Pythagoras

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Humanities lecture on Pythagoras and the importance of math and music in early Nature Philosophy (Dr. George Brooks)

Komentáře • 116

  • @yushamush9849
    @yushamush9849 Před 3 lety +14

    this guy is truly fantastic, life is better with people like him in action

  • @yuanwang8658
    @yuanwang8658 Před 4 lety +43

    this is the real philosophy teacher, connect all stuff together, the math, and music...rational - ratio.....so cool...

    • @jeffreyriley8742
      @jeffreyriley8742 Před rokem +1

      Fun analogies, too.

    • @Pete-uv4bu
      @Pete-uv4bu Před rokem +1

      Yeah he is amazing. He's not even a math teacher but he has helped me understand more about math in this short clip than any math teacher I even had.

  • @Mr.New.Folder
    @Mr.New.Folder Před 5 lety +34

    Sir one of the rare things makes me happy and euphoric these days is to check up on your channel and watch how beautiful one can put intertwined thoughts in a simple form.

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 5 lety +20

      You are very kind to say that--it has been an unexpected source of satisfaction that these lecture videos which I posted merely for my online students have attracted a small but global audience of appreciative people. Thank you. Peace.

    • @Kijanashenzi
      @Kijanashenzi Před 3 lety +5

      @@georgebrooks7775 Hello Sir, would you be able to post more of your lectures, they are really interesting to listen to. Thank you.

  • @ranahassanein8677
    @ranahassanein8677 Před 4 lety +10

    This is the closest I've ever come to understand any theorem . THANK YOU! EXCELLENT!!

  • @valerianc8575
    @valerianc8575 Před 3 lety +6

    Excellent explanation! I wish i had such teacher in school

  • @melissareid1595
    @melissareid1595 Před 4 lety +12

    Fascinating stuff. Noone ever told me these things before. I love it.

  • @hazemm440
    @hazemm440 Před rokem +3

    You deserve to have million of viewers. What a phenomenal lecture by an outstanding lecturer.

  • @conglomeratehq
    @conglomeratehq Před 3 lety +4

    Need more educators like you! I figured math out only after completing chemistry and extrapolating my own correlations to come to the same conclusions of how to understand and enjoy math. CHEERS!

  • @karamlevi
    @karamlevi Před 3 lety

    Most teachers are weak individuals who abuse others not of their ilk.
    This teacher though is a God amongst fools.
    He is the true teacher... he is the gifted and loving person who cares for the minds of learners.
    A great human being.
    So simple, so ease...
    It’s called seeing things from others points of views and amending ones self until the other can share in thy knowledge.
    Profound sales people do this.
    They are kind, sweet and helpful.
    Great caregivers, great communicators, great healers, great animal trainers...
    It’s like dancing to music. Help a person catch it and they can grow...

  • @jurgenblick5491
    @jurgenblick5491 Před 4 lety +4

    The essence of a true teacher

  • @adon2424
    @adon2424 Před 6 lety +5

    Amazing how you bring "everything " into focus! I realize now that perception is an illusion forged when consciousness rationalized harmony and discord...

  • @doomtreasure2278
    @doomtreasure2278 Před 4 lety +4

    Very very good educator right here 👏

  • @bburg1776
    @bburg1776 Před 6 lety +7

    Your an amazing teacher. I think if I would have had teachers like you I wouldn't have dropped out of school. I'm looking forward to watching all your videos. Thank you for your efforts.

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 6 lety +2

      I was lucky in having a great math teacher in 8th grade, Mrs. Booth, who taught us to actually think about what math was describing, not just memorize formulas and procedures.

    • @karamlevi
      @karamlevi Před 3 lety

      Me too.

  • @pitagorashamilton9361
    @pitagorashamilton9361 Před 3 lety +3

    Muchas Gracias Professor.
    Excelente discurso sobre Pitágoras.

  • @smileawhile3788
    @smileawhile3788 Před 3 lety

    Great lecture. I look forward to watching more. Thank you.

  • @mohammedmustefa2473
    @mohammedmustefa2473 Před 4 lety +2

    your lectures are amazing .....please make more please

  • @philliphoffman2921
    @philliphoffman2921 Před 3 lety +2

    I wish I lived in the USA... would 100% pay to attend your classes Well done sir

  • @DiscotopiaUk
    @DiscotopiaUk Před 2 lety +2

    I’ve watched a ton of your videos, you truly are an inspiring teacher 👍

  • @yoncoreee7573
    @yoncoreee7573 Před 3 lety +2

    I wish I had this kind of teacher . I am nearly 40 and want to go back to school

  • @steadyeddy6526
    @steadyeddy6526 Před 4 lety +3

    Great lecture. Harmony and dissonance resonate with our EMOTIONS. They were trying to objectify EMOTIONS, something we are still in the dark about today.
    The rational and the irrational, order and chaos, light and darkness, good and evil, one must presuppose its anteposition. Nor can one exist without the other.
    One is agreeable, the other disagreeable. WHAT TO DO?

  • @baharhatami6957
    @baharhatami6957 Před 2 lety +1

    Great lecture, hope to see more videos. Thank you

  • @sinanguer4366
    @sinanguer4366 Před 6 lety +2

    sure great material.

  • @gabriels302
    @gabriels302 Před rokem

    Incredible! Thanks

  • @anthonye7656
    @anthonye7656 Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Professor Brooks, Im a student at FIU and boy do I wish I was able to take any of your classes. I just wanted to say thank you for posting your lectures. I enjoy and gain even more curiosity about the world and the nature of truth. Im an English Major but I’ve always linked my interest in literature back to my fascination in philosophy, theology, and psychology. Thank you again!!!

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 3 lety

      Thanks, I've recently done a polished lecture in a green screen room with special effects on the history of the number 7 which shows up towards the end of the Pythagoras lecture. You might enjoy it:
      czcams.com/video/cS3j7u6Vuo0/video.html

  • @Rayaaymen
    @Rayaaymen Před 2 lety

    Love you....Your lectures helped me to grasp things simply and with love.... ♥️♥️♥️ regards from INDIA

  • @KAChinery
    @KAChinery Před 7 lety

    Great presentation! Thank you!

  • @andronicemarinis1072
    @andronicemarinis1072 Před 4 lety

    Being Greek, I grew up with this. Great stuff!!!

  • @mohamedsaid9917
    @mohamedsaid9917 Před 4 lety +1

    Great!!! GOO onn, please!😍😍😍😍THANK uu.

  • @user-dm5kv9gz8h
    @user-dm5kv9gz8h Před 4 lety

    Thank you sir for showing ancient wisdom they don’t teach them to people today they want us to learn only how to consume!

  • @gregoriosaavedra955
    @gregoriosaavedra955 Před 3 lety

    Exellent. Thank you. God bless you.

  • @simflyr1957
    @simflyr1957 Před 3 lety

    WOW... THANK YOU - Pythagorean theorem, makes SENSE!!!

  • @ravikiran5160
    @ravikiran5160 Před 6 lety +1

    I'm from India, great classes and very helpful for me. Please upload more classes

  • @AJDOLDCHANNELARCHIVE
    @AJDOLDCHANNELARCHIVE Před 4 lety +1

    Brilliant stuff! As someone who has always been very poor at mathematics (perhaps due to the dictatorial nature of how it was taught) and very much anti music theory (and still am on the basis that theory is just the explanation, not the method) I found this thoroughly engaging and informative. I've always been a massive fan of Pythagoras and the later philosophical/spiritual schools like the Neoplatonists. It's great to see and hear someone describing things in the manner which they may have been done back in Ancient Greece before abolition of true education and the introduction of indoctrination, memorisation and recital.
    Cheers from the UK!

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks man, I just traveled over to your channel and listened to a few videos...you shred that guitar buddy!

  • @catherinehofmann4839
    @catherinehofmann4839 Před 2 lety +1

    thank you so very much for your inspiring teachings. I would’ve loved to have you as a teacher ….

  • @drdayguy
    @drdayguy Před rokem

    Thank you I'm 55 and thought I was stupid. I know now I just needed a good teacher!

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před rokem +1

      I was lucky to have had Mrs. Booth...now we have both benefited from her.

  • @alchemyma
    @alchemyma Před 2 lety

    Wow what an amazing video

  • @hhhugz5826
    @hhhugz5826 Před 2 lety

    man, i wish you were my highschool teacher. i would have actually listened.

  • @noahjames172
    @noahjames172 Před 4 lety +1

    Phenomenal teacher

  • @MADKOALA
    @MADKOALA Před 4 lety +2

    Just done with this one and off to your nature philosophy class now, this is tremendously interesting, as someone who likes to study songwriting this is perfect. I believe these ratios are also what define music that is instantly liked by people, as opposed to your common "bad song", I\m doing research to see what comes up because if we could define what it is that makes us, for instance, listen again and again to the same song and learn it, it could be applied to other things, if you could somehow generate that kind of drive in the brain.

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 4 lety +1

      So glad you liked it and are finding it useful. There is some follow-up to the music aspect in my most recently uploaded video on the #7 and its mystical allure. It is also my first video in front of a green-screen with production values and special effects added.

  • @alchemistsanonymous6558

    God bless Mrs Booth. Children deserve to be taught the Quadrivium. I wish I learned that first, then "school math" second

  • @roadsector9527
    @roadsector9527 Před 4 lety

    Hi Sir, Thank you for your lectures.

  • @funnybot77
    @funnybot77 Před 2 lety

    I would gladly pay for this guy's videos. He has a business opportunity. :)

  • @baroquecat2295
    @baroquecat2295 Před 3 lety

    mind BLOWN!!

  • @galegaming6381
    @galegaming6381 Před 4 lety

    your explaination isvery good.

  • @akhlaqahmad6206
    @akhlaqahmad6206 Před 3 lety +1

    Good job

  • @saud7205
    @saud7205 Před 2 lety +1

    This must be in every math book !!

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před rokem

      I actually learned a lot of this FROM my math books in school. A lot of chapters begin with little biographical blurbs about the mathematician or the problem that prompted the solution that the chapter is about. Most students skimmed right past those parts...I found them fascinating.

  • @NikoHermogenes
    @NikoHermogenes Před 3 lety +1

    quality teachers matter

  • @jeffreyriley8742
    @jeffreyriley8742 Před rokem +1

    I love the idea that Parmenides thought everything was like in the Matrix!

  • @Designsounzcom
    @Designsounzcom Před 4 lety

    Please upload more videos you are the best explain

  • @Rayaaymen
    @Rayaaymen Před 3 lety

    Love you......🥰🥰

  • @estherherat4977
    @estherherat4977 Před 5 lety

    Enjoyed this just as much as I have enjoyed the rest. A little disappointed though that the video seemed to have skipped a tad. Thank you.

  • @christopherellis2663
    @christopherellis2663 Před rokem

    In any rightangled triangle, the sum of the square of the sides is equal to the squRe of the hypotension.

  • @danielhopkins296
    @danielhopkins296 Před 2 lety

    Pythagoras, or, Buddhacharyas, is probably the eye doctor Herodotus says Amasis sent to Cambyses ( Budd Kambojas)
    The PYTHagorean theorem is said to appear with the priests of PTAH and the sutras of BUDHAyana

  • @abhishekhsharma677
    @abhishekhsharma677 Před 3 lety

    Sir please make more videos to educate us . Thanks you so much .

  • @FranciscoCastillo-ot9ib

    Muy bueno!!

  • @rustyb4nana
    @rustyb4nana Před rokem

    God bless you

  • @RootedVines
    @RootedVines Před 4 lety

    Awesome

  • @waynedombrowski7568
    @waynedombrowski7568 Před 3 lety

    To any Music Theory majors:now you're ready to try wrapping your mind around the Pythagorean Comma. It leads to why J.S.Bach was compelled to compose the 48 Preludes and Fugues of The Well Tempered Clavier and why we have 12 semitones per octave. Also,I strongly suspect that Pythagoras,the father of Western music,may well have derived key concepts from India,by way of the Persian Empire,which connected the two cultures of Greece and India before Alexander. By the way, Arabic numerals originally were derived from..India!

  • @danielolivera2618
    @danielolivera2618 Před 3 lety

    Hi George, do you have any videos on socretes? love your videos!!

  • @georgemiguel6885
    @georgemiguel6885 Před 5 lety

    Wooow! 👏👏👏

  • @sunildeshpande1
    @sunildeshpande1 Před 4 lety

    बहुत बहुत धन्यवाद स् र

  • @claudiabl5787
    @claudiabl5787 Před rokem

    ... Eventually, they had invented squares:)
    and they meseaured afterwards all world with squares
    Back then, I had poor English, theses days maybe the reasoning.
    Professor, I am following the classes right now, to understand if i should register for new classes in Philosophy.

  • @thomasberry1772
    @thomasberry1772 Před 2 lety

    I wish my teacher thought like this...

  • @sandcroft2924
    @sandcroft2924 Před 3 lety

    thank you , i am hooked!! i loved maths but my teachers were useless never tried to make us understand anything and just to memorise it which i cant NOT everyone can memorise things the same way. thanks onve again x
    btw there is jump at 28:44...not sure what happened there missed that part?

  • @PViolety
    @PViolety Před rokem

    Nice.

  • @Jack-eo5fn
    @Jack-eo5fn Před 2 lety

    How did I not know this diagram of squares? Because I had Mrs McCollum for math instead of Mrs Booth.

  • @logos513
    @logos513 Před 6 lety

    HI George off topic (love your lectures)... But During the time period of the Trojan war...what were the epic stories of times past being told of that time? Are there any known references? Do you know of anything I can read about? Cheers

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 6 lety +3

      That is an interesting question. I asked a colleague of mine who is a specialist in Classical Greece (I'm a medievalist) and he confirmed what I suspected, which is that we know very little about the Mycenaeans before the late Bronze Age when they came into the Mediterranean world and had their adventures which became the folklore of the later Greeks. The only two approaches are to mine the echoes of older stories and songs that appear in the Homeric epics and other scraps of Linear B (the name for their writing), or to try to reconstruct it from Indo-European (which is a whole different academic field). The stories of Theseus and Heracles would seem to be older by a century or two than the Trojan War. And of course the stories of the Olympian gods probably existed in some form for many centuries before that. In Book I of the Iliad, the character Nestor, who is older than the other warriors, is scolding them for their dishonorable behavior and reminding them that their fathers would not have acted this way--he goes on to mention their exploits, including destroying the "beast men who lived in the mountains." It sounds a bit like Gilgamesh and Enkidu slaying Humbaba in the Cedar Forest from the early Mesopotamian epic. (I've also read a theory that these "beast men" and Humbaba might be distant memories of the last of the Neanderthals!). Anyway, these kinds of tidbits are about the best we can do. Our literary tradition of the Greeks begins with Homer and Hesiod and we just can't penetrate much further back. The previous culture of the Minoans, which they conquered, likely had a rich mythic tradition, but we still cannot decipher their language (Linear A) and I don't know that there is a whole lot of it anyway. Thanks for writing--it's been fun thinking about this. Cheers!

    • @logos513
      @logos513 Před 6 lety

      George Brooks Thanks for the response ! I’ll start looking into. Some of the things you’ve mentioned ! Are you a believer in earth being split into four periods of time ? Where mans intelligence size strength knowledge and longevity demise to 10 percent Of it’s previous age ? Are there any characters that you know of during the Ulysses time where their age was a few hundred yrs old ?

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 6 lety

      I think that starts to veer into mysticism, rather than evidence-based history. But who knows?--I wasn't there!

    • @AJDOLDCHANNELARCHIVE
      @AJDOLDCHANNELARCHIVE Před 4 lety

      @@logos513 You can still live to 200+ today if you practise fasting, extremely focused nutrition (IE; basically only consume medicinal herbs), sexual abstinence, qigong or some other sort of meditative energy work to both circulate internal energy and cultivate it from the universe around us, and of course live a relaxed stress-free, unpolluted lifestyle, amongst other things which should come naturally (alcohol is ok but not car fumes or synthetic drugs etc...). The Chinese hermit monk/Taoist Li-Ching Yuen is someone to look into.

  • @LAILA-2816
    @LAILA-2816 Před 3 lety

    Dear sir all the compliments are true I don't know what to add other than have you written any books?

  • @CannaCrafter
    @CannaCrafter Před 6 měsíci

    Around 9:15 in the video you mentioned Pythagoras having an odd dislike for beans. I wonder if its because he knew undercooked beans had the precursor to cyanide in them and eating only 2 or 3 raw kidney or lima beans would induce the same effect as food poisoning. I also wonder if this is where the term "bean counter" came from 😂

  • @laineymckenzie660
    @laineymckenzie660 Před 2 lety

    All truth not myths...

  • @zoeyvanlydegraf424
    @zoeyvanlydegraf424 Před 4 lety

    What course is he teaching?

  • @Finnyzation
    @Finnyzation Před 9 měsíci

    Vibration, vibrato ratio

  • @Ferbvargas
    @Ferbvargas Před 2 lety

    I really wish you had a math course simply teaching us math using reality instead of symbols. My daughter is struggling in high school, her teacher is terrible, and I try to help, but I don't know enough. Do you happen to know of video source which teaches in this manner? As might realize, your lessons are already changing lives, hopefully my daughter is one of them.

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 2 lety

      Wow, thank you. I am not a math professor, but I had the benefit of Mrs. Booth for 8th-grade math which changed my brain forever, and one of my academic interests is the history of science and technology, so I continue to think about mathematics and its applications--and I just enjoy thinking about the world in mathematical terms. What grade is your daughter in, and what kind of math is she struggling with? I don't know a lot of online math resources, but as I type this I see the bots have put a math tutorial course in the ads (calcworkshop.com) which might be good. There is one delightful series of math videos with simple stick figures drawn in sped-up video by a mathematician named Vi Hart that I love (here is her video on Pythagoras which I have my students watch--it is very good at conveying how the Greeks saw things in ratios: czcams.com/video/X1E7I7_r3Cw/video.html). If it would help, I could do a quickie video on how all the formulas for areas of plane figures: square, rectangle, parallelogram, triangle, circle...are all related to each other, derived in a series, and how they relate to the physical shapes they describe...that was the mind-blowing lecture from Mrs. Booth that changed everything for me--I would never see math the same way again.

  • @akhlaqahmad6206
    @akhlaqahmad6206 Před 3 lety

    I want more stuff

  • @frederick3467
    @frederick3467 Před 4 lety

    Hate maths, didnt understand it, enjoyed your lecture a lot and found the maths interesting

  • @kot0564
    @kot0564 Před 10 měsíci

    Didn’t know Kevin James was a professor.

    • @kot0564
      @kot0564 Před 10 měsíci

      Jokes aside this guys awesome, I’ve watched a bunch of his lectures. Too bad I didn’t have someone like this philosophy 101, I would’ve actually been interested.

  • @atmanand5802
    @atmanand5802 Před rokem

    🥗Dhanyavaad Ji🌏Tat Tvam Asi📿Aham Brahmasmi💖🌈🌟🌕👁🌅🕉

  • @carlmorrison9789
    @carlmorrison9789 Před 2 lety

    You have to complete the square.

  • @rubio93
    @rubio93 Před 5 lety +1

    Dorian mode has a minor third, not mayor, BTW :P

  • @kevinodonnell3451
    @kevinodonnell3451 Před 2 lety

    Please make a video that defends Philosophy. Science obviously came from Natural Philosophy. Isaac Newton was a Natural Philosopher himself. I hate that some people say Philosophy is Dead when it is clearly not. I wanna hear what you would say.

  • @st.paulmn9159
    @st.paulmn9159 Před 3 lety

    Spinal cord injuries

  • @Laocoon283
    @Laocoon283 Před rokem

    30 sec black screen lol?

  • @plumstreetmusic
    @plumstreetmusic Před 6 lety

    Thank you George. You may enjoy the series of short videos about Pythagoras that I put together for my students and others. --John Sase, Ph.D. Economics (and a guitarist) czcams.com/video/sSNlSri6bag/video.html Also, you may enjoy Norman Wildberger's series on Rational Geometry: czcams.com/video/GGj399xIssQ/video.html

  • @hedo9392
    @hedo9392 Před 4 lety

    Why didn't anyone clap after the spider man song!

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 4 lety

      Ha! Good question! I have occasionally gotten applause at the end of that bit, but only with a really lively bunch of students!

  • @eleveneleven1865
    @eleveneleven1865 Před 3 lety

    Why does it work lol

  • @AFRoSHEENT3ARCMICHAEL69

    Yeah but (Pi)thagoras was BC so why would they. I interestingly see a direct connection to music and the Bible for example: God created the heavens and the earth in 7 days referring to the diatonic chords of the Major scale he rested on the 7th day because the 7th scale degree is Locrian (Loco) which has the natural Tritone in the key of C also known as the devil in music. This 7th scale degree has no resolution because of it's diminished 5th or Pentagram. The 12 disciples representing the 12 semi tones with JC=13 or Jesus Christ encompassing an octave only 13 is 1. This is why the Bible is the true word of god. They thought only perfect shapes could come from something harmonious. If you also take a circle of fifths start at C and go through all 6 diatonic notes in alphabetical order you get the start of David. Remember diatonic follows this Order Major Minor Minor Major Major Minor. Chromatic Christ Whole holy whole tone scale being hexatonic Ect. IDK it all makes sense to me 12 . Like the Bible was written by mathematicians and musicians. Tetragrammaton is apparently the true name of god which to me sounds like some complex shape. Music has symmetry and that resonance experiment using Hz proves Pythagoras was right on the Music of the Spheres. Music is the universal language of the cosmos.

  • @EllyLugosi
    @EllyLugosi Před 2 lety

    George Brooks, I love your channel! Thank you so much sir!!! 🌟

  • @DoubleAAmazin3
    @DoubleAAmazin3 Před 2 lety

    dissonance goooood

  • @cindynichols946
    @cindynichols946 Před 2 lety

    sq½w

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 2 lety

      1/2 width squared = 1/4 the area. It's the problem in reverse, and doesn't get you around the issue of irrational relationships.

  • @suballica
    @suballica Před 4 lety

    I enjoy your lecture videos even though I am not a history or philosophy student. The thing I like about your lecture is you just describe the ancient ideas and events without much of your own personal bias and judgement. Especially with your Early Christian Timeline lecture where you are not being biased about religion/Christianity and letting listeners make up their own mind and understand things as it is.
    You also explain things using an everyday language where a layman can understand without the need of any background knowledge in philosophy.
    My only complaint is you are doing a disservice to humanity by publishing only a few videos. Also, you are uploading random unrelated videos and that doesn't give me a reason to subscribe to your channel as I am not sure what you are offering. I have an interest in philosophy but don't need to see your catapult videos. You are making me confused as what to expect from your channel.
    As a business student, you are not 'specialising' the product you are delivering to your niche market. You must have read Adam Smith's 'Wealth of the nations", you just need to apply it here. Cheers!

    • @georgebrooks7775
      @georgebrooks7775  Před 4 lety +5

      Well, I'm glad you have enjoyed the lectures--your complaint is noted, but it proceeds from two flawed assumptions: 1. the topics are not "unrelated"...they are various topics that I teach as a professor of humanities--it isn't just a religion site or a philosophy site, but everything related to the human pursuit of truth and beauty; and 2. I don't really care if anyone subscribes to my site--you'll notice that there are no ads as I have not tried to monetize my channel. I only filmed these lectures for my online students, and to put some of my standard lectures online to save class time for discussion--they are on CZcams because that was the easiest way to link them to my online platform. I didn't expect other people to watch them, and was surprised when I started getting email notifications that such-and-such a person had "subscribed to my channel"--I didn't even know what that meant at first. It has been pleasantly surprising that people all around the world have watched my lectures and 99% of the comments are positive...and my Plato lecture in particular seems to have helped a lot of people through difficult courses. As a business major, you see the world in terms of profitable commodities, but that isn't the only way to place value on something. Subscribe...don't subscribe...I will be equally unaffected by whatever choice you make. Cheers!