It must be a wonderfully rare opportunity, both to the audience and to Wiles, to give a lecture in the very building named after him. What a legend
@ivanalejandrocamarillo8264 Жыл бұрын
Si, un gran matemático en verdad
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@sambasivanganesan8595 Жыл бұрын
One of the greatest mathematicians today. It is a real honour to listen to him. It would be really amazing if more of his talks are made available on KZbin 🙏🙏🙏🙏
@mattikemppinen6750 Жыл бұрын
What an awesome way to kick off the day by having a big cup of coffee and listening to the words of the great Professor Wiles before heading to my analysis lectures. Thank you!
@aaabbb-py5xd Жыл бұрын
Ah lectures, the thing I never needed to go to
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@MattHudsonAtx11 ай бұрын
I'm enjoying Wiles on Langlands with tea before a day of tuning databases
@aaabbb-py5xd11 ай бұрын
@@MattHudsonAtx All you really wanted to say was that you're the database janitor, lol, and you wanted somebody else to lend you credibility and gravitas, so you began with name dropping
@MattHudsonAtx10 ай бұрын
@@aaabbb-py5xd You really need to work on your cut-downs. That didn't even disappoint me.
@kurtomom Жыл бұрын
There is something in this man which really resonates within me.
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@reimannx3310 ай бұрын
Slow down there. He is a married man :)
@GordonBrevity6 ай бұрын
There is something about your comment that really shows me you want to harmonically oscillate within Wiles.
@HyperFocusMarshmallow Жыл бұрын
Nice, light talk. Video is generally very good. A minor note to the editor. Between 23:40 and 29:30 the slide is never shown. I don't think it changes during that time so to see it one can just pop back. It's also quite nice to see the lecturer. But it would probably be nice to show it slightly more often. No need to change anything. But maybe keep it in mind for future videos if it's not too big of a hassle.
@CuriousCyclist11 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks for recording and uploading this lecture.
@bnominato10 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing! Anyone know more about the abelian equations that he had mentioned in the lecture ? I’ve learned about abelian groups, but I would like know more about them.
@OmateYayami10 ай бұрын
Layman's question. Sorry for being impudent. Is this Alex Ferguson of maths to be present at his eponymous stand? Sry for bad Englando, not my 1st language.
@juanvera79228 ай бұрын
I wonder about this equation. Finding out the value of x ? in the equation : Sin x= Cos 4x
@spiderjerusalem4009 Жыл бұрын
Long live andrew wiles
@mehdipascal250 Жыл бұрын
Pardon d'écrire ça en français. Plusieurs pensent que la théorie de Galois ne peut plus justifier le théorème de Fermat, ils ont tort, car par exemple l'équation suivante est soluble par entiers non nuls, "a^6+b^6+c^6+d^6+e^6+f^6=u^6+v^6+w^6+x^6+y^6" en trouve facilement des solutions, en revanche l'équation,"a^6+b^6+c^6=u^6+v^6", est non soluble, et il n'y a que la théorie de Galois qui peut le justifier.❤
@peterboneg Жыл бұрын
Nice talk, although I feel like he started off talking to people with little knowledge of mathematics and finished by using terminology that only experts would understand.
@justin9571 Жыл бұрын
Isn't that the best possible scenario - gives each audience member biggest contiguous block of time of lecture material they understand before they have to tap out
@halneufmille Жыл бұрын
Following tradition, 1/3 of a math lecture is for general audiences, 1/3 is for colleagues, 1/3 is for the speaker himself.
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@millerl0l712 ай бұрын
i love andrew wiles
@waslajauharmaths11 ай бұрын
Where can i find the slide pdf of this lecture?
@poetlaureate73348 ай бұрын
I keep thinking im understanding what hes saying and then feel so good about myself and then a second later realise it just felt good to follow the sentences hes saying and i dont know what he means. Id like to see him and gregori pearlman have a math fight with their skills like some star wars movie where the knights take out their light sabres only their light sabres will be their math skills. Now, back to albanian equations...why not bulgarian or romanian? Okay lets get back to listening.
@SanderBessels4 ай бұрын
Abelian, named after Abel. Not Albanian.
@angelamusiema11 ай бұрын
Va bè! Lasciamo perdere ,qui direttamente hanno scoperto il Panteon! Che stelle che brillano!
@joeseppe139811 ай бұрын
what is the program that he uses for creating presentations ?
@gustaf280711 ай бұрын
That's very clearly just the beamer package in LaTeX
@edernollivier11 ай бұрын
Andrew Wiles forgot the Riemann's hypothesis.
@superman0000111 ай бұрын
I have a wonderful solution to quintic (and any higher order) equations, but it’s too long to write here.
@CaesarsSalad11 ай бұрын
literally true for the quartic
@artemetra326211 ай бұрын
nice reference there
@sajadahmadrather6464 Жыл бұрын
Awesome.
@InshushaGroupie11 ай бұрын
I'm still getting over the fact that ANDREW WILES did a speech.
@beeble200311 ай бұрын
Why? Academics give talks all the time.
@InshushaGroupie11 ай бұрын
Wiles is famously reclusive.@@beeble2003
@MrMusicM67 Жыл бұрын
Genius
@High_Priest_Jonko11 ай бұрын
What a fucking badass
@kaushal_kumar2422 Жыл бұрын
❤
@hoareg2 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful talk but please next time focus on the slides
@Aquillyne Жыл бұрын
Yeah rather than a sea of balding male heads.
@High_Priest_Jonko11 ай бұрын
Lmao@@Aquillyne
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻👌🏻
@kevinleeds97911 ай бұрын
@@Aquillyne it's only 8 or 9 out of 22 but the world's oceans have 10^31 molecules about
@svenmansfeld7 ай бұрын
Believe nothing that you can't understand 100%!
@SphereofTime11 ай бұрын
0:35
@javedkhan102469 ай бұрын
Respected sir, I am from Balochistan the province of Pakistan. Sir I really quite interested in Mathematics. I need Maths scholarship. Please! Help me. I am poor.
@tokajileo5928 Жыл бұрын
the mayans used 0 way before europeans
@sandyjr5225 Жыл бұрын
It's popularly said that Indians invented zero (however let's not start a war in this comment section).
@ivanalejandrocamarillo8264 Жыл бұрын
Yes, just as negative numbers weren't invented by middle age europeans but he meant the first time they were used for pure math proposes
@2sljmath11 ай бұрын
👌🏻
@SadSocks11 ай бұрын
And look what happened to them
@chenardpierre82707 ай бұрын
This debate is sterile. Solving the 3rd degree equation has been achieved in Europe, though Arabic mathematicians have searched for a solution for centuries. Calculus has been invented in Europe, not by Japanese or Indians. This is the iron law of history.
@erikeriknorman Жыл бұрын
The current problem in academia is the hubris of the older generations.
@dissent9959 Жыл бұрын
Interesting assertion. Evidence?
@erikeriknorman Жыл бұрын
@@dissent9959 Current academics in Pure Mathematics and Theoretical Physics bottleneck potential theories through the very unscientific process of "peer review" rather than physics simulations. Why should a professor without any remarkable simulations decide what theory is successful or not? Peer review is relevant in applied Mathematics and engineering ofc, but much less in areas like Computer Science.
@nope11011 ай бұрын
@@erikeriknormanwhat are you talking about? How could you use a physics simulation to solve the Riemann hypothesis? Verify the classification of finite groups? And mathematicians do use computers to check proofs, that’s how the 4 colour theorem was verified
@felix.henson11 ай бұрын
@@erikeriknorman Simulations are a terrible way to verify new ideas in physics (regardless of the fact that they would be useless for any pure maths-related problem) since they're actually simulations of what we currently understand about the way the world works, i.e. the current scientific consensus. If you build a simulation based on Newtonian mechanics it will "disprove" relativity, but we have observed consequences of relativity in the real world. I'm not exactly sure why you think this is a viable proof method unless you're thinking along the flawed lines of "computers are always right".
@beeble200311 ай бұрын
@@erikeriknorman It's clear that you don't know how mathematics works, that you don't know how physics works, and that you don't know what the word "hubris" means.
@claudiamanta1943 Жыл бұрын
9:41 I always disliked algebra because it’s boring. And illogical. Humans who define themselves as rational creatures are trying to find a rational solution by using irrational numbers. And come up with a real answer whilst using imaginary numbers. To me, it’s like trying to eat the doughnut 🍩 of zero and have it 😋
@SpencerTwiddy11 ай бұрын
Those terms (irrational, imaginary) are misnomers. If you replace them with e.g. “Number-Type 1” and “Number-Type 2”, you will see the one being irrational is yourself.
@martiniquevodka557411 ай бұрын
More like cause u were softlocked by your low IQ
@nope11011 ай бұрын
Imaginary is a terrible word to describe them, imaginary numbers appear all the time in physics, they’re perfectly reasonable
@Altercraftermc11 ай бұрын
Boring and illogical tells me someone got filtered by a simple middle school algebra class 😂
@beeble200311 ай бұрын
There's nothing at all illogical about algebra. And you've hit on the word "irrational" without understanding that it has two meanings. When we refer to a person as "irrational", we mean that they are illogical and unreasonable. When we refer to a number as "irrational", we mean simply that it is not the ratio (division) of two integers.