The joy of abstract mathematical thinking - with Eugenia Cheng

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
  • Category theory is an abstract branch of mathematics - but did you know it can be both fun, and extremely useful for everyday life?
    Watch the Q&A here: • Q&A: The joy of abstra...
    Buy Eugenia’s book here: geni.us/GBfELuE
    Watch this clear and engaging talk on category theory, as Eugenia sheds light on how her speciality can be applied to many different areas of life, including inequalities, current events, and day to day living.
    This talk was recorded at the Ri on 5 April 2023.
    00:00 Introduction
    06:54 What is category theory?
    18:30 What is abstraction?
    25:41 Why is context important in mathematics?
    33:04 Relationships between things
    41:21 Categories - history and definition
    50:08 Conclusion
    Subscribe for regular science videos: bit.ly/RiSubscRibe
    Dr Eugenia Cheng is a mathematician, educator, author, public speaker, columnist, concert pianist and artist. She is Scientist In Residence at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She won tenure in Pure Mathematics at the University of Sheffield, UK and is now Honorary Visiting Fellow at City, University of London. She has previously taught at the Universities of Cambridge, Chicago and Nice and holds a PhD in pure mathematics from the University of Cambridge. Alongside her research in Category Theory and undergraduate teaching her aim is to rid the world of “math phobia”.
    --
    A very special thank you to our Patreon supporters who help make these videos happen, especially:
    modsiw, Anton Ragin, Edward Unthank, Robert L Winer, Andy Carpenter, William Hudson
    Don McLaughlin, efkinel lo, Martin Paull, Ben Wynne-Simmons, Ivo Danihelka, Kevin Winoto, Jonathan Killin, Stephan Giersche, William Billy Robillard, Jeffrey Schweitzer, Frances Dunne, jonas.app, Tim Karr, Alan Latteri, David Crowner, Matt Townsend, THOMAS N TAMADA, Andrew McGhee, Paul Brown, David Schick, Dave Ostler, Osian Gwyn Williams, David Lindo, Roger Baker, Rebecca Pan
    --
    The Ri is on Patreon: / theroyalinstitution
    and Twitter: / ri_science
    and Facebook: / royalinstitution
    and TikTok: / ri_science
    Listen to the Ri podcast: anchor.fm/ri-science-podcast
    Our editorial policy: www.rigb.org/editing-ri-talks...
    Subscribe for the latest science videos: bit.ly/RiNewsletter
    Product links on this page may be affiliate links which means it won't cost you any extra but we may earn a small commission if you decide to purchase through the link.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 125

  • @itamarperez
    @itamarperez Před rokem +31

    Erik Meijer's talk on using computer programming as an abstraction layer for mathematics was enlightening, showing how it can turn abstract mathematical concepts into interactive lessons for children. This method not only cultivates a deeper understanding of mathematics but also sparks interest and motivation in learning the subject.

    • @eternaldoorman5228
      @eternaldoorman5228 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Could you provide a link or a title? He has done a lot of talks!

    • @ewthmatth
      @ewthmatth Před 7 měsíci +1

      Was it a Royal Institute talk or was it giving for another organization?

  • @notsoaverage_d
    @notsoaverage_d Před rokem +3

    Love the info. this channel brings all the time!

  • @GGoAwayy
    @GGoAwayy Před rokem +18

    She is a very compelling speaker. I think this is the second or third talk by her and every time its educational and enjoyable

  • @vdicarlo
    @vdicarlo Před 11 měsíci +4

    I love hearing someone competent coherently express ideas that have been stewing less coherently in my own mind for years. I disliked math until someone taught me elementary algebra somewhat as the speaker suggests, and when I learned more about the general idea of a function, lots of other things started making sense. I learned a bit about what a number is from Strang's lecture proving that e is a number. Linear algebra helped with all kinds of things, including the concepts of distance, metrics, norms, the triangle rule, and inductive proofs. When I started realizing that students learn better when you start introducing some of these concepts at an earlier stage in their education, I began teaching my 9th grade class in ancient history about the nature of abstraction, using the examples they were learning in their class in geometry, as well as things like logic gates, art, and scientific simulations. I am sure some of it was not absorbed by all of them, but they all got some of it, and some got a lot. I wish my teachers had known what the speaker knows and taught the way she teaches. Brava!

  • @jasondiasauthorpage615

    Yes. I've been saying for years, as an educator but not as a mathematician, that we teach mathematics not because it applies to daily life, but because it doesn't. The ability to step out of concrete reality into abstract reasoning is a uniquely human skill. While someone might not use the formulae they learned in secondary school, they can use the skill of thinking logically, constructing proofs, rejecting false answers and so on.
    Thanks for this much more sophisticated take from an actual mathematician's perspective.

  • @SaveTheManuals
    @SaveTheManuals Před rokem +6

    Found this talk to be informative, enlightening, witty and engaging. Thank you from Wisconsin, USA.

  • @Kimberly-bk8vx
    @Kimberly-bk8vx Před rokem +4

    Loved this lecture so much! More like this please ♥️

  • @anirbanc88
    @anirbanc88 Před rokem +3

    this was superb! thanks

  • @segamai
    @segamai Před 7 měsíci +1

    The way she talks is mesmerizing, I could listen to another three hours of this

  • @prasadrao2895
    @prasadrao2895 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you, RI. I really appreciate your videos.

  • @tatithe609
    @tatithe609 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Wow! This talk was just AMAZING! I am studying math in grad school right now and I can't even describe how she opened my eyes to so many possibilities. I might change fields lol Thank you so much Dr. Cheng!

  • @alan2here
    @alan2here Před rokem +5

    TED Talks back on track :)

  • @joelkronqvist6089
    @joelkronqvist6089 Před rokem

    This video was very illuminating to me. Thank you, Eugenia Cheng and the Royal Institute!

  • @marialovett6297
    @marialovett6297 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Wow, Eugenia is just a breath of fresh air to me. Loved this!

  • @bp6087
    @bp6087 Před rokem +9

    Sometimes I believe learning has more to do with a personal connection with the teacher. I have failed a few courses in my time. The material just didn't make sense to me when I was learning it. Somehow I would do much better in the same course after retrying it with a new teacher. Teachers come with their own problems and personalities, too. Perhaps I was simply a bad student. I won't rule out that possibility.

    • @infectedrainbow
      @infectedrainbow Před rokem +6

      Most teachers are honestly pretty bad. It's not easy and we don't appreciate great teachers enough.

    • @3nertia
      @3nertia Před rokem +4

      @@infectedrainbow And the system makes it difficult for teachers to be good - they don't provide the resources necessary heh

  • @dawidcham
    @dawidcham Před rokem

    That was wonderful, thankyou.

  • @stjepannikolic5418
    @stjepannikolic5418 Před rokem +9

    I sometimes wonder whether having mathematical abstract thinking skills is a curse in today's world.. Thanks for the great lecture.

    • @orterves
      @orterves Před rokem +7

      I find most people don't understand the advantages of viewing real processes through an abstract lens.
      They think it's too vague and detached from the real processes - but they don't realise that because they're so focused on the details they can't see the forest for the trees, while the abstract approach provides a bird's eye view from which you can delve into the details while maintaining a clear concept of the whole system.
      In programming particularly, from the abstract view it becomes clear that it's all just functions transforming information - objects and arrows between objects

    • @Unique-Concepts
      @Unique-Concepts Před 10 měsíci

      @@orterves a dumb question: is category theory a object oriented mathematics ?

  • @danielloh3025
    @danielloh3025 Před 11 měsíci +3

    ‘There is only truth relative to context ..’ .. Fantastic! 👍

    • @nickfosterxx
      @nickfosterxx Před 6 měsíci

      Absolutely. 'And which I will demonstrate by showing these familiar relationships in a new context..'
      Wittgenstein would be amused I'm sure.
      Incredibly satisfying in a slightly weird way.

  • @RuthMcDougal
    @RuthMcDougal Před 5 měsíci +4

    This is why I have always loved math but I didn’t like math in school. I have been engaging in these things without a name for them all my life. This is my first intro with Eugenia and she seems amazing.

  • @desitterspace10101
    @desitterspace10101 Před rokem +4

    Can I buy tickets to attend these talks, or are they invite only? They always seem half-empty. Amazing talk

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  Před rokem +3

      You can certainly buy tickets to come to our historic Theatre, and we'd love to see you! You can book tickets to all of our in-person and livestreamed events here on our website: www.rigb.org/whats-on

  • @mikewilson8664
    @mikewilson8664 Před měsícem

    Dr. Eugenia Cheng is such an impressive communicator of what is a difficult subject that she actually makes it intuitive. Complexity is difficult to understand, such as biology that can be difficult to explain. When we consider biological systems the function of a cell is often regarded as the starting point to understand complexity of biology, as opposed to the relations of the cell to other biological components that make up the whole organism. For example, most of us are wired to consider the function of the immune system as a discrete binary activity that identifies what is ok and what is a pathogen and therefore "bad" - but what if as philosopher Thomas Pradue suggests, we consider the relations that the immune system has with other things like the microbiome, and its role in immunology - are the relations more important or the functions? The ability to abstract the relations to unravel the complexity associated with immunology and other complex systems is unbounded. Abstraction as philosopher William James promoted is an approach to progress science as long as we are aware that we are abstracting. Very thought provoking presentation - thankyou Eugenia.

  • @phenixorbitall3917
    @phenixorbitall3917 Před 9 měsíci

    After seeing this... I think category theory is the best discipline in mathematics that exists for I love to think in analogies👌

  • @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a8145

    Well, trigonometry helps a lot in daily life. Most of the time intuitive. Math to me it the lenguage of nature and the only lenguage where a monologue makes sense.

    • @ariebaudoin4824
      @ariebaudoin4824 Před 9 měsíci

      i disagree with the monologue thing, i think monologues make sence in every language, and i think mathematics is maybe the most colleberative language of all, because it is the only language where we extensively fiddle with the natural way the language is created together to make it more intuitive. in a sense mathematics is a self awere language, wich in my eyes makes it more colleberative because it is something we are willingly participating in.
      this idea of mathematics as a lonesome activity is a bit harmfull to it i believe, because it plays into the steriotype of the loner mathematician person

  • @qbarnes1893
    @qbarnes1893 Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is what the British students need, really great scholars who actually understand UK students, their understanding that all of us are different is amazing.
    None of those i, i ,i or you don’t understand because I’m so more intelligent are present, not condescending but just really really interesting.
    Even the word maths is pronounced correctly instead of that awful bastardisation.
    We require more and more to be as infused and interested in this amazing science such as this wonderfully gifted and honoured speaker....

  • @davidrichards1302
    @davidrichards1302 Před 8 dny

    Agreeable abstractions are the soul of every peace treaty.

  • @chrisarmstrong8198
    @chrisarmstrong8198 Před rokem +1

    Off topic, I know, but I liked the optical illusion at 30:28 where, if you scan the black dots, some seem to transiently have white centres.

  • @nunoalexandre6408
    @nunoalexandre6408 Před 8 měsíci

    Love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @PEHowland
    @PEHowland Před rokem

    What a fantastic speaker!

  • @mgmartin51
    @mgmartin51 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Charming and illuminating. I would like to be able to take a maths course from someone who could help you bump up a level or two in your understanding of this beautiful field.

  • @nickfosterxx
    @nickfosterxx Před 6 měsíci

    What a terrific lecture. R.I. at its best.
    Loved 42:00 onwards, genius.
    And no notes.
    (Also - fonts where uppercase I and lowercase l are the same, seriously should be illegal.)

  • @shdyo
    @shdyo Před rokem

    great talk

  • @thirzel
    @thirzel Před 5 měsíci

    I love this topics and will keep it to explain others what I do in my job. Very simple explanation! By the side, that we do not use trigonometry in daily life, or some other aspects of school maths, I'd like to disagree with this. We always try to apply all new concepts in our home to support our children. The sad thing is that teachers should actually do it.

  • @RonLWilson
    @RonLWilson Před 7 měsíci +2

    I just bought her book and started reading it as part of my research I am doing to develop a graphical Universal Modeling Language that I am calling UniML.
    As I read through her book it is becoming clear to me that what I am attempting to do with UniML is not all that different from Category theory, only is approaching it from the direction of developing a graphics notation that can be used by things like category theory to describe itself.
    BTW, I have made a number of videos on UniML and uploaded them to my CZcams channel that describes it in more detail, albeit that this is still a work in progress and not a finished product in that the design is still in a state of flux.
    But I am finding her book really helpful in providing many good Use cases to examine as well as providing concepts that are helpful in refining its design. And that is one of the reason I bought it to begin with, thinking that might turn out to be the case, which I am glad to see, that it indeed is!

  • @orange-vlcybpd2
    @orange-vlcybpd2 Před 6 měsíci

    What an important lecture.

  • @user-lq8gg2uv9z
    @user-lq8gg2uv9z Před 6 měsíci

    I KNEW I was right that there have to be book like this

  • @darwinlaluna3677
    @darwinlaluna3677 Před 6 měsíci

    How if the past present and future determine to the flow of seconds, how do we measure it ? It by its shape and size?

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 Před 2 měsíci

    Those circle drawing compasses were weapons because of the pointy side

  • @tonyosime9380
    @tonyosime9380 Před 11 měsíci

    Hi Eugenia Cheng. Please use more hand gestures as you deliver. I observed hand gestures less than 20% of the time. Try for 90% of the time - smaller varied gestures work well.

  • @God-ld6ll
    @God-ld6ll Před rokem +2

    as or more fun than any game you can play i can atest at times.

  • @briseboy
    @briseboy Před 10 měsíci

    It is never trig or calc that is the problem. A teacher digressed into baseball stats, causing loss of interest immediately,
    as i was interested in the physical dynamics of surfing, ballet, and actual kinetic sports, which require a lot of appraisal - thinking about energies and vectors.
    Complex dynamical systems occur in every observable association, and some mathematical understanding of this is essential.
    Should you pursue Eugenia's processes you WILL find that you learn physical, social, and other skills more quickly.
    And, recognizing her name just now, i realize she authored a book - "The Art of Logic in an Illogical World" , which sounds like an important read; I found it lying on my bed, neglected in the arousals of war and dispute!

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 Před 2 měsíci

    I had the same problem. Complex number were 11th in one board and 12th in another board and learning by yourself was not allowed. Did not understand why.

  • @XtineJohnes
    @XtineJohnes Před 2 měsíci

    I agree that the progression of how we teach math is very, very flawed and with the wrong teacher, amazing scholars can get turned away from subjects that they would be great at.

  • @ruellerz
    @ruellerz Před rokem +1

    Fun way of thinking! Not to directly bash this talk, so many talks now are just powerpoint and lecture. I was fully focused and absorbing but I feel the human mind needs props to really set thoughts in memory. I applaud the gray jacket at the beginning that had a pouch. She attended a conference, mars? with really intelligent attendants and she spung it into a Cat theory exercise.

  • @YouMeverse
    @YouMeverse Před 5 dny

    It is not what I expected, the title is about abstraction but rarely explains abstraction, rather than some mathematical problems.

  • @FastRacer-kg6cz
    @FastRacer-kg6cz Před rokem

    She is the joy

  • @TronSAHeroXYZ
    @TronSAHeroXYZ Před rokem

    Latency exists between the knowledge attained, and the knowledge yet to be obtained, which create microscopical waves of knowledge which propagate from the origin points created through communication lanes.

  • @michaelhuntley1660
    @michaelhuntley1660 Před 11 měsíci +1

    This lady should be employed by the government of the day. To inspire kids to enjoy maths.

  • @marcodeluca4068
    @marcodeluca4068 Před 2 měsíci

    She’s talking about the truth but without accepting the lies

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 Před 2 měsíci

    Lucid. Tempted to buy that yellow book but scared it will be lot of work to understand

  • @sososo3906
    @sososo3906 Před 5 měsíci

    I wish i saw this 15 years ago

  • @redneckewhitetrashbluecollar

    Cool way to think about imagination .

  • @shrikantjoshi4556
    @shrikantjoshi4556 Před 7 měsíci

    In maths ther are only two numbers zero and one and only two oprations addition and division ..and that is true in daily life .. all others are theories

  • @aloluk
    @aloluk Před rokem

    I've never heard it called Taxi-cab distance. I've always known it as the manhattan distance.

    • @IsYitzach
      @IsYitzach Před 11 měsíci +1

      One of the things Manhattan is known for: taxis.

    • @numericalcode
      @numericalcode Před 9 měsíci

      You learned something new

  • @addermoth
    @addermoth Před 9 měsíci

    I still don't understand why the super rich non male is seen as below the super rich male? Surely it could be reversed and show super rich non male to super rich male below if we abstract the terms as A,B,C? This example seems subjective rather than objective.

    • @numericalcode
      @numericalcode Před 9 měsíci

      Yes you can. The point of category theory is you can replace any example with another with equivalent structure. The subject matter is irrelevant. But it is clever teaching to nudge people into coming up with alternatives when they don’t like the example. I’m sure she does that with her students.

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 Před 2 měsíci

    I differ. Everytime a kid solves a word problem they should be told they actually conducted a physics experiment. Then they do not have to read books like unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in universe.

  • @shrikantjoshi4556
    @shrikantjoshi4556 Před 7 měsíci

    No two points have same characteristics

  • @tonyosime9380
    @tonyosime9380 Před 11 měsíci

    Volume was low on this video.

    • @bryan__m
      @bryan__m Před 5 měsíci +1

      In the words of Public Enemy: "turn it up!"

  • @kencory2476
    @kencory2476 Před rokem +2

    Carpenters use trig all the time.

    • @numericalcode
      @numericalcode Před 9 měsíci

      You should tell that to the kids who ask, “When are we ever going to use this?”

    • @bryan__m
      @bryan__m Před 5 měsíci

      @@numericalcodebut what about the kids who don't want to be carpenters?

  • @ramkumarr1725
    @ramkumarr1725 Před 2 měsíci

    I used to give the 2 bananas and 2 apples example from a decade

  • @umarfaruqhfe
    @umarfaruqhfe Před 9 měsíci

    This is really cool. Just watching. What she calls category theory is what I call "Snowflake Logic."

  • @nickfosterxx
    @nickfosterxx Před 6 měsíci

    The intersection of category theory and set theory = modern politics.

  • @henryrugama7794
    @henryrugama7794 Před 9 měsíci

    She’s an auto-bot 🫶🏼

  • @teeI0ck
    @teeI0ck Před 8 měsíci +1

    💻she's using a #Dell laptop. 🤔

  • @mihailghinea
    @mihailghinea Před 11 měsíci +3

    Would it be correct to substitute "Non-male" with "female" ? Or is that no longer accepted?

    • @bryan__m
      @bryan__m Před 5 měsíci +2

      If there are only two genders, then "non-male" means "female". If there are more than two genders then "non-male" means "female, NB, etc". Using the word she did allows it to work with anyone's worldview.

  • @KhaoticDeterminism
    @KhaoticDeterminism Před rokem +2

    there’s math all over the universe it’s how Sacred Geometry works 💜💜

  • @TheMaxwellee
    @TheMaxwellee Před rokem +2

    Excellent! just a couple small suggestions, maybe slow it down a little - allow for longer pauses for thought. and perhaps a little less of your personal views on the world, I agree with them, but many of them seem unnecessary, they move my thoughts from math to politics. Thanks heaps though, you're ace.

  • @eternaldoorman5228
    @eternaldoorman5228 Před 11 měsíci

    Great, but the number of adverts I had to sit through! Good grief.

  • @LeonTrimble
    @LeonTrimble Před 3 měsíci

    Ads after 3m30s shame on whoever did that.

  • @sfermigier
    @sfermigier Před 6 měsíci

    Do you really need to put adds in this video ?

  • @avital3257
    @avital3257 Před rokem +10

    If all truth is context related, than this "truth" is also context related...

    • @Unique-Concepts
      @Unique-Concepts Před 10 měsíci +2

      Nice self reference

    • @SantaClaauz
      @SantaClaauz Před 5 měsíci +1

      🤯🤯🤯
      never thought of it that way u should publish this

    • @tXoddXk
      @tXoddXk Před 4 měsíci +1

      You’re conflating fact with truth.

    • @avital3257
      @avital3257 Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@tXoddXk Is me conflating fact with truth, a fact or a true statement?

    • @tXoddXk
      @tXoddXk Před 4 měsíci +1

      It’s observed, so factual.

  • @HamidSain
    @HamidSain Před rokem +2

    abstract mathematical thinking categorizes men and women explicitly.....never let the popular forces to delude you

    • @LolaOpheliac
      @LolaOpheliac Před 11 měsíci

      no, you’re just a loser. hope this helps xx

  • @0.618-0
    @0.618-0 Před rokem +1

    Hard to listen to and follow what she was on about, might be my brain. But nice lecture all the same. Thankyou.

  • @gunnerfan8934
    @gunnerfan8934 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The problem with academic is that they like to invent new subjects and fancy names, and then explain them for hours and hours. Amazingly, they have audiences.

  • @danielstead3067
    @danielstead3067 Před měsícem

    Awesome, but show us how this helped you fold the jacket into the pocket!!

  • @jimjenke3661
    @jimjenke3661 Před rokem +1

    COVID always was what it is. It is peoples' perception of it that has changed.

  • @perfectman3077
    @perfectman3077 Před 10 měsíci

    This fell apart about 35 minutes in

  • @mahonjt
    @mahonjt Před 10 měsíci

    To have the posh, string quartet playing, brown woman who is an academic tell me I have too much privledge as a member of the set of humans with an X chromosone and genetically derived low skin pigmentation was less entertaining and educational on category theory than i'd hoped when I pushed play. I think I'll go back to set theory where my personal characteristics didn't seem so mateserial.

  • @timhaldane7588
    @timhaldane7588 Před rokem +1

    Math*

  • @ozgurinsan
    @ozgurinsan Před 6 měsíci

    at last a non apple laptop.

  • @gunnergee2655
    @gunnergee2655 Před 3 měsíci

    Why spoil maths with propaganda and political ideology?

  • @sgramstrup
    @sgramstrup Před 10 měsíci

    This was very interesting, but unfortunately it was extremely long-winded. It was literally, 'yap yap' 4 times, and 'relevant info' 1 time. skip the first 25 minutes..

  • @Pepespizzeria1
    @Pepespizzeria1 Před rokem +4

    Genuinely a shame you can't have a lecture without racist or sexist devisive undertones now other than that really informative, really good 👍

  • @briannewman9285
    @briannewman9285 Před rokem +3

    I found her very interesting and thought-provoking, except when she got into that goofy neo-marxism.

    • @iampdv
      @iampdv Před rokem +2

      wasn't she all the time? I watched two random pieces to see if I want to watch the whole thing, and she got to that bs in both...

  • @justinclifton55
    @justinclifton55 Před rokem +5

    The entire talk in one word, egocentric.

  • @Greg-xs5py
    @Greg-xs5py Před 6 měsíci +1

    Was enjoying the lecture until she decided to go all Communist on us, talking about white privilege and how women are more oppressed than men (missing the irony that as a mathematician she’s one of the most privileged humans that ever existed). It’s like, what’s the matter with people? Even if true, and it’s not, how does that do anything other than create hate?

    • @SantiagoRodriguez-hq4ik
      @SantiagoRodriguez-hq4ik Před 4 měsíci +1

      I think the point of the example is to show that polarizing topics can be abstracted to make clearer its nuances which can provide middle grounds for engaging in productive conversations. And besides, the diagram is just that: a diagram. Its accuracy depends on the context in which we are measuring privilege.
      Also what does this have to do with communism? This seems a lot like her example of seat belts and fascism where it looks like y'all are both thinking in different levels of abstraction.

    • @Greg-xs5py
      @Greg-xs5py Před 4 měsíci

      @@SantiagoRodriguez-hq4ik Intersectionality, which is what she is talking about, has it's origins in cultural Marxism. The privledged class is the oppressors and the under privledgded is the oppressed. Communists since the
      French revolution have been trying to judge one group as oppressed and another group as privledged so the adminstrative state can redistritute everything to make it more "just". Plus, I doubt this method of abstraction will convince anyone with half a brain, it only obfuscates the issue with a straw man argument.

  • @jeffheath842
    @jeffheath842 Před rokem +2

    Why is an asian women speaking about math. I thought math was racist? lol

    • @cavramau
      @cavramau Před rokem

      Watch the show. She spoke about racism. .... it's all related ...

    • @iampdv
      @iampdv Před rokem

      Sure it is (sarcasm), and asians do better than others (stats). So how uninclusive of the RI to invite an asian to speak about math... Should they be cancelled?

  • @iteerrex8166
    @iteerrex8166 Před rokem

    Maths is one of the subjects I studied at the uni, but sorry her uptight speech is too annoying to listen to.