Why Were the Romans Bad at Math? | SideQuest Animated History

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  • čas přidán 9. 04. 2020
  • The Romans built one of the greatest empires in history and we carry their legacy to this day ... yet for all their greatness, math was not their strong suit. At all. Ever wonder why?
    If you'd like to see more of these videos, consider supporting me on Patreon: / sidequest_channel
    Have a fancy historical idea you'd like me to cover? Drop a comment and let me know!
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Komentáře • 998

  • @joshuabessire9169
    @joshuabessire9169 Před 2 lety +2500

    I remember some Eastern European mathmatician being asked why his country had so many great mathmaticians. He said that his was a poor country and couldn't afford impressive scientific equipment, and all you need for math was a pencil and paper.

    • @tobinochimp
      @tobinochimp Před 2 lety +65

      Sounds like something Pal Erdos said

    • @gkky-xx4mc
      @gkky-xx4mc Před 2 lety +145

      Sounds like Hungary, they've produced some of the most famous mathematical minds of the past century for being such a small country

    • @kingmaverick3140
      @kingmaverick3140 Před 2 lety +8

      All I can say is
      Wow 😲 👏🏻

    • @MDP1702
      @MDP1702 Před 2 lety +38

      @@gkky-xx4mc Hungary wasn't always a small country in the past though, so it depends on the time.

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před 2 lety +33

      @@MDP1702 It was, it was just ruling over big area of enslaved people. The area where hungarians were majority was tiny, that's why the whole thing collapsed in 1918.

  • @billstrutz7912
    @billstrutz7912 Před 2 lety +1377

    There's a simple reason why the Romans didn't "get" algebra:
    They always thought that X equals ten.

    • @theonebman7581
      @theonebman7581 Před 2 lety +81

      Please never speak to me or my children or my children's children ever again.
      /j

    • @kafkaesk3449
      @kafkaesk3449 Před 2 lety +33

      @@theonebman7581 it's a good pun. Admit it

    • @theonebman7581
      @theonebman7581 Před 2 lety +20

      @@kafkaesk3449 I hate you, I hate myself, I hate humanity, I hate you all! AAAAAAAAAAAAA
      *Imma steal it, either for my maths prof one day, or my kids one day-*

    • @dropPlaydead
      @dropPlaydead Před 2 lety +7

      @@theonebman7581
      I hope you're doing ok now 🤗🤭

    • @theonebman7581
      @theonebman7581 Před 2 lety +3

      @@dropPlaydead Hey thank you! likewise! :3

  • @andreadebortoli6069
    @andreadebortoli6069 Před 3 lety +2548

    Just one thing...memorizing was important at the time and more importantly after the fall of Rome cause if you had find a very interesting book in some hidden private library or later on in monastery the first time you have read it may be also the last. A philosopher or an astronomer had no time to go back to Alexandria or Nicea if he lived in Londinium (London) that is why people in antiquity were taught how to memorize lots of things and more importantly memorizing them fast.

    • @CountingStars333
      @CountingStars333 Před 2 lety +158

      Just make notes.
      > tfw no paper.

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 Před 2 lety +87

      @@CountingStars333 even a peasant could get ahold of bark and transliterate it really poorly. there are frozen remnants of these bark letters between peasants, and bark copies of paper government edicts, strewn all across the more inhospitable regions of russia from the russian empire.

    • @canyou7670
      @canyou7670 Před 2 lety +15

      @@cageybee7221 There's a huge time gap but I guess they could still do that

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 Před 2 lety +32

      @@canyou7670 that's just an example, russia's climate preserved these things better than others which is why it's easier to find them there.

    • @canyou7670
      @canyou7670 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cageybee7221 Of course

  • @LordBruuh
    @LordBruuh Před 2 lety +624

    I never would have thought the Romans were bad at math considering their precision engineering, but I can understand there is a difference between knowing something just "works" and knowing the intricate mathematical theories behind the "thing" in question, whether it be an aqueduct, coliseum, etc.

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Před 2 lety +29

      Not quite an apples to apples comparison, but I went to teach English in Japan, so the language I har to learn was, erm, English. I couldn't even say why "a apple" or "an tree" were wrong, to begin with!

    • @janbananberg357
      @janbananberg357 Před 2 lety +9

      they didnt know how yeast worked, they just thought that their fermenting pots became magical after while not understanding that it was in fact yeast that were living in the cracks of the pot.

    • @janbananberg357
      @janbananberg357 Před 2 lety +8

      They also knew about soap and its benefits but considered it "unmanly" so they didnt use it.

    • @Cherubim666999
      @Cherubim666999 Před 2 lety +1

      Truth is most things can be created with very basic math, and the more complex stuff is really just to shorten the process if you have a pretty good grasp on how to do it.
      Theres not much that i cant build, fix, design or create. Houses, cars, electronics , my own lil inventions here n there ..etc. and i am horrible in math.
      It gets much much easier after you screw up your project a few times as well lol

    • @rosenberry9150
      @rosenberry9150 Před 2 lety

      @@worldcomicsreview354 yup, my inner thinking thought 'an' appears on words that is written starting with a vowel, but then there is 'an hour'

  • @shanemize3775
    @shanemize3775 Před 3 lety +1338

    It would never occur to me that a society known for engineering marvels was also "bad" at math. However, I've never understood how they did actual math with Roman numerals. Very cool video!

    • @Yourmomma568
      @Yourmomma568 Před 2 lety +156

      they didn't. this video is poorly researched. math wasn't done with numerals very often, it was done through the lens of geometry, shapes and such. integer focused math is actually relatively new enlightenment era phenomenon. back then numbers were for counting and geometry was for math. one of those things that we can't really conceptualize today, but they also had trouble with things like negative integers, so our current system has overtaken it for that reason.

    • @CourtneySchwartz
      @CourtneySchwartz Před 2 lety +54

      “The Light Ages” by Seb Faulk can show you how math was done with Roman numerals well into the 13th century. It just makes your brain hurt when you compare it to the elegance of Arabic numerals.

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 2 lety +54

      They did math graphically....using physical 2D and 3D geometric shapes instead of number systems. And they did pretty complex maths this way.
      It was done this way until the renaissance period (I think).

    • @arcticwulf5796
      @arcticwulf5796 Před 2 lety +8

      They used the Abacus, it can do basic math up to division and multiplication.

    • @peterbonucci9661
      @peterbonucci9661 Před 2 lety +23

      Roman numbers are ideal for an abacus. On a Roman abacus, there are two rows for each column. The top row has one bead and is the V, L, D position. The bottom row has four beads and is the I, X, C, M position. in the old style numbers (VIIII = 9) you move up four beads in the I position and one in the V position. In new style numbers (IX = 9,) you move one I down and one X up, reducing the number of "carries" that you have to perform. The reason you don't have IIX=8 is that moving 2 I's doesn't help on the abacus.
      You can also use your hands as an abacus. Use your right 4 fingers as I's, use your right thumb as V. Use your left 4 fingers as X's and use your left thumb for L. You can count 0 to 99 on two hands.

  • @powerist209
    @powerist209 Před 2 lety +546

    And there’s Byzantines who are “what if Romans and Greeks mingled their customs in medieval Christian context”.
    Being one of the few intact Empire with complex government and academia in Europe during the Middle Ages being a major point.

    • @hydrargyruschaldaecus2572
      @hydrargyruschaldaecus2572 Před 2 lety +58

      They were in fact too complex that their name became the word for "overly complicated or intricate" things.

    • @abinjjaimon
      @abinjjaimon Před 2 lety +70

      The byzantines ARE romans. Rememmbee ,the term "byzantine" was dubbed a century after the eastern roman empire fell

    • @hydrargyruschaldaecus2572
      @hydrargyruschaldaecus2572 Před 2 lety +53

      ​@@abinjjaimon They had changed substantially compared to say Augustan Rome. But it's natural for any nation to change as time goes on. Even if the Empire remained intact to this very day, it would certainly be totally foreign to the Empire in Antiquity in almost every aspect. I find the "they were nothing like the Roman in classical period" argument so weird because of that.

    • @Antonio_DG
      @Antonio_DG Před 2 lety +15

      Romei, the name of the Romans of Greek culture, they called themselves that, not Byzantines.

    • @Xalerdane
      @Xalerdane Před 2 lety +22

      @@abinjjaimon ‘Byzantine’ is derived from ‘Byzantium’, which was the name of the original city occupying that particular spot on the Bosporus.
      Constantine the Well Liked bulldozed it and built his New, Better Rome on top of the remains, which became named ‘Constantinople’.
      Western Historians always referred to it by the name of the city it replaced, because Western Historians are extremely petty and can hold a grudge like few others.

  • @maximthemagnificent
    @maximthemagnificent Před 2 lety +306

    This reminds me of an article I read once defending so-called "useless" research. Its main argument was that it's difficult to tell far in advance which scientific explorations will lead to something important (i.e. you don't know what you don't know, so better diversify your research). I'd argue that this was the nature of the Roman failure at mathematics.

    • @arshdixit1566
      @arshdixit1566 Před 2 lety +3

      Mind linking it

    • @maximthemagnificent
      @maximthemagnificent Před 2 lety +5

      I'd estimate it's been ten years since I read the article I referenced, so I cannot recall the exact source. I tried to Google it up, and while it's easy to find articles on that topic, I wasn't able to narrow it down by including specific phrases I recalled from the one I read. Sorry.

    • @w_6880
      @w_6880 Před 2 lety +8

      I don’t think that exploring how quails procreate while under the influence of cocaine is that important nor will it lead to a great scientific discovery. Yet, the US government spends roughly $350k a year studying it.

    • @maxvarjagen9810
      @maxvarjagen9810 Před 2 lety +5

      @@w_6880 ...well, how do they?

    • @gandalf_thegrey
      @gandalf_thegrey Před rokem +3

      I'm not bad a math... I diversified my knowledge in different topics
      Sounds great, will use that for the future lol

  • @amdasaba
    @amdasaba Před 4 lety +67

    I thought the title was "Why were the Roman Mad at Bath?"

    • @NathanTAK
      @NathanTAK Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like you spade a moonerism

    • @FrdKal-Kal
      @FrdKal-Kal Před 3 lety +1

      Didn't the Romans have bad hygiene?

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 Před 2 lety +7

      @@FrdKal-Kal what? With all those baths?

    • @achair7265
      @achair7265 Před 2 lety +1

      @@helenamcginty4920 That didn't drain properly, in the public bath houses no less, that's the only gripe.

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 Před 2 lety

      I dunno why, one of the best-preserved Roman baths is at Bath.
      (Though a lot of the finer detail, suspiciously not-eroded by the centuries, is actually Victorian)

  • @gabeshaw3721
    @gabeshaw3721 Před 2 lety +184

    Greece has many hills and mountains which provided a lot of defence, so they didn’t need to do a whole lot of military innovation. This, for the most part, kept Greek city states from conquering and destroying one another, as well as preventing outside enemies from conquering them for the most part, allowing them to flourish culturally. Italy is actually pretty flat on either side of the Apennine Mountains. Before it started conquering the known world, Rome faced a lot of existential threats and was constantly at war with its Latin, Etruscan, Umbrian, and Samnite neighbors, as well as the raiding Gauls and Germans, the Carthaginians, and occasionally the Greeks. The best minds were put to use in law, administration/bureaucracy, politics, war, and engineering.

    • @marcv2648
      @marcv2648 Před 2 lety +4

      The Greeks had plenty of military innovations. How do you think they conquered the known world? This video is full of misinformation by the way. The Greeks were geometers, not mathematicians. They didn't use zero either.

    • @user-Prometheus
      @user-Prometheus Před 2 lety +7

      @@marcv2648 Greeks _were_ mathematicians, and it is wrong to generalize that just because they used geometry to prove many theorems and a lot of them are in the particular field they were geometers, not mathematicians. At some point, Greeks even came close to inventing calculus. Do not try to discredit them with these theories. Greeks paved the way.

    • @yashvardhantyagi0512
      @yashvardhantyagi0512 Před rokem +1

      what about spartans and macedonians? They were greeks and pretty good at military.

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Před rokem +1

      You are correct that geography is so important. Is why America was such a powerhouse. To the north you had very few people due to the weather so it wasn't a threat and to the south it got really tiny so there wasn't enough population to be a threat, and to the east and west for giant oceans. It would be unbelievably hard to attack America.

    • @sometingwong2733
      @sometingwong2733 Před 15 dny

      @@marcv2648 that was macedonian still greece but they are in a different place compare to athens and sparta

  • @johnny-smith
    @johnny-smith Před 4 lety +157

    This channel deserves more views.

    • @anthonyitaliano7316
      @anthonyitaliano7316 Před 4 lety +10

      It'll catch on, give it a few months. Second Thought, RealLifeLore, Wendover Productions, etc...I remember them having 2-5k subscribers for months and months until they blew up on one video that went viral.

    • @dermotmeaney
      @dermotmeaney Před 3 lety

      And subs?

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 Před 2 lety +4

      Its not the only informative/interesting video with low viewing numbers. Like Science shambles etc.

    • @achuuuooooosuu
      @achuuuooooosuu Před 2 lety

      I thought this had a million views tbh, it was made really well

    • @Namehjeff
      @Namehjeff Před 2 lety

      Rohan is here! Gondor has called for aid!

  • @OAlexisSamaO
    @OAlexisSamaO Před 2 lety +198

    "in civilizations with lower literacy, the most effective way to demonstrate ones power was not through intellectual superiority but through something more material"
    lel this is exactly why i started to learn electronics,
    i live in mexico and my passion is programing and i started to study on my own and made some programs,macros and games, yet my uncles
    always thought i was wasting my time or doing nothing productive (i was adopted by mi grandparents so my uncles feel that his parents are helping me way too much), so i started to study electronics made some projects like obstacle avoid robot a homemade 3d printer, robot arm, currently im working on some glove to control the robot arm and in an automated chess board
    with this projects that to be honest were easier to do than some programs or games i had made, they now stoped talking bad of me at my back and now they morally support me to go to the university.

  • @queldron
    @queldron Před 2 lety +297

    Thing is that the Greeks were famous Engineers too with grand works and public buildings.

    • @powerist209
      @powerist209 Před 2 lety +11

      And they worked in Post Alexandrian Greece where they are internationally connected despite the Diadochi War. Meaning they could exchange ideas and put to good use.

    • @queldron
      @queldron Před 2 lety +14

      @@freneticness2136 They had amazing siege engines (some examples are Helepolis, fire siege engines not to mention they were the inventors of catapults, ballistas, crossbows and others). They had aqueducts and also underground aqueducts (city plumbing) and were also the inventors of modern type showers and water sinks in their houses. They had bath houses with hot waters and large theaters. All these especially in Asia minor, Egypt and in Greece. The technological advances were so astounding that Arthur Clark in the '70s wrote about the Greeks, that, if their insight was in parallel with their ingenuity, today we would talk about travels in colonized planets and not how to try to get to the moon again.

    • @queldron
      @queldron Před 2 lety +9

      @@freneticness2136 First, they invented all of these things (in weapons and in urban technology).
      Second, southern Greeks were more foot soldiers heavy infantry style, while northern Greeks were more focused on cavalry and that was the combined arms army of Alexander that conquered the world.
      Third, they had siege engines with them and the engines were compacted and deployed when ordered (lego style).
      Forth, Alexander needed about 7 to 8 months to conquer Tyre while other conquerors nevered conquered it (where did you read that he needed years???).
      Fifth, Greeks also were using circumventing walls against cities to besiege them, they even did that before they invented the siege engines (catapults, ballistas etc) because it was the only way to do that before said inventions.
      Sixth, all Greek Cities were walled (I am sure that you have heard of the Long Walls of Athens) except Sparta and that was on purpose.
      Seventh, the walls of Mycenae were astounding for the Archaic Greeks (850bc - 750bc the time when Homer was alive) and that was the time when Greece went out of their 400 years of Dark Ages. After that they didn't marvel at them anymore.
      Eighth, the Romans considered the Greeks to be the most civilised people. For them to be titled Greek was the greatest honor. The Romans were propagating that they were the successors of Alexander's legacy. Their elites were speaking Greek to such extent that they abandond the use of Latin and we have writings of the common people of Rome that were angry at them because they "forgot" their mother language (Latin).
      Ninth, in the New Testament, Paul writes that in the eyes of God "it doesn't matter if you are Scythian or Greek", meaning that in the eyes of God it doesn't matter if you are the lowest barbarian or the most civilized person in the world. He wrote that at the height of the Roman period and considered himself a Roman citizen, but he used the word "Greek", not "Roman" to symbolise the peak of the civilized and cultured person.
      Tenth, what Arthur Clark said was in one small sentence the compacted achievements of the Greeks and their potential, if they didn't have civil war such a favorite hobby.

    • @queldron
      @queldron Před 2 lety +6

      @@freneticness2136 Wrong on so many levels. Greek civil war was the major factor that brought the Greek Empires/Kingdoms to collapse. Rome and other powers just provided a little more push. Also, Romans almost always had Greek allies when fighting against others Greeks. Please read about the technological advancements of the Hellenistic period and how these advancements were halted in the Roman period.

    • @stefthorman8548
      @stefthorman8548 Před 2 lety +2

      @@queldron Macedonians aren't northern Greeks, they're an former tributary, aka an "barbarian" that became more powerful then the Greeks, they adopted Greek stuff, because they were stronger.

  • @johnford6501
    @johnford6501 Před rokem +19

    Correction: Al-Khwarizmi was the father of Algebra. His book “al-jabr” which literally meant “balancing” as in balancing an equation, was introduced to Italy where his name was changed to Al-Goritmi, which is where we get the word “algorithm” from.

    • @johnford6501
      @johnford6501 Před rokem +6

      I’m a math teacher and I try to stress the accomplishments and contributions of the Arabic world as much as possible in my class as we would be still adding X’s and V’s without it.

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Před rokem +5

      @@johnford6501
      Well you clearly slept in History classes as these arabic numerals are Hindu. Arabs merely brought them to North Africa where Italians picked them up

    • @anametobenamed3717
      @anametobenamed3717 Před rokem +2

      So did you apparently, Hinduism is a religion, Hindi is a culture. That still doesn't denegrate the fact that arabs so effectively used it and spread it

    • @IndiaTides
      @IndiaTides Před rokem

      @@varoonnone7159 In arabic, the numberals are called hind. Arabs copied many mathematical achievements of Indians. Greek also contributed. Chinese did the same. In mediaeval time, Arabs contributed more to it. The channel is eurocentric. They will remove contribution of all other civilizations to praise thei godfathers. They think logic is invented by Greeks. Lol.😂😂😂
      I mean every other civilizations didn't understand logic.

  • @danielovercash1093
    @danielovercash1093 Před 2 lety +3

    I just found your channel and you're answering questions I never knew I needed the answers to

  •  Před rokem +2

    This channel absolutely rocks! Great diverse animations, intriguing storytelling and videos just the right length (but I would have no problem if they are longer if subject requires it) Keep up with original content and subjects :)

  • @mikehunt6946
    @mikehunt6946 Před 3 lety +8

    1:41 i died. what a shocking development.

  • @daca8395
    @daca8395 Před 2 lety +91

    Well, as an engineer, I can say math is quite usefull in my profession.
    And by "quite usefull" I ofc mean "you must know it to even be concidered for a job"

    • @PugnaciousProductions
      @PugnaciousProductions Před 2 lety +21

      A Roman legion is often called a "construction company that sometimes does war."

    • @PugnaciousProductions
      @PugnaciousProductions Před 2 lety +9

      @@Name-cz5jj They only burned them so others couldn’t use them, which is smart in war.

    • @just1it1moko
      @just1it1moko Před 2 lety +3

      thats also because nowadays an engineering project cannot fail or someone gets fired because it can cost up to billions of dollars sometimes. back in those days you just had slaves do all the work and it would cost you a lot less. and if a slave got wounded or died in the process it would just be considered a suggestion for improvement.

    • @daca8395
      @daca8395 Před 2 lety +4

      @@just1it1moko I disagree. First, slaves were threated like property, and therefor looked after to a degree. Second, if Roman projects fail, you risked loosing more then a job

    • @PugnaciousProductions
      @PugnaciousProductions Před 2 lety +1

      @@just1it1moko Yeah, ever heard of decimation?

  • @jessedevlin9489
    @jessedevlin9489 Před 2 lety +4

    I love history videos not focused on troop movement and wars.
    Good job!

  • @tomasmurcu
    @tomasmurcu Před 2 lety +1

    This is one of the best and most entertaining and unique videos about Rome I've ever seen- and I've seen an awful lot. Great, great work.

  • @DTux5249
    @DTux5249 Před 2 lety +135

    Question...
    How does the Roman system make addition and subtraction harder? It is visually easier to do.
    MDCCCVII subtract MCCII is DCV and I didn't even have to think about what those symbols mean
    Multiplication isn't difficult. Repeat each group of symbols a number of times and simplify
    XVI by VII
    XVI XVI XVI XVI XVI XVI XVI
    XXXXXXXVVVVVVVIIIIIII
    XXXXXXXVVVVVVVVII
    XXXXXXXXXXXII
    LLXII
    CXII
    Or double one side as you halve the other
    XVI by IIII
    XXVVII by II
    XXXXVVVVIIII by I
    XXXXVVVVIIII is XXXXXXIIII is LXIIII
    Even simple division isn't that hard. Just break em down, and halve em
    C divide by IIII
    LL by IIII
    L by II
    XXXXX by II
    XXXXVV by II
    XXV by I
    XXV is our answer
    I don't even have to understand the numbers I'm working with to do things.
    Yeah, not having 0 is a bummer, but most math involving it is fairly simple anyway
    0 groups of something is 0
    Don't divide something into 0 pieces
    Something ± 0 is the same thing
    Unless you consider logarithms simple math, I really don't get that first statement

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +35

      Now, compare that with decimal numbers. Then tell which is easier. Also, you gave examples of pretty small numbers and simple addition, subtraction and multiplication. How would you do squaring or cubing the numbers. Or, how would you write fractions and polynomials and equations?

    • @casparvoncampenhausen5249
      @casparvoncampenhausen5249 Před 2 lety +23

      @@user-pakshibhithi10 his point was that it's good for simple calculations, not complex ones

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +21

      @@casparvoncampenhausen5249 For simple calculations we can just use tally marks too. It is very clear that Roman numerals are very inefficient.

    • @TheGreenTaco999
      @TheGreenTaco999 Před 2 lety +6

      @@user-pakshibhithi10 saying that it is clear doesn't make it clear. saying that you are right doesn't make you right.
      the romans had no practical use for precise numbers, if you disagree then please name the practical uses.
      but remember, OP is talking about addition, subtraction, and multiplication, which WOULD be hard to do with tally marks. Tally marks are WAY worse than Roman Numerals.

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +6

      @@TheGreenTaco999 Tally marks maybe a little less better than Roman numerals. But Roman numerals on themselves have abysmal amount of use.

  • @D76straight
    @D76straight Před 3 lety +3

    Great video. I've always wondered about this.

  • @otherpatrickgill
    @otherpatrickgill Před 2 lety +12

    it sounds so strange to hear someone in a British sounding accent say "math"
    Outside the United States (we don't talk about Canada) mathematics is taken as plural, since it's comprised of many branches (algebra, arithmetic, calculus...) and the "s" indicating pluralization is carried over to the abbreviated form.
    We don't abbreviate pantaloons to "pant" and so we don't abbreviate mathematics to "math".
    Your narrator deserves a medal for flawlessly using the American contraction without sounding like he's just gargled live frogs

    • @anantav51
      @anantav51 Před 2 lety +1

      lol that was the first weird thing I noticed

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Před rokem +1

      An S after math sounds exceedingly bizarre to my ear, but I guess that's because I'm from the land nobody talks about ;-P. Nobody pluralize it here either except for the same snobs who get angry if you say soccer. Those people are also idiots because soccer is the only word they get cranky about that is different on one side of the pond than the other.

    • @youthoughtaboutit6946
      @youthoughtaboutit6946 Před rokem +1

      That makes me wonder, do non-Americans/Canadians regularly call science sciences or history histories, or is that just reserved for mathematics?

    • @michaelnelms4296
      @michaelnelms4296 Před rokem

      Proper English is confusing. Then along came American English and decided to change things up.

  • @has25252
    @has25252 Před 4 lety +58

    Do one on the history of plagues/pandemics and how people responded and the after effects - would get a lot of views now, I think, especially in this format.

    • @changer_of_ways_999
      @changer_of_ways_999 Před 2 lety +5

      Short answer: Sometimes a lot better than we are. Florence lost somewhere around 70-80% of their population in the first wave of the Black Death but still maintained their basic government and social structure and literally became one of the main centers of the Renaissance.
      Now compare that 70% loss to what's happened facing a 0.003% percent loss of the population and you can see how much shame our ancestors are putting us in. They had a higher tolerance for mortality than us. Our prosperity makes us more strangers to crises. In some ways our advanced knowledge works against us as it engenders a sort of hubris and intellectual ego that shatters when nature proves that we're still mortal and fallible.

    • @LukSter18998
      @LukSter18998 Před 2 lety

      @@changer_of_ways_999that sucks

  • @s.vidhyardhsingh3881
    @s.vidhyardhsingh3881 Před 2 lety

    Subscribed. Only after watching two videos. This is really informative. Keep up the good work

  • @Altorin
    @Altorin Před 2 lety +149

    roman numerals weren't designed for math, they were designed to be carved into stone.
    They're pretty good numbers for carving into stone. Arguably much better for it then arabic numerals. Could you imagine carving an 8 into stone? Shudders.

    • @pedrosabino8751
      @pedrosabino8751 Před 2 lety +12

      I have never thought about this, maybe the latin alphabet would be better to carving too 🤔

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 2 lety +18

      @@pedrosabino8751 yeah, Arabic is abysmal at anything other than fancy handwriting and specialized typographic tools. I say that as someone born into it.

    • @sophiamarchildon3998
      @sophiamarchildon3998 Před 2 lety +12

      Carve "1878" on a block, or do it with "MDCCCLXXVIII". The 2nd one takes a lot more time and also has curves like the first one. But the first one is only 4 characters and can be written with just 17 lines.

    • @pedrosabino8751
      @pedrosabino8751 Před 2 lety +8

      @@sophiamarchildon3998 Just carve D as a triangle and C as

    • @minamagdy4126
      @minamagdy4126 Před 2 lety +10

      @@sophiamarchildon3998 the Hindu- Arabic numeral system is indeed better in being shorter. Pure Arabic numbers, as symbols, aren't actually that bad, but the letters are abysmal.

  • @bertieballs
    @bertieballs Před 2 lety +5

    As an Englishman I was very disappointed when the narrator with a VERY British accent said math instead of maths.

  • @jgizzy
    @jgizzy Před 3 lety +13

    This is so crazy, how does a video LIKE THIS only get 4,175 views in more than 6 months????? It should be a few hundred thousand at least. All of these videos!! I am shook, wtf is wrong with youtube algorithm.

    • @josephmoore9706
      @josephmoore9706 Před 2 lety +1

      It's time has come. The algorithm God has blessed thee

  • @esit94
    @esit94 Před 3 lety +1

    How has this channel not blown up?!

  • @kaisergauss6401
    @kaisergauss6401 Před 3 lety +28

    Passion to learn via correlating what you already know to a not understood subject at hand is how you gain wit. Romans had no need for theoretical wit except in application for imperial endevors, the wit of which was either relied on by Romans who learned via correlating warring and practical Roman cultural subjects, or by Greeks who learned via pondering the abstract and correlating their ideas with real application. For example: "eureka!" Was only shouted because a man wanted to learn how to measure something, and found out how by seeing a peculiarity with his bathwater. That was the Greek mindset.

  • @Xanctus
    @Xanctus Před 2 lety +3

    2:36 is what assured i would subscribe.

  • @warai309
    @warai309 Před 2 lety +1

    How simple and yet beautiful art style

  • @angelfan16
    @angelfan16 Před 3 lety +1

    Interesting video. Great job.

  • @tonybayer2546
    @tonybayer2546 Před 2 lety +9

    As an Italian, this explains a lot.

  • @hugs4drugs205
    @hugs4drugs205 Před 2 lety +27

    Marcus Aurelius is a great example the Roman's dealt highly with the theoretical as well, however just in other subjects

  • @vivaelpepe4878
    @vivaelpepe4878 Před 4 měsíci

    I always wondered that, thanks 👍🏻

  • @x0lopossum
    @x0lopossum Před rokem +2

    0:30 LOL😊

  • @georgios_5342
    @georgios_5342 Před 2 lety +114

    1:04 no, the Greeks had a much better math system, because it is decimal. The Greek system has symbols for 1-9, 10-90, 100-900. It's much better for addition and subtraction, because it works just as modern numbers, you simply have three choices for each number, depending on where that number is. Meanwhile the Roman system has symbols for 1, 5, 10, 50 etc and you have to put them one next to the other or to the back of the other.

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +13

      Decimal number system was invented in India. Not Greece, they had a better system than the Romans, but, they didn't use the decimal number system.

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +6

      @@user-ds1qf6kw1j That system definitely didn't have zero. How come it would become a decimal number system?

    • @TheGreenTaco999
      @TheGreenTaco999 Před 2 lety +13

      @@user-pakshibhithi10 moving goalposts!!! no one talked that it had or didn't have zero, this is about rather or not it's got decimals!!!

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +5

      @@TheGreenTaco999 How can a number system become "Decimal number system" without Zero. Did it have a symbol for '10' too. How could they write big numbers without Zero? The numbers should be written over and over to make a bigger number. That is decimal number system. How did they do that in that system?

    • @user-pakshibhithi10
      @user-pakshibhithi10 Před 2 lety +4

      @@user-ds1qf6kw1j It would be nice if you explain how that system works. Because I have no idea of it.

  • @Libertus-wv9xe
    @Libertus-wv9xe Před 2 lety +16

    When you have an empire you have the best of the best in every field at every corner of the empire working for you and probably even many outside the empire who are opportunists . That's how the US does things even today.

    • @voteforfreedom3725
      @voteforfreedom3725 Před 2 lety

      Having an ability to learn from their mistakes and changing and adapting what didn't work. Is what made Romans so successful. However history tells that when an empire falls this ability was lost well before it fall.

    • @genghiskhan5701
      @genghiskhan5701 Před 2 lety

      @@Name-cz5jj
      The Chinese Empire is still around though and kicking

  • @colorin81colorado
    @colorin81colorado Před 2 lety

    You eclectic collection of facts and figures does ADD up!

  • @roycorreia
    @roycorreia Před 2 lety

    Great video!!

  • @southvillechris
    @southvillechris Před 2 lety +9

    Brilliant! But pedant point here: the narrator is English but calls it "math" like an American would, but the images all say "maths" like a Brit would.

    • @Tom-771
      @Tom-771 Před 2 lety +3

      The video also says that the Romans left the maths to the greeks since they were better at it. Well, it seems you like to leave narration, like here, to the British. So perhaps it would be an idea to actually let the narrator sound like a Brit. Also he would say IN-Quiry with the emphasis on the Quiry not the In. Little things, but they don't 'are grate.

  • @iainharper3926
    @iainharper3926 Před 2 lety +15

    Romans (to me at least) seemed to be great adopters and innovator’s of bring together ideas that worked from other cultures to use within their own. That’s why I cannot understand why they didn’t replace their numeric system!

    • @asktheetruscans9857
      @asktheetruscans9857 Před rokem +1

      For the same reason Americans won't use the metric system. We think everyone has to learn our "language," including mathematical language.

    • @tuluppampam
      @tuluppampam Před rokem

      Because they didn't find it necessary, thus never did

    • @BughunterX
      @BughunterX Před rokem

      Basically Romans where the Chinese of their time. Ok, China allready existed back then, so they were a copy ;)

  • @kamranabbasov6408
    @kamranabbasov6408 Před 10 měsíci

    as you mentioned that Greco-Roman education system relied on memorization, it reminded me of the master's degree I was studying in Italy in engineering and how memorization was crucial in grading system. Professors sometimes wanted the exact thing they have told in the lectures without giving any space to improvisation or alternative ways.

  • @Jgfhujnggg23342
    @Jgfhujnggg23342 Před rokem +2

    Your guy’s animation is so simple yet when looked at closely in individual parts is SO detailed, impressive, this is one of those channels I’m not mad there’s not alot of videos, The animation alone should take a while it’s unique, simple, detailed pleasing and therapeutic to the eye and it should be said!👍 Jesus bless!!!!!!!

  • @thatrandomguyontheinternet2477

    I love how our modern education system is almost a carbon copy of the backgrounds learning environment that the Romans had

    • @50shekels
      @50shekels Před 2 lety +38

      *"school bad, i smart because i no like school"*

    • @dl2839
      @dl2839 Před 2 lety +7

      @@50shekels Honestly, I believe Public Schools should be abolished.

    • @fduranthesee
      @fduranthesee Před 2 lety +6

      @@50shekels 'tis true tho

    • @50shekels
      @50shekels Před 2 lety +27

      @@dl2839 Awful rethoric. Should've listened more in public school. F+

    • @sasi5841
      @sasi5841 Před 2 lety +10

      @@50shekels it is bad though. Most people don't remember much of the things they learned in public schools, public schools do a terrible job of showing the practical application of things they are taught (assuming those things are important), the like to fill the minds of students with useless and unnecessary things most of the time (i.e. like what's the point of learning the iambic pentameter), sometimes the things that are taught are counter productive and destroys creativity, lastly they suck up too much of the tax revenue. The cons of public schools are lot higher than the pros. Even then most of the pros of public schools could be provided by other, more economical and time-efficient, ways.

  • @idiotsavant2343
    @idiotsavant2343 Před 3 lety +32

    "Were the Roman's really just that thicc" yes, Roman's were super thicc.

  • @golden_smaug
    @golden_smaug Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this video my dear sir!

  • @grey3247
    @grey3247 Před 2 lety

    Between this and the first two videos on the channel the man went on a training arc

  • @gordonburns8731
    @gordonburns8731 Před 2 lety +3

    Mathematics is a plural, therefore any abbrieviation of the word must also be plural... it's MATHS, not MATH!

  • @Ghradri
    @Ghradri Před 2 lety +37

    Imagine using maths like a Greek to calculate the circumference of the Earth instead of getting water from point A to point B, building siege engine to crush barbarians under big rocks or counting the amount of salt bags you need after defeating Carthago.

    • @Noizzed
      @Noizzed Před 2 lety

      @CAT CHANNEL Not true, if you got two opponents fighting each other with swords or spears, the one with knowledge will win over the one who is only strong.
      Strong attacks aren't gonna win you a fight, precise and quick ones will.
      You of course don't need maths, but you mentioned "mind" and you certainly need more knowledge than strength.

    • @Kevin-fj5oe
      @Kevin-fj5oe Před 2 lety

      @CAT CHANNEL in shooting range it by far easier, you add armor, logistic, and equipment then it more or less the same as the roman.

    • @tuluppampam
      @tuluppampam Před rokem +1

      @CAT CHANNEL in wars single soldiers mean almost nothing, all you need is discipline and good tactics
      Physical strength is necessary, but people can be trained for that to reach an acceptable minimum

  • @masterblaster4784
    @masterblaster4784 Před rokem

    These videos are so good, yet so violent

  • @r.casagrande8689
    @r.casagrande8689 Před 2 lety

    Amazing channel

  • @User-ghcwvouvmgs
    @User-ghcwvouvmgs Před 2 lety +4

    There literally had to do math to calculate a number...
    DCXLII
    642 I think
    Took forever.
    Would not recommend.

  • @miguelservetus9534
    @miguelservetus9534 Před 2 lety +5

    You show the Greeks doing calculus and algebra. Calc wasn’t invented/discovered till the 1600”s, Newton and Liebnitz. Algebra was a little earlier, Rene Descarte.
    The Greeks were really good at trigonometry and some arithmetic but not higher order mathematics.

    • @mageds2684
      @mageds2684 Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly. He kinda messed up on that part.

    • @-rate6326
      @-rate6326 Před 2 lety

      Newton and liebnitz don't invented calc it was already being used by lots of mathematians
      there is high chance greeks might be using calculus without knowing about
      peoples were developing lots of mathematical topic independently
      for instance. Number system we use today was being used in Indian Subcontinent in 1500 BCE
      greek and indian were in contact with each other from so long
      there were sculpture of Greek gods in Indian Subcontinent from maurayan empire ( strongest empire at that time )
      they were engaged in huge trade at that time
      there were lots of cultural exchanges too
      Persian empire was in contact with Indian Subcontinent
      thats why al khwarizmi used indian number system
      concept of negative numbers was used by chanakya to show debt (he was economist too) he was royal advisor of mauryan empire.
      world was way to much connected back then.
      peoples were share there knowledge with each other.
      everyone was influenced by each other
      before archimedes peoples were doing trade overseas with ships.
      which makes me think that history is shattered.
      Euclid is called father of geometry
      there was another greek mathematician before euclid he wrote 13 book about geometry only 6 from which survived

  • @HerrHafiz
    @HerrHafiz Před 2 lety

    wow.interesting video with cute animation.how do you do that?i mean which software did you use?thanks for the answer, im curious to learn.

  • @malachaimoniz2290
    @malachaimoniz2290 Před 2 lety

    I subbed just on the art style

  • @readingthebible5413
    @readingthebible5413 Před 2 lety +3

    I can’t imagine they were that bad at math given the amount of stuff they engineered and built.

  • @ArdentLion
    @ArdentLion Před 2 lety +6

    TLDR: Romans were cool, Greeks were nerds? Got it.

  • @tsikanpanda
    @tsikanpanda Před 2 lety

    This channel should have more subscribers

  • @TITSTODIEFOR
    @TITSTODIEFOR Před 2 lety

    I love watching the subscriber numbers climb on this channel

  • @be2081
    @be2081 Před 2 lety +4

    I always knew I was Roman

  • @OneOfDisease
    @OneOfDisease Před 2 lety +12

    Love the art style. I wish you would have show with examples how complicated it would have been to do arithmetic using Roman numerals. Regardless the art style earned a sub...or perhaps it was the goats.

  • @nickblacksoul4318
    @nickblacksoul4318 Před 2 lety

    Done deal I am subscribed ..... Like that silly, English ,one eyed ,cane holding, cartoon , great work 😉

  • @lainecolley1414
    @lainecolley1414 Před rokem +1

    @3:36 the Romans being stuck on that sandy spit of land it's understandable that they'd be more physically fidgety.

  • @my8thaccount236
    @my8thaccount236 Před 2 lety +19

    I highly doubt that an empire that created some of the most beautiful, long lasting and innovative architectural constructions was “bad at math”. You don’t become a master of Architecture without a mastery of Geometry and a decent understanding of how physics affects objects.

    • @tuluppampam
      @tuluppampam Před rokem +4

      Gothic architecture was literally created because people liked big windows but a wall of glass doesn't carry a lot of weight
      The first few times buildings crashed down, but then, through TRIAL and ERROR, they figured that all those arches and columns and more worked
      They weren't great engineers, they only knew through practice

    • @DBProxy
      @DBProxy Před rokem

      Applied physics and geometry is very different from theoretical.
      You don't always need to know all of the exact intricacies to understand something. As a very very simplistic example lets use throwing a baseball.
      You throw the ball, it curves and suddenly drops due to the way you threw it, you don't need to be well versed in gravity and friction to understand that "if I throw the ball like that it'll do that same thing again", its just an innate understanding, common sense.
      Then, later you can put the pieces that you've learned from various other things together to make even greater. You don't need to understand every minute detail to understand that things work in certain ways.

  • @kght222
    @kght222 Před 2 lety +3

    haven't watched yet, i am at 0:14. "why were the romans bad at math" makes me think "are you insane." in antiquity and even with the holy roman empire in the western world only the greeks rival the romans in math. and even while that isn't entirely true (many other cultures had great understanding of math in europe, northern africa and far beyond) the romans kinda collected (i was going to say created, but that isn't true at all) the fundamentals that all western mathematics are built on today. the romans were on par with china when it came to math during their existance.

  • @icy_bird5540
    @icy_bird5540 Před rokem +2

    Math teachers: “you’re going to need to know this later”
    The Roman Empire: “watch me”

  • @burieddreamer
    @burieddreamer Před rokem +1

    4:00 Is that man holding a telescope? Isn't that an invention attributed to Galileo?

  • @mcflymikes
    @mcflymikes Před 2 lety +45

    Such a pity this channel failed, while similar quality content channels have around 1 million views per video.

    • @CountingStars333
      @CountingStars333 Před 2 lety +4

      All about consistency + humor.

    • @Komenya0905
      @Komenya0905 Před 2 lety +1

      Came across this channel yesterday. It is excellent. Sure it is a pity.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 2 lety +4

      In this case the channel hasn't got a cue about the subject. The roman number system is linked to nifty abacus with negative numbers.

    • @Umamaahoe
      @Umamaahoe Před 2 lety +5

      The channels still uploading… wym

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Před 2 lety

      How do you know if a channel has failed?

  • @josemarques404
    @josemarques404 Před 2 lety +22

    I find this argument fallacious, for the fact that Rome was not always this huge empire. On the contrary it had long been a small Greek like city state until it’s large territorial expansions began. So, this idea that small territories produces intellectuals seems a false equivalency.

    • @josemarques404
      @josemarques404 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Name-cz5jj In a sense he addresses that point, by the fact that the Romans did produce a lot intellectual but how they demonstrated it was through public works and maybe not so much scholastically

    • @prometheus9096
      @prometheus9096 Před 2 lety

      Because it is. This video is just garbage.

  • @aniruddhsingh4169
    @aniruddhsingh4169 Před 2 lety +2

    At 5:04 didn't mentioned India

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Před 2 lety

    Nice video

  • @nikolaivanniekerk1626
    @nikolaivanniekerk1626 Před 2 lety +6

    Greatest innovation comes when there is catastrophe. There would be a problem from the catastrophe and because there is a need o fix it, ideas form. So cultures that have the most ideas are faced with the most problems and a will to solve them. What do you guys think?

    • @thefutureisnowoldman7653
      @thefutureisnowoldman7653 Před 2 lety +2

      I disagree the collapsed of rome didn't lead to a early enlightenment it led to a dark age.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 2 lety

      @@thefutureisnowoldman7653 The colapse of philadelfia led to washington, rome just went to constantinople

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro Před 2 lety +1

      Ww2 created lot of technology. Internet was started by usa military.

    • @genghiskhan5701
      @genghiskhan5701 Před 2 lety

      @@thefutureisnowoldman7653
      Dark Age is pretty much a bs term.
      The Germani Goths who conquered Rome later swore fealty to the Emperor in Constantinople.

  • @helenamcginty4920
    @helenamcginty4920 Před 2 lety +5

    Why does an Englishman say 'math' instead of 'maths'?

  • @bernardosax
    @bernardosax Před 2 lety

    You deserve 1M subs.

  • @arberarber6592
    @arberarber6592 Před 2 lety

    Whats the name of the chant in the beginning?

  • @theprojectproject01
    @theprojectproject01 Před 2 lety +5

    I've talked to some mathemeticians about this, and they all agree that doing maths in the Roman system was mostly to do with understanding that the brain can recognize different symbols to mean different things.

  • @namenotfound8747
    @namenotfound8747 Před 2 lety +15

    Virtually every single thing we take for granted in the west comes from the Romans direct and indirectly. Without the Romans, there is a chance that Greek knowledge would of been lost if they didn't appreciated it. Protecting and preserving knowledge is more important then just discovering new ideas. People and schools love to praise the Greek democracy of Athens or the Roman republic but pretend as if the Roman empire isn't the reason we still know of these ancient pasts. People these days really downplay the empire's contributions to the present.

  • @walterbell1529
    @walterbell1529 Před 2 lety +1

    0:25 sometime in the future when y’all are bigger and have more time a mini-side quest could be done on all the other bad mathematicians societies.

  • @bebedor_de_cafe3272
    @bebedor_de_cafe3272 Před 2 lety

    0:56 that sistem pendurated for a long time

  • @dinos9607
    @dinos9607 Před 2 lety +10

    This idiocy of "Theoretical Greeks vs. Practical Romans", or the other "Greek philosophers, Roman engineers" has to end. In the 6th century BC - I repeat, 6th century BC, in Samos - I repeat again, Samos - a small island in eastern Aegean they pierced a tunnel into the mountain to bring water to the city from the other side. The tunnel had to be turning to reach the source (i.e. it was a curve inside and had to have also several turns inside to avoid tough or bad rocks... and guess what.... they had started the tunnelling from both sides ... and they met 2 kilometers in the middle. Just like in the English channel tunnel. You know how much was the difference? 20cm or so. Let that sink in. I repeat.... in the island of Samos which was not even the 20th largest state in Greece. Let that sink in.
    Greeks were far superior engineers than Romans. Romans just had the money and guess what.... they hired Greek engineers. Facts.

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 2 lety +5

      Imagine being this mad over a video

    • @dinos9607
      @dinos9607 Před 2 lety +5

      @@riograndedosulball248 Imagine imagining people being "mad" because they presented a different viewpoint. Millenial? GenZ?

    • @OSTemli
      @OSTemli Před 2 lety +1

      @@dinos9607 🤦 u did a mistake, entire global majority identify as roman spiritually.

    • @TheGreenTaco999
      @TheGreenTaco999 Před 2 lety +1

      "Greeks were far superior engineers than Romans. Romans just had the money"
      so literally the Greeks were superior in the subject's ideas but weren't applying it as much due to a lack of money? and that the Romans were able to preform more of the actual "doing" due to an abundance of money?
      theoretical: "concerned with or involving the theory of a subject or area of study rather than its practical application." having good ideas but no money. *greeks*
      practical: "of or concerned with the actual doing or use of something rather than with theory and ideas." having ideas and applying them. *romans*
      "they hired Greek engineers" not saying they didn't, but they did not exclusively, or especially hire Greek engineers to my knowledge. The aqueducts that stand to this day were invented by Appius Claudius Caecus who was Roman. This would be like suggesting that the following facts I will list in just a second suggest that Greeks were bad and engineering because of what they got from the Egyptians when in reality it just shows that great engineers come from all over the place and are not necessarily "from" somewhere specific, this gets interesting when you consider that the Romans also hired Egyptian engineers.
      "Greek early scholars were schooled in ancient Egypt. The ancient Egyptians provided the knowledge base the Early Greek scholars needed to advance their knowledge. The Greeks were in fact obsessed with the ancient Egyptians."
      "Starting with the first “proto Greeks”, the Myceneans and Minoans, the Egyptians imported much of their culture towards Greece as a part of the great trade of the Bronze Age. After the Bronze Age Collapse, the early Greeks were heavily influenced by the more sophisticated Egyptians in the wake of the Greek Dark Ages."

    • @dinos9607
      @dinos9607 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheGreenTaco999 Some of the most impressive architectural features in ancient Greece were those of the Minoans-Mycenaeans. And they do not at all look like "Egyptian"'for all the talk of "egyptian influences". There are architectural statements in Greece that predate pyramids (yes, including pyramids, in Peloponese, they do exist, in smaller sizes of course, but older than those of Egypt - the pyramid is an age-old design, nothing brand new even at the dawn of the the Bronze Age) .As for the arches you find in the Roman aquaducts these pre-existed and first (= first known to us) found in bridge building in Bronze Age Greece.
      The fact that Greeks were running their own affairs in small almost city-level states the biggest of which had less than the 1/1000th of the ressources of Romans had does not mean they were not able to build amazing things. Romans never reached, let alone surpass the Greeks in architecture, not in engineering. I am not stating this to belittle the Romans, it is just a historical fact. I already placed a nice example of the little island of Samos and what they did there piercing the mountain to bring water - an architectural feat far more difficult and far more complex than building an aquaduct, no matter how many kilometers long (it is just the same thing, long enough - once you have the ressources and above all the need to do so you do it). Where on earth would the Greeks need to build big aquaducts to transport water from far away? They always built their cities quite close to water sources and their aquaducts were thus local (and often partially or fully underground as well).
      I do not want this to be inflated nor do I belittle the engineering feats of Romans. I just tore down the idiotic notion of "theoretical Greeks vs. practical Romans". It just does not stand even the slightest of scrutiny. that is all.

  • @LCTesla
    @LCTesla Před 2 lety +3

    the importance of math to rudimentary engineering is overrated. there are a lot of problems you can more easily solve through trial and error than through calculation.

  • @hko2006
    @hko2006 Před 2 lety +1

    4:46 what made the atzec good at it?

  • @nervousman_1417
    @nervousman_1417 Před 3 lety

    During the intro I heard chanting...could you please link it since I like chanting for study

  • @Jason-gq8fo
    @Jason-gq8fo Před 4 lety +5

    Maths

    • @markwhi1
      @markwhi1 Před 4 lety +1

      Which is your favorite mathematic of all the maths?

    • @Jason-gq8fo
      @Jason-gq8fo Před 4 lety +1

      @@markwhi1 the one with all the letters

    • @markwhi1
      @markwhi1 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Jason-gq8fo Well that explains it.

  • @epicfail6887
    @epicfail6887 Před 2 lety +2

    2:17
    Damn that math in his head
    I understand them all LOL

  • @nunyabiznes33
    @nunyabiznes33 Před 2 lety +2

    Didn't the Romans also used abacus (the word is Roman too iirc)? How did they used that with that numeral system of their's?

  • @ICaligvla
    @ICaligvla Před 3 lety +1

    So, how did you come up with name for your channel?

    • @SideQuestYT
      @SideQuestYT  Před 3 lety +1

      Well, I think it fits a lot with the videos I make. Each is its own little adventure, a sidequest.

  • @KaiserAfini
    @KaiserAfini Před rokem +1

    They did set the first calendar with leap years, which served as the basis of the current one. Their great skill in logistics supply chain gave them a tremendous edge in war, which requires mathematical aptitude. So they had mathematical skills, just not a tendency to research it academically.

  • @sherkhan2416
    @sherkhan2416 Před 3 lety

    OK now this is something new

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Před 5 měsíci

    This reminds me of a video from the engineering guy which pointed out the difference between Engineering and the hard sciences: the former is focused on solving practical problems even if the science behind is poorly k nown. They could get engineering experience via trial and error and work out rules of thumb for designs long before the science for it has been figured out.

  • @Briselance
    @Briselance Před 2 lety

    02:14
    Yet, you can't have a good practice without a good theory touchstone.

  • @FizzleFX
    @FizzleFX Před rokem +1

    2:28 peek of Humanity
    When bring smart made you a star.

  • @osheridan
    @osheridan Před rokem +1

    "I didn't fail class, I was embracing Roman culture!"

  • @richbummy7925
    @richbummy7925 Před 2 lety

    Can we get a cointelpro video??

  • @paradox_1729
    @paradox_1729 Před 2 lety +1

    There is more to this, even Greek mathematical developments had come to an end by the time the Romans came around. There were socio political aspects to this, but one of the big issues was arithmetic itself, as used by the greeks and the romans. The representational number system using letters work fine up to a point, but that cumbersome arithmetic would have lead to or would impede development of anything resembling calculus. For that you would need positional number system, that makes arithmetic a trivial matter, so you can go past it and build bigger constructs and ideas.

  • @ClickClackBoom
    @ClickClackBoom Před 2 lety

    please please please make a video on what make some cultures innovative

  • @wilhelm_kr4216
    @wilhelm_kr4216 Před 2 lety +1

    "Dude, its a sword. You just swing-swong it, not launch it into space"

  • @satyabratmalik4326
    @satyabratmalik4326 Před 2 lety

    0:08-0:11 what's that sound?

  • @ShionWinkler
    @ShionWinkler Před 2 lety

    I want a video about the goats, that is the most important question that needs to be answered.