sound bites and continuous video assaults that moulds people into mindless puppets.
I'm understanding algorithms and a lot of math come from India. India has solved some of the deepest problems, socially and science wise. But my depression of humanity intolerance for combination and collective Commons to accelerate, obedience in an expression on planned obsolescence with respect to religion and humor, concerning evolution and beauty or humor out living a social or civic integrity, but the anger and Melrose people want to remain is also frustrating. Hello to no idea of why we are here, and goodbye to a coveting for illusion and religion to meet a sexual expectation or repression. Arithmetic, science, Athletics and romance are more tolerable without humor, which would be useful for apology and only in the more preconceived violations or attacks on comprehension that would leave room for useless affiliation, where understanding privacy and severity of psychological assumption that reduces behavioral obedience or commitment to comfort for all people with a need for humor out aggression. Policy of life, not politics and control. Mutually exclusive. But as much as I love probability, physics based on algebra and geometry is more serious
It's a missed turn. I'd rather have a video from the Sorcerer. If he was on a call the only difference would be that you can't see his face and you wouldn't have thousands of people trying to judge him on it. At least he's doing that with consent. That's an improvement on some of these situations.
I hold the opinion the the cause of mans unhappiness is of genetic recombination. Perhaps a level of depression is involved in many cases but not necessarily.
A man who has mastered the ability to sit quietly in his room is capable of doing great things. It is a man who has remembered that he is universal consciousness (which is the ultimate intelligence)
haha should have asked terence tao and marilyn von savant for modern advice , since no one on earth could be smarter than them , this holds even for math sorcerer XDDDDDDDDDDDDD sry but i am just speaking of truth BYEEEEEEE~ nice video btw , go on dude ~
There is a great untold merit to generalism, and a whole tao revolving around the way of the generalist, those jacks of all trades. I'm more of a research wizard myself, though I have delved into some of the hard sciences. Namely electrical engineering & computer science. It's not that I am against mathematics, nor in denial of its utility, but there are other paths to utility which may be just as fruitful, if not more. One day when I have the time & inclination, I may do a deep dive ( back ) into mathematics. PS: Lets see your Wizard's hat. And your finest wizard's book, in the next video. It's important to have fun.
Poor proto-statistician Pascal. If only he had been familiar with modern personality theories, he would've known that, although not the most common orientation in the world, a significant percentage of the population Natura thrives on quiet thoughtful introspection. Perhaps such knowledge would've induced him to search elsewhere for humanity's biggest source of woe
"I missed my turn."
- Blaise Pascal
LOL xD
nice one
When doing mathematics, you don't just look at a wall, while sitting alone in a room. There are times when you also bang your head against it. But then you go for a walk on your own without music, observe nature, then come back and sit down again. Alone looking at the wall. And you finally find your way through the problem. That's how one mathematically grows
“All of humanity's problems, stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone.” - Blaise Pascal
I've realized recently how distracting my world is - clutter, electronic and human interruptions. I'm not sure how I would react to a clean room with a math book, a desk, a chair, a pencil and paper, and no electronics.
21 hrs ago? The video was released like 15 mins back...
@@steelinyt5516 Members first
He is taking of meditation here
And if anyone wants the original in French and not google it, voilà: "Tout le malheur des hommes vient d'une seule chose, qui est de ne pas savoir demeurer en repos, dans une chambre."
Covid spurred my continuing math education. It taught me to use and relish solitude. I had an old Algebra 1 textbook. I worked every problem in it -- and kept going. I'm working at Calculus 2 now.
I am doing algebra 1 now and you have inspired me to continue. Did you do algebra 2 and calculus 1. Would you mind sharing your progression so I can maybe learn from it?
@@TempoAbe-c6z Yes. I did Algebra 2 AND Pre Calculus before tackling Calculus 1. There are NO shortcuts. I am a 3 a.m. bookworm, two hours every day. I recommend you claim math as your hobby. I often draw a parallel with my wife, who does crossword puzzles. These are my number puzzles. 😎
Thanks so much I plan to do the same.
If you get time could you share which textbooks you used on your journey.
Otherwise best of luck to you. I plan on doing discrete math after calculus but maybe you plan on doing physics or something.
Keep it up , great job 👍
Reminds me of a quote from Albert Camus
"The Absurd rises out of two contrasting stances:-The human need for meaning and the apparent meaningless of the universe"
My favorite quote from Pascal (well I think he said this) is "The heart has its reasons, which reason does not know." He was a man who loved to think, whether it was doing math or philosophizing. But he realized not only that emotions and feelings gave meaning to what we discover through reason, but that some things lie completely beyond our powers of thinking--and lie only in the heart. Which are those things? Maybe it takes sitting quietly in a room to find out.
I love your channel. Thank you for bringing high quality educational content to us. Pascal was one smart guy!
My tips for learning math:
1) Be consistent.
You have to have a good reason not to learn math. Every art needs consistency, including the art of learning.
2)Use your tools.
You must be able to do math with pen and paper. But you should also be able to use a CAS efficiently.
I sometimes do math when I'm out walking. It's not easy to do math without pen and paper, but it's a fun exercise. When I get home I reach for a notebook, and then I correct all the mistakes I made in my head. It's a humbling experience.
I love this concept or philosophy, not because I support that, but because I tried this myself (in reality, everyone tried without noticing) and by being "bored" you're able to know yourself more, get in touch with your thoughts and big ideas come in this state of mind, even though doing math maybe is not the same as what I'm talking about, I really found a similarity between these two. I really enjoyed hearing you and sharing it! Great content great channel great person. ❤
You will enjoy reading "When Einstein Walked with Gödel" by Jim Holt,
essays on mathematics, philosophy, and physics.
actually indians have known this since 1500+ bce. They have a book called "The Upanishads" which talks about how to obtain a better knowledge of oneself that revolves around meditation. It's really more about controlling your mind and being able to slow it down enough to individually see each thought and process through it. allowing one to increase their ability to concentrate and focus on an individual thought, idea or action for longer. greeks also were approaching this till socratic thinking was the major philosophy, though, i believe the stoics stoics were the closest western civilization that had the same ideas or close to it.
True, in Hinduism and other indic religions(most popular among the westerners being Buddhism), the utmost priority of saints, rishis is to meditate, as long as they possibly can, breaking the limits of the human body which craves stimuli at all times. Many a times through this, they are able to achieve higher levels of thinking.
People normally like to pass it off as superstition or myth, but I have seen priests break what is humanly possible by meditating alone for days without food, which requires a level of concentration which I can't even imagine. Math is the closest thing there is to this sort of a tradition, for rather than just using your mind, you have paper to visualize even more creatively, your thoughts.
What happened to Indians
Hi math sorcerer, one of marcus aurelius's ideas is that the mind can serve as a refuge where you can access an internal calm while other things may be happening externally (less expensive than a beach vacation). I think a great analogy is crate training with dogs. I don't want to describe the crate training process here but I have seen a dog be able to change how it sees its kennel as a place where it is confined to a place where goes willingly and often
Please be mindful, in 2021, 3,522 people were killed in motor vehicle crashes involving distracted drivers, representing 8% of all traffic fatalities just in the U.S.A. Please be careful, driving is one of the most dangerous activities people do, and the statistics reflect that. When you do something like miss a turn, you should see it as a warning . . . . be safe! Former truck driver here . . . . getting careless can be fatal.
"complacency kills"
yeah but america made the first car with a cup holder. other countries were outraged because they said driving a serious you shouldn’t be casually dining while driving. i think being distracted while driving is a part of the American culture tbh
Yeah but making money with youTube videos is always a priority.
In Psalms it is written "be still and know that I am God".
I've always thought that what that verse was trying to convey was that we can only reach our highest potential, our highest consciousness when we "sit quietly alone in a room" and focus on pure things with complete focus.
What's more pure in our reality than mathematics!? It truly is the language of "God". The language that underlies everything. It is a path to our highest self.
most good ideas has come during walks abd discussions. not when sitting lonely...
to me, doing math is very much like creating art and surfing... yes surfing... you have to find your muse and catch the wave of inspiration to make the most out of it...
Yes and yes!
There is a lot of truth to that quote. I wish we had a lot more mathematicians in this country and the whole world.
It's all their habit. Some people hesitate to sit alone and study. Others, like to sit alone and study as they don't like any kind of disturbance. But being a professional, you need to balance it.
I think that it’s necessary to be capable of both profound stability in isolation and shameless breadth of connection with the very world of fomentation we substantiate.
Sir, your fan from India. I appreciate ur work towards bringing human minds back to it's fundamental essence and their greatest achievement i e. Mathematics. Would appreciate if u could make a video on indian Mathematician Ramanujan, his works and his achievements. Even As Indians we only have a faint idea about his mathematical achievements.
Meditation is another thing required to be quiet by your self
I'm not sure if all of humanity's problems come from that, but it's a good skill to have. I think most people who love math are able to do that, almost by definition, since that's kind of what learning math requires. A related question is, what percentage of mathematicians (or people who love math generally) are introverts?
We would be much better off if we could sit quietly. I am taking a one day digital vacation this week. I think this will give me a reset for the day after vacation to be alone with my thoughts, textbook, pen and paper.
The voices inside my head drive me crazy if I sit quietly.
Thank you for this, you are a true role model for me!
Don't give one fuck and do math.
Those voices in your head will shine the light of imagination to imagine the right things and forget about this world just for sometime
math and calisthenics.
And chess!!
Was just thinking this . Calisthenics is huge
Rock Climbing
to me it sounds like it's referring to thought experiments, and the ability to focus on an idea in your head without distraction and stimulus
Pascal's quote is second only to " Hell is other people" (Sartre?) and "Solitude is the school of genius." (Gibbon)
a tip for people: just study one whole day in your room to prove to yourself that you can do it. lock yourself in, throw your phone out. After this, you know you can do it and the next time its gonna be less hard.
“That’s like far out dude”
Blaze Pascal
« Tout le malheur des hommes vient de ne savoir pas demeurer en repos, dans une chambre. » Blaise Pascal
My interpretation of Pascal’s phrase is that people keep themselves too busy and distracted all the time. Just sitting and doing nothing makes us uncomfortable. (Scrolling shit on your phone is doing something, even if it’s not useful.)
The people who have the presence of mind to just stop and examine their inner world for a while are more likely to be happy as well, I think.
Nice, I hear you changing those gears. Manuals are still going hard!
I think he means Blaise Pascal. Trying to remember. There's something in math and I think its called Pascal's triangle. Numbers are arranged on it in shape of a triangle.
It's a Concept that occurs in Combinatorics- in the domain of the subtopic Binomial Theorem and Binomial Expansions, I think.
@@chinmaybarje3915 thanks I'll get some math books on combinatorics
I think that his quote adresses to the Humanity. We are always drove by ennui to commit useless acts sometimes. We sometimes act against our interest by pure boredom. So this fundamental quote is stating that we shall just lay and rest in a room instead of doing all this purposeless stuff. The meaning of life in itself.
Sometimes, when a mathematician toils quietly in his room, the sound that you mentioned, the sound of a pencil scratching away on paper becomes a 'divine' whisper. How else can we account for the provenance of such ideas?
Sounds like Pascal was thinking about meditation. Perhaps breath counting meditation could be used as a way to prepare for a math study session. Many people who work on their own, writers and visual artists, use warm-up sessions prior to doing creative work. Writers will keep a journal, do timed daily writing sessions, or write to a prompt. Artists will do sketches or color studies. What do you think Mr. Math Sorcerer? Are you willing to do a meditation session prior to doing a math study session? Report back to us if you think it is helpful?
“I have discovered that all human evil comes from this, man's being unable to sit still in a room.”
Blaise Pascal
"I just read a TH-cam comment quoting me". - Blaise Pascal
good for u, but maybe you should share it with you friends.
Pascal known best for the physics unit-; he was a child prodigy
nice quote. I think quite true
He's referring to meditation; which is sitting alone with eye closed in a quiet room.
Sitting in silence.
what a luxury no stalkers disrupting
It could be reading and other things. Also old people tend to just sit in a chair alone looking at their sorroundings. They start at morning till the sun dies. It kinda crazy how they just sit there all day
silence is absolute and Satanic decisions sometimes not worth it ie con sequence
Sitting quietly in a room is a good habit. A good way to study Mathematics. A good way to seek out God. I just discovered your channel few minutes ago.
Pascal Wager is one of the best counter against atheism
What about Rokos Basilisk? One one hand we have "Don't Use Science and Eat the Fruit of Knowledge or you will go to Hell" and on the other hand its "Contribute to Science or i Torture you, Motivating you to Build Me"
It lacks an appealing conviction. I never found it very convincing.
i find it interesting that nearly-if not actually-all the great mathematicians and scientists of yesteryear were also at least amateur philosophers, and-conversely-that there haven't been any ground-breaking, paradigm-shifting developments in science since it became trendy for scientists to, at best, ignore philosophy.
i'm not saying what i haven't explicitly said here, just noting an interesting double-sided correlation.
Armenian mathematician Emil Artin founded modern algebra
Armenian programmer Avie Tevanian created macOS
show me your secrets sourcer. I am grateful
If a person is not motivated to actually do math problems then the next best thing is to just read math books and watch videos about math.
hi, my name is Mohammad and i am 25 years old living in Norway. i did take a math and physics cours, last year. but i fail. my education background is not strong. especially in science. and now i am doing it on my on to retak it and hopefully pass the courses to get a degree from uni. thank u
Same bro I'm not good at science. But I'm doing a math & science degree.... But I love classical mechanics and thermodynamics of physics. I couldn't understand physics properly.
I love doing mathematics but social media distracted me .. I have no focus & concentration.... Screen time is long and the study😢 time is 0 %
Correct me if I’m wrong but he was the one who discovered Binomial Expansion.
It's not called the Pascal's triangle for nothing...
@@PedroCristian just realised this when you mentioned it’s been a while since I’ve visited that chapter. Thanks for reminding me
It's hard to focus in a quiet room in our era. There are so many distractions.
intuitively tried to click on the hang up button. What does that say about me?
In a group is great, but most time should be spent alone doing the math.
Blaise never met Buddhist monks
If I ever have a son, his name will be Blaze.
Good lord.
Its related to math, as its related to everything
Pascal also invented a great primer computer language named after himself 🤪
Yes, this is pretty much the case, and the “mobile device” has made it much worse. It rewires our brains and shortens our already limited attention spans.
On the other hand, the mobile device has opened up an unprecedented portal to knowledge for anyone who wants to learn about ANYTHING. You just have to have the discipline to eschew the distractions.
One of the most despised habits is that of “discipline,” or rational control of one’s behavior. If we took more time to think, we would make fewer bad choices in our lives.
Discipline is the mortal enemy of the “consumer” economy built on 3-seconds sound bites and continuous video assaults that moulds people into mindless puppets.
Sitting in a room alone seemingly doing nothing, programming is like that.
When are you going to turn around?
It reroutes.
Blaze Pascal is a great rapper name
I'm understanding algorithms and a lot of math come from India. India has solved some of the deepest problems, socially and science wise. But my depression of humanity intolerance for combination and collective Commons to accelerate, obedience in an expression on planned obsolescence with respect to religion and humor, concerning evolution and beauty or humor out living a social or civic integrity, but the anger and Melrose people want to remain is also frustrating. Hello to no idea of why we are here, and goodbye to a coveting for illusion and religion to meet a sexual expectation or repression. Arithmetic, science, Athletics and romance are more tolerable without humor, which would be useful for apology and only in the more preconceived violations or attacks on comprehension that would leave room for useless affiliation, where understanding privacy and severity of psychological assumption that reduces behavioral obedience or commitment to comfort for all people with a need for humor out aggression. Policy of life, not politics and control. Mutually exclusive. But as much as I love probability, physics based on algebra and geometry is more serious
You missed your turn because multitasking is not really possible.
It's a missed turn. I'd rather have a video from the Sorcerer. If he was on a call the only difference would be that you can't see his face and you wouldn't have thousands of people trying to judge him on it. At least he's doing that with consent. That's an improvement on some of these situations.
This video gives me anxiety. Just drive, man! :P
Then get out of his car. You are the anxiety in the room
I hold the opinion the the cause of mans unhappiness is of genetic recombination.
Perhaps a level of depression is involved in many cases but not necessarily.
says a man talking into a phone while driving a vehicle :)
did he claim to perfect this idea?
It's because by doing too much in the world , man makes problems
Take on a French mind to understand their spelling. I don't think the bourgeois is responsible.
Bro is on a mission to find some mathematical genius who isn't even aware of his own potential
A man who has mastered the ability to sit quietly in his room is capable of doing great things. It is a man who has remembered that he is universal consciousness (which is the ultimate intelligence)
111
"Don't underestimate how pathetic people can be." - Blaise Pascal
haha should have asked terence tao and marilyn von savant for modern advice , since no one on earth could be smarter than them , this holds even for math sorcerer XDDDDDDDDDDDDD
sry but i am just speaking of truth
BYEEEEEEE~
nice video btw , go on dude ~
So, extroverts are the cause of all of humanity's problems?
There is a great untold merit to generalism, and a whole tao revolving around the way of the generalist, those jacks of all trades.
I'm more of a research wizard myself, though I have delved into some of the hard sciences. Namely electrical engineering & computer science.
It's not that I am against mathematics, nor in denial of its utility, but there are other paths to utility which may be just as fruitful, if not more.
One day when I have the time & inclination, I may do a deep dive ( back ) into mathematics.
PS: Lets see your Wizard's hat. And your finest wizard's book, in the next video. It's important to have fun.
I would also like to request a wizard's hat.
@@alexandrianova6298 It's unanimous then.
Poor proto-statistician Pascal. If only he had been familiar with modern personality theories, he would've known that, although not the most common orientation in the world, a significant percentage of the population Natura thrives on quiet thoughtful introspection. Perhaps such knowledge would've induced him to search elsewhere for humanity's biggest source of woe
I don’t think your time is so valuable that you need to be filming content while you’re driving and endangering yourself and other drivers.
No it was Blaise Pascal/s mom that told him that. Free baby sitter.
"Too Much Information" ~ The Police (1981)
th-cam.com/video/W0q3Vh1Yr9Q/w-d-xo.html
The hectic world has been around us for a long time.
"You need intensive inpatient help" - the police's police