Set Theory - The first few axioms: Oxford Mathematics 3rd Year Student Lecture
This is the third of four lectures from Robin Knight's 3rd Year Set Theory course. Robin writes: "Infinity baffled mathematicians, and everyone else, for thousands of years. But around 1870, Georg Cantor worked out how to study infinity in a way that made sense, and created set theory. Mo
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures - Set Theory
Geometry - Scalar Triple Product: Oxford Mathematics 1st Year Student Lecture
To give an insight in to life in Oxford Mathematics we are greatly increasing the number of undergraduate lectures that we are making available. This Geometry lecture from Professor Derek Moulton is taken from his First Year course. This course revisits some ideas encountered in high scho
From playlist Oxford Mathematics 1st Year Student Lectures
The OLDEST Maths Books in Oxford
Oxford Mathematician Dr Tom Crawford looks through some of the oldest maths textbooks at the University of Oxford with assistance from the @StEdmundHall Librarian James Howarth. Link for Maple Learn worksheet below. Maple Learn worksheet on Parallelograms here: https://learn.maplesoft.com
From playlist Director's Cut
Set Theory - Classes, sets and proper classes: Oxford Mathematics 3rd Year Student Lecture
This is the fourth of four lectures from Robin Knight's 3rd Year Set Theory course. Robin writes: "Infinity baffled mathematicians, and everyone else, for thousands of years. But around 1870, Georg Cantor worked out how to study infinity in a way that made sense, and created set theory. M
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures - Set Theory
Riemannian Geometry - Definition: Oxford Mathematics 4th Year Student Lecture
Riemannian Geometry is the study of curved spaces. It is a powerful tool for taking local information to deduce global results, with applications across diverse areas including topology, group theory, analysis, general relativity and string theory. In these two introductory lectures
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures - Riemannian Geometry
The History of Mathematics in 300 Stamps
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Robin Wilson - The History of Mathematics in 300 Stamps The entire history of mathematics in one hour, as illustrated by around 300 postage stamps featuring mathematics and mathematicians from across the world. From Euclid to Euler, from Pythagoras to
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
History of Mathematics - Complex Analysis Part 1: complex numbers. Oxford Maths 3rd Yr Lecture
Complex numbers pervade modern mathematics, but have not always been well understood. They first emerged in the sixteenth century from the study of polynomial equations, and were quickly recognised as useful – if slightly weird – mathematical tools. In these lectures (this is the first
From playlist Oxford Mathematics 3rd Year Student Lectures
Can you hear the shape of a drum?
Bach, the Universe & Everything - Can you hear the shape of a drum? In Bach the Universe & Everything, mathematics and music share the stage. A partnership between Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and Oxford Mathematics, these secular services aim to reflect the community atmosphere
From playlist Music and Mathematics
Beyond Boundaries 2017: Roundtable Discussion
The second annual Yale STEAM Symposium featured presentations by faculty and staff on the benefits and challenges of digital methods for research and teaching. “Close and Distant Reading in Science and the Humanities” Richard Prum, Ornithology, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology; Peabody M
From playlist Yale Digital Humanities Lab
Professor Mark Girolami: "Probabilistic Numerical Computation: A New Concept?"
The Turing Lectures: The Intersection of Mathematics, Statistics and Computation - Professor Mark Girolami: "Probabilistic Numerical Computation: A New Concept?" Click the below timestamps to navigate the video. 00:00:09 Introduction by Professor Jared Tanner 00:01:38 Profess
From playlist Turing Lectures
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Jon Chapman - Waves and resonance: from musical instruments to vacuum cleaners, via metamaterials and invisibility cloaks. Via guitars, whistles and a musical saw to the noise reduction in a vacuum cleaner, Jon Chapman explains the role of waves and res
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
Cascading Principles - Conrad Shawcross, Martin Bridson and James Sparks with Fatos Ustek
Whether a mathematician or an artist, when you begin you often don't know where you'll end up. In this fascinating discussion, artist Conrad Shawcross and mathematicians Martin Bridson and James Sparks explore connections between mathematics and art. An exhibition of Conrad's mathematical
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
Riemannian Geometry - Examples, pullback: Oxford Mathematics 4th Year Student Lecture
Riemannian Geometry is the study of curved spaces. It is a powerful tool for taking local information to deduce global results, with applications across diverse areas including topology, group theory, analysis, general relativity and string theory. In these two introductory lectures
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures - Riemannian Geometry
The Butterfly Effect - What Does It Really Signify?
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Tim Palmer - The Butterfly Effect - What Does It Really Signify? Meteorologist Ed Lorenz was one of the founding fathers of chaos theory. In 1963 he showed with just three simple equations that the world around us could be both completely deterministic
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
This is one of the easier questions on the exam, and it is a fun one to solve. 2020 Oxford MAT 1C https://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/system/files/attachments/test20_0.pdf solutions https://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/system/files/attachments/websolutions20_1.pdf Twitter sqrt https://twitter.com/mathisstil
From playlist Math Puzzles, Riddles And Brain Teasers
The Num8er My5teries - Marcus du Sautoy
Oxford Mathematics Midlands Public Lecture: Marcus du Sautoy - The Num8er My5teries With topics ranging from prime numbers to the lottery, from lemmings to bending balls like Beckham, Marcus du Sautoy provides an entertaining and, perhaps, unexpected approach to explain how mathematics ca
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
The Sound of Symmetry and the Symmetry of Sound: Marcus du Sautoy
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Marcus du Sautoy - The Sound of Symmetry and the Symmetry of Sound From Bach’s Goldberg Variations to Schoenberg’s Twelve-tone rows, composers have exploited symmetry to create variations on a theme. But symmetry is also embedded in the very way instrume
From playlist Music and Mathematics
Who is the Greatest Footballer of All Time? Leading Oxford Mathematician ends the debate 🐐
The end of a timeless debate. Dr. Tom Crawford, Mathematician at the University of Oxford, has created a data-driven algorithm to solve the eternal question: Who is the Greatest Player of All Time? Watch to find out who comes out on top! Welcome to LiveScore’s official YouTube channel!
From playlist Collaborations
Factorising Linear Expressions and Quadratics GCSE 9-1 Mathematics
Dear all I am making maths videos and also a maths tutor for all levels. Offer online+ Face to Face. Check out my website for more information www.abdallahmathstutoring.co.uk Also i sell products on etsy.com/AWMathsStationary for calculators and books. Books are all 50 pence for all lev
From playlist GCSE Maths!!