Terence Tao – Kepler, Newton, and the true nature of mathematical discovery
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Top Comments (10)
He needs no introduction, and doesn't get one ❤
Tao seemed clearly uncomfortable with the way you described Kepler as if he were simply “trying random things.” That makes Kepler sound arbitrary or careless, which is misleading. Before he had the decisive observational data, Kepler was already working within a serious mathematical and astronomical project: he was trying to uncover an underlying order in planetary motion. His early ideas were speculative, but they were not random. What made his work decisive was that, once confronted with precise observations, he kept revising those models until they matched the data.
Time to cancel the Friday plans I didn’t have!
Im so triggered by this video not being one second longer.
"Does AI help you with math?" "Not really" "But AI, does it help you with math?" "Maybe for making documents and reports" "Aha! So AI does help you, what an amazing time!" "But not really with math" "What a cool AI!"
To see someone at the top of their game be so kind and humble is a beautiful thing.
this video is the reason why youtube lets you reduce playing speed by 0.8x
Finally someone with an Erdos Number equal to the total number of braincells in my head
1:07:31 “… we don’t have enough data on how math or science develops. We have one timeline of history, and we have maybe 100 turning points in this timeline. If we had access to a million alien civilizations, each with a different development of history and science in different orders, then maybe we’d actually have a decent shot at understanding how we measure what progress is and what’s a good strategy.” The most mind-bending premise of a speculative sci-fi story I have heard in a while.
Terrance and 3Blue1Brown have incredible videos on the Cosmic Distance Ladder, and Kepler's contribution. Marvel after marvel.
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Top Comments (10)
He needs no introduction, and doesn't get one ❤
Tao seemed clearly uncomfortable with the way you described Kepler as if he were simply “trying random things.” That makes Kepler sound arbitrary or careless, which is misleading. Before he had the decisive observational data, Kepler was already working within a serious mathematical and astronomical project: he was trying to uncover an underlying order in planetary motion. His early ideas were speculative, but they were not random. What made his work decisive was that, once confronted with precise observations, he kept revising those models until they matched the data.
Time to cancel the Friday plans I didn’t have!
Im so triggered by this video not being one second longer.
"Does AI help you with math?" "Not really" "But AI, does it help you with math?" "Maybe for making documents and reports" "Aha! So AI does help you, what an amazing time!" "But not really with math" "What a cool AI!"
To see someone at the top of their game be so kind and humble is a beautiful thing.
this video is the reason why youtube lets you reduce playing speed by 0.8x
Finally someone with an Erdos Number equal to the total number of braincells in my head
1:07:31 “… we don’t have enough data on how math or science develops. We have one timeline of history, and we have maybe 100 turning points in this timeline. If we had access to a million alien civilizations, each with a different development of history and science in different orders, then maybe we’d actually have a decent shot at understanding how we measure what progress is and what’s a good strategy.” The most mind-bending premise of a speculative sci-fi story I have heard in a while.
Terrance and 3Blue1Brown have incredible videos on the Cosmic Distance Ladder, and Kepler's contribution. Marvel after marvel.