Tao is a very good communicator. Modest, fluent, responsive, considered, honest, and humorous. Very good person, a great scholar and a gentleman to the core.
@morchel3322 жыл бұрын
is this a us math sales funnel?
@arnoldmuller17034 жыл бұрын
Such an excellent and inspiring lecture, it closed many of my gaps in "all-day" astronomy. It gave me the shivers how good Terrys answers to the questions were. For example the one about by how much hard work all the results were earned, Terry said its because he reported only the firsts and the firsts are always at the edge of the technically possible. Its the perfect answer, given straight without time delay. In this little example we might get a glimpse into how great a mind he actually is.
@StevePotter4 жыл бұрын
Much appreciation to Prof. Mellon for doing such a good job moderating this excellent talk and panel discussion. All the technology worked so well, you seem like you have done this many times. Fair play to you and the panelists.
@tails4e4 жыл бұрын
I have to say I really enjoyed that, great lecture, it was wonderful to hear Terry talk about this topic, and great questions. Well done RIA for organising this, I'm looking forward to more Hamilton Day lectures!
@HueyTheDoctor3 жыл бұрын
Terry begins at 7:30
@guynouri2 жыл бұрын
What a remarkable presentation. Take to time for the whole thing including q and a. The ladder is a remarkable notion of conceiving a widening POV. How do how can we see our universe. I am re calibrating my most basic assumptions in view of Tao’s extensive presentation!
@paulodonoghue3614 жыл бұрын
Brilliant history of the cosmic distance ladder
@tensevo3 жыл бұрын
In terms of maths discovery and invention by one individual versus groups, I think the best way is to keep cycling between the two, lone focus versus collaboration.
@guynouri2 жыл бұрын
Good idea! We need both
@rickbaldrick6283 жыл бұрын
Definitely easier to deduce the curvature of earth from the darkness to light aspect during dawn. The night sky is darker in a spherical aspect
@quynhduong67353 ай бұрын
So every month, moon phase follows exact pics? Or the Moon’s shapes depend on season in year, position for observing on the Earth?
@tensevo3 жыл бұрын
Simply awe inspiring, how far we have come from walking the desserts of Egypt, looking up at the sky. I would love to have learnt maths and physics like this, with embedded history, instead of by abstract geometry and equations that have no relevance to every day existence.
@parcm3 жыл бұрын
The question Martin Mathieu asks about individual mathematician versus group work has its origin in the purely socio-economic aspect of being a scientist. In those days... personal success equaled status, which was often more important than making knowledge available. This question is perhaps still relevant today, strangely enough.
@jensbrusgaard55453 жыл бұрын
Very nice lecture about the astronomical ladder. However, there is a mistake. It was Ole Roemer who measured the speed of light based on the eclipse of Jupiter’s moon Io and not Huygens.
@zack_1202 жыл бұрын
He said also noted on screen it was by Romer And Huygens 1:00:01.
@michaelrose94424 жыл бұрын
Quite good,although some of the innovative voices from mediaeval times were not touched upon. But a splendid job.
@d7ffab9793 жыл бұрын
This dude wants to see the whole universe!
@darpanpatel80233 жыл бұрын
This talk by Terence Tao about The Cosmic Ladder was like slicing butter with a chainsaw 😂
@muhammadputera65933 жыл бұрын
What do you mean?
@ИбадатЖұмабек3 жыл бұрын
nice
@netterstyl2 жыл бұрын
Interesting bit of trivia: The number of miles from the Earth to the Sun is exactly the same number of times he uttered "um" during this presentation. Remarkable!
@chrisleblanc95453 жыл бұрын
15:50 - flat earthers beware
@rickbaldrick6283 жыл бұрын
I am just going to say they could of saved alot of time back in the day if they would have just placed in quadrants of 4 the light and darkness aspect ratio of the night sky.
@rickbaldrick6283 жыл бұрын
Good lecture though and definitely a breakdown from acient up.
@davidwilkie95513 жыл бұрын
The Mathematics of light and dark, projection-drawing time-timing sync-duration fractal probability dominance interference-> Trigonometric positioning conics.., Act-uality of inherent coordinated coherence-cohesion objectives, pure relative motion-movie Intelligence, and instantaneous transverse trancendental Eternity-now Interval, resonant Observation. Therefore Default Wisdom consequences integrate in practice, via Actuality of AM-FM Universal Communication Entanglement In-form-ation. Understanding (holographic) ONE-INFINITY here-now-forever, looks simple as a beginning point for categorization of Superspinsymmetry-> Temporal Singularity pivotal POV-> perspective, relative angular time-timing sync-duration identification, (axial-tangential centre of Time Clockface), superimposed analog quantization rates of rates, ..and the only device generally available is a personal, organic, bio-logical pulse timer. Heartbeat. Fundamental re-cognition of relative proportions of everything-connected holistic Self, is the default mechanism of Theoretical abstractions, and qualitative quantitative numberness analysis.., and on reflection, projected mapping techniques for Navigating a visual Sky Calendar. Which is the probable perceived cause, the naturally occurring Origin, for making the Heart the centre of Time and general Philosophy. The Theory of thought experiment, concentric laddering of the probabilistic re-evolution cognition, Astronomical Observation light-cone of Actuality Knowledge.., of QM-TIME Completeness cause-effect Timing-spacing-> logarithmic condensation modulation coordination-positioning AdS/CFT real-time Perspective. Gauss could explain why he was exasperated with the lack of understanding of observable mathematical meaning inherent in the Surveyor's Techniques of Observation. (?)
@abdonecbishop Жыл бұрын
Euler
@mikebellamy3 жыл бұрын
The history of discovery here tells us two things: 1 - The ancients were just a smart if not smarter than we are today.. (comparing the best so reasonable conclusion is it applies to the average) 2 - We smart humans cannot have been on this planet for that long.. more like a few thousand years not hundreds of thousands of years. Consistent with the bible I would suggest.
@bornbad67382 жыл бұрын
Toa Tao Tao, distance, must be separated from time ,unrelated, counting into infinite, infinite is a location, no time involved, 0-1-0, this is a distance that becomes a place ,the zeo is a place a nothing from negative to current position to positive, nothing moves its just there.the rule of infinite, is equal to the rule of void.,.current position equal to neither, but pulled into current position will become destination calculated 3 becomes 1 , 4 is unnecessary Deming the question invalid. Stop using time in a factor, traveling distance has nothing to do with this concept of time , perception is the definition of al time , ie an idea gone out of control. A cubit made of cubits missing the last cubit to complete the cubit , find the missing material in the knowledge of the cubit is all there is.
@xxxxxx-zy9lu3 жыл бұрын
A curious talk. He's a smart guy and obviously has a keen interest in the field but surely the talk would have been better coming from an expert in the field.
@xxxxxx-zy9lu3 жыл бұрын
@Mr Right it's been a while, but the talk was mostly about astronomy, in which he came across as an informed amateur rather than expert, rather than maths.
@SkyDarmos3 жыл бұрын
All the distances of mainstream cosmology are wrong. The universe is really 42 trillion years old, and all the nearby galaxies are 3 times further away than we think while the most remote galaxy we can see is 39 times further away than we think.
@eskii23 жыл бұрын
Any proof of this argument?
@SkyDarmos3 жыл бұрын
@@eskii2 For discussion feel free to add me on Facebook. Thx.
@astrolillo3 жыл бұрын
Look for psychiatric help crank
@SkyDarmos3 жыл бұрын
@@astrolillo The mainstream has already admitted that the trouble with Hubble basically means that there is new physics and traditional cosmology doesn't work. It has proven itself wrong.
@SkyDarmos3 жыл бұрын
@@astrolillo I have numbers and data. I challenge you to find any mistake.