Unveiling The Remarkable Discovery Of Pi By A Genius - Prepare To Be Amazed!

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2024
  • If you are a mathematician, this video is not for you. If you are a visual thinker, this will explain everything your Math teacher left out!
    When you find out how the value of Pi was discovered, it will change your whole idea of Math and Geometry. Teachers tell you that Pi is about 3.14 but they never explain why. Visual thinkers need things explained in another way and this will explain it so you go OH! Now I understand!
    Follow the instructions and you can make your own Archimedes discovery of Pi to amaze your friends with.
    With award winning children's author and illustrator, Shoo Rayner
    Support this channel and get so much more by joining me on Patreon ➡️ bit.ly/ShooPatreonPage
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Komentáře • 290

  • @yaish3463
    @yaish3463 Před 3 lety +104

    This is is the best explanation of pi I've seen so far, that too the explanation was by one of the best artists. And the drawings were simple yet elegant, I'm impressed and you have caught my attention

    • @tiffanyscott3544
      @tiffanyscott3544 Před 2 lety +2

      Ditto!

    • @user-hl2go8tw7n
      @user-hl2go8tw7n Před 10 měsíci

      Hello ! Please tell me if the circle was smaller and stopped to say 2 and something ? What happen ?

  • @EnidsEventfullLife
    @EnidsEventfullLife Před 4 lety +67

    Nice video Shoo. Fun Fact to work out PI,
    How I wish I could calculate PI
    How = 3, I=1, wish=4, I=1, could=5, calculate=9, pi=2
    3.141592=PI

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 4 lety +12

      Never heard that! Id spend all day counting on my fingers and adding up wrong 😆

    • @T0NYD1CK
      @T0NYD1CK Před 7 dny

      Or, as they might say in France:
      Que j’aime à faire apprendre un nombre utile aux sages !
      Immortel Archimède, artiste, ingénieur, qui de ton jugement peut priser la valeur ?
      Pour moi ton problème eut de sérieux avantages !

  • @KENG-mf8pl
    @KENG-mf8pl Před 3 lety +29

    This is the most logical explanation of pi

  • @joshuabardon9992
    @joshuabardon9992 Před 4 lety +50

    This is put together very well! You always sound so happy while talking about all this which makes it feel very welcoming

  • @danielparsons2859
    @danielparsons2859 Před 2 lety +19

    I thought it was a complex question and in fact I found a beautifully simple answer in this video. Thank you. Consequently I've now subscribed.

  • @joemontiel8726
    @joemontiel8726 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I wish there were more teachers like this guy!

  • @harikrishna8146
    @harikrishna8146 Před rokem +8

    How did that wheel instantly turned into 3D with the addition on Grey sketch 😨😨
    Very great explanation sir

  • @petestevens9740
    @petestevens9740 Před 2 lety +7

    This is a really nice explanation of what Pi is / where it comes from. It is NOT a demonstration of how Archimedes determined a more precise value than "a little more than 3". Pi is only approximately 3.14, and Archimedes didn't have access to numbers written in decimal form anyway - they hadn't been invented yet. He was able to work out (using a very brilliant geometric method) that the number of diameters it takes to equal the circumference has to be between 3 10/70 and 3 10/71. That was enough precision for him, and it gives us 3 1/7 (22/7) which is about 3.148. Would love to see you make a video showing that method!

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 2 lety +6

      Thanks - It's really for the visually minded and mathematically challenged. For some people the maths only makes sense when there is a practical demonstration behind it. 😃

    • @betha8566
      @betha8566 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yes, I read that he used hexagons inside and outside a circle and doubled them until he got to 96 sides. Then he found out the perimeter that way into the fractions you described.

    • @betha8566
      @betha8566 Před 3 měsíci

      @@shooraynerdrawing I enjoyed your explanation. I always thought of pi as "just a number," but now I "see" that it's 3.141592... DIAMETERS of a circle!

    • @jgarrison1309
      @jgarrison1309 Před 2 měsíci

      Nice video. If you do this again, right around the six minute mark of the video, when you were getting three and a half and a then three and a quarter, measure the line with your ruler... to that mark... and divide that by the diameter of your circle. Use that as your decimal. You wrote down 3.14 out of nowhere because that was what we were told pi was in school. The straight line distance divided by the diameter of your wheel is the way to go, if you don't know about 3.14 ahead of time.

    • @billshiff2060
      @billshiff2060 Před měsícem

      22/7 (3.1428) was Archimedes upper boundary for PI not PI itself. Archimedes said PI lies between 3.1408 and 3.1428 which is approximately 3.141. Of course he stated it in fractions not decimals. 223/71 < π < 22/7 or 3.1408 < π < 3.1428 So pi must be ~ 3.141_

  • @noahman27
    @noahman27 Před 3 lety +5

    This is an awesome illustration of Pi. Thanks!!!!!!

  • @gerarddonovan4145
    @gerarddonovan4145 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant explaination

  • @thahirunnisajaffar
    @thahirunnisajaffar Před 11 měsíci +2

    The explanation and demonstration was outstanding sir.

  • @kevinkasp
    @kevinkasp Před 2 měsíci +1

    I figured this out in 4th grade by experimenting with various coins as my “wheel”. We hadn’t learned fractions yet so all I could say was “the distance around a circle is a little bit more than three times the diameter.”
    Well actually I didn’t know the word diameter yet so it was “A little bit more than three times across the circle.”

  • @AllanEngelhardt0
    @AllanEngelhardt0 Před 4 lety +3

    I love these. More please :)

  • @azanshaikh7825
    @azanshaikh7825 Před rokem +2

    This is the most brilliant explanation of Pi I have ever come across. Well done, good sir! subscribed.

    • @user-hl2go8tw7n
      @user-hl2go8tw7n Před 10 měsíci

      Hello ! Please tell me if the circle was smaller and stopped to say 2 and something ? What happen ?

  • @danielvincent6453
    @danielvincent6453 Před 3 lety +2

    I mean THIS IS THE BEST EXPLANATION Thanks man

  • @Sorflor
    @Sorflor Před rokem +1

    Amazing explanation of pi. I've never thought that's how someone would discover it. 👍

  • @Fiskie666
    @Fiskie666 Před 2 lety +3

    I finally understood what pi is .. incredible and it is soo simple! like all genius things it is simple.
    Do you think that anyone would explain in this way in elementary?
    Everyone would have understood.

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 2 lety

      Math teachers think in numbers and don’t understand that others think in images. They don’t get it so carry on the old way

  • @lampy6070
    @lampy6070 Před 10 měsíci +1

    So, by using this formula (l=dxπ), you can calculate the lenght the wheel will cross when you roll it one full circle based on its diametar.

  • @robertbour77
    @robertbour77 Před 4 lety +4

    Very helpful! That looks like an interesting book!

  • @takeshisatou2371
    @takeshisatou2371 Před 3 lety +4

    engineers: pi=3. Take it or leave it

  • @HenrikMyrhaug
    @HenrikMyrhaug Před 11 dny

    I always learned: "Circumference = π • diameter"
    I always thought everyone understood pi as being the ratio between the circumference and diameter of a circle, but this video brought back a memory.
    When I first saw someone write C=2πr, I was so confused why they used a more complicated and abstract formula. C=πd is so much simpler and tells you explicitly what you showed in this video.
    It makes sense if you learned C=2πr, you wouldn't get the same intuitive understanding of what pi is. By the way, I would recommend you measure the diameter instead of the radius, because measuring the diameter gets you a smaller relative error of the measurement.

    • @favesongslist
      @favesongslist Před 8 dny

      maybe as it is helpful with the area of a circle being π r2

  • @shaikhao9638
    @shaikhao9638 Před 3 lety

    Very helpful

  • @kmyc89
    @kmyc89 Před 10 dny

    I have seen that animation many times on Wikipedia,
    but I never thought, it was the origin (not to mention, that Archimedes wasn't the only, but the most accurate Mathematician)

  • @sharpasmarble6344
    @sharpasmarble6344 Před 3 lety

    Awesome thank u ✌🏻📚

  • @legendaryfailure
    @legendaryfailure Před rokem +2

    This is the best explanation, and I refuse to learn anything else any other way

  • @arshpreetsingh8567
    @arshpreetsingh8567 Před 2 lety +3

    Aryabhatta discovered pie

  • @juicy_apple_x4046
    @juicy_apple_x4046 Před rokem +2

    This is how it should be taught in public schools

  • @achembusinessidea5306
    @achembusinessidea5306 Před rokem +2

    Truly you are one of the best teachers i have ever come across.
    Very useful video sir.
    I would like to have this book in India .
    Pls tell me how may can I purchase it from you ??

  • @Papi_21
    @Papi_21 Před 3 lety +4

    I swear if someone told me this I would have done pure Maths instead maths literacy in school 😂

  • @thecommonsenseconservative5576
    @thecommonsenseconservative5576 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I went to a top 100 high school and I took AP calculus as a junior and I am now 39 and you just explained to me how pie came about

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 7 měsíci +1

      lol you were taught by mathematicians not artists 🤣

    • @billshiff2060
      @billshiff2060 Před měsícem

      Its PI π not pie🥧

    • @thecommonsenseconservative5576
      @thecommonsenseconservative5576 Před měsícem

      @@billshiff2060 cool story bro tell it again

    • @billshiff2060
      @billshiff2060 Před měsícem

      @@thecommonsenseconservative5576 Its a fact not a "story". Something tells me your "top 100" high school had those short busses lol.

    • @thecommonsenseconservative5576
      @thecommonsenseconservative5576 Před měsícem

      @@billshiff2060 your "something" was on those short busses that drove by my high school you dumb pedantic

  • @YeshuaIsTheTruth
    @YeshuaIsTheTruth Před 2 lety

    I just subscribed because of this explanation.

  • @rosannfitzekam5315
    @rosannfitzekam5315 Před rokem

    Love your videos!

  • @Gubdeer
    @Gubdeer Před rokem +1

    Great job!

  • @aranjaysharma
    @aranjaysharma Před 2 lety

    This will help me a LOT in my school project thank you sooooo much mind sir

  • @hihi-td9jd
    @hihi-td9jd Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome!

  • @YellowMustard_
    @YellowMustard_ Před 14 dny +1

    I can’t tell if I was watching an art tutorial or a math explanation

  • @krishiyer3990
    @krishiyer3990 Před 18 dny

    Brilliant

  • @independentballerina
    @independentballerina Před 2 lety +1

    wonderful!

  • @Himachal.culture
    @Himachal.culture Před 2 lety

    thanks very for this easy concept.

  • @puyagorji4020
    @puyagorji4020 Před 2 lety

    brilliant

  • @gwen7005
    @gwen7005 Před 4 lety

    Oh my! Thank you.

  • @dogslife4831
    @dogslife4831 Před 4 lety +1

    Delightful video

  • @agentstona
    @agentstona Před rokem

    nice you showed the circumference and pi relation ship ,Is there a way to show the Area and pi relation ship too using cardboards ?

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před rokem

      Oooh! I’ll have to think about that

    • @alansands256
      @alansands256 Před rokem

      See my reply under comment from "tom01". I don't use cardboard but I explain the relationship between Pi and area.

  • @jgarrison1309
    @jgarrison1309 Před 2 měsíci

    Nice video. If you do this again, right around the six minute mark of the video, when you were getting three and a half and a then three and a quarter, measure the line with your ruler... to that mark... and divide that by the diameter of your circle after you measure your wheel. Once you have that answer to the division problem, use that as your decimal. You wrote down 3.14 out of nowhere because that was what we were told pi was in school. The straight line distance divided by the diameter of your wheel is the way to go, if you don't know about 3.14 ahead of time.

  • @missionlightsgrp9187
    @missionlightsgrp9187 Před rokem

    Thank you so much. I’m truly greateful.

  • @kingnothing735
    @kingnothing735 Před 2 lety +1

    What I came for: The history of pi
    Why I stay: A quick art attack craft

  • @demon7305
    @demon7305 Před 3 lety +3

    let's all agree if I had watched this my exam would have been simpler and more fun to memorize.

  • @SergioRodriguez-og7oc
    @SergioRodriguez-og7oc Před 27 dny

    THANK YOU!!!!

  • @treint6751
    @treint6751 Před rokem

    That's pretty cool

  • @shazrizvi4343
    @shazrizvi4343 Před 2 lety

    Marvellous

  • @montyyy
    @montyyy Před 2 lety

    Thanks this video is very useful

  • @naveenshankar
    @naveenshankar Před rokem

    Beautiful

  • @tutorchristabel
    @tutorchristabel Před rokem

    awesome explanation

  • @user-hl2go8tw7n
    @user-hl2go8tw7n Před 10 měsíci

    Hello ! Please tell me if your circle was smaller and stopped to say 2 and something ? What happen ?

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 10 měsíci

      if the circle is smaller or larger the ratio is still exactly the same

  • @scherwinn
    @scherwinn Před 2 lety

    great.

  • @ManojKumar-ef2og
    @ManojKumar-ef2og Před 2 lety

    The use of the home avalible parts really caught my attention

  • @nathansequeira9442
    @nathansequeira9442 Před 2 lety

    Love the videos!

  • @richardseed8253
    @richardseed8253 Před 2 dny

    "and here is one i made earlier". Every Blue Peter Presenter ever

  • @richblaker9087
    @richblaker9087 Před rokem

    That really is truly astonishing... I had no idea Pritt Stick was even around in Archimedes time...

  • @Poor_Devil
    @Poor_Devil Před rokem

    tremendous

  • @froggyblocks
    @froggyblocks Před 2 lety

    Thanks man

  • @Sam-lj4bm
    @Sam-lj4bm Před 2 měsíci

    So it will work in every rotating body?

  • @11n_n
    @11n_n Před rokem

    Wow, great video!

  • @ronaldmontgomery8446
    @ronaldmontgomery8446 Před 19 dny

    The cord dimension of an included angle of 1/60° (MOA) at exactly 300 yards (10800") = pie π.

  • @richardseed8253
    @richardseed8253 Před 2 dny

    I remember in year seven being asked to measure the tins in mums cupboard. Diameter and circumference. Most of us got three and a remainder.

  • @anshrahatif4391
    @anshrahatif4391 Před 3 lety +5

    I have completed my high school. I wish I would have known this when I was in my school and I would rock it before my friends and teachers.

  • @gedtoon6451
    @gedtoon6451 Před rokem

    I like the rounded digits on your calculator. Who is the manufacturer?

  • @cuddly_panda7409
    @cuddly_panda7409 Před rokem

    And then there’s my teacher who gave me homework to search how pi how was created?Yaaaaaaaaaaa

  • @saigonmonopoly1105
    @saigonmonopoly1105 Před 12 dny

    Two lines in a circle line equate 4 quarter one diameter and three lines

  • @davidgggggggg
    @davidgggggggg Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah. They never explained anything to me. They just threw rules and numbers at me to put on my paper.

  • @albertobernado4103
    @albertobernado4103 Před 2 lety +2

    But who was the first person to discover that this circumference/diameter ratio is a ratio with infinite value? Where was this discovered and how exactly was this "measurement" found? Can anyone help me find this information?

  • @patrickhuynh1766
    @patrickhuynh1766 Před rokem

    6:28 "No one ever told me that, no one. If they did I wouldve understood"

  • @I_DidntKnowThat
    @I_DidntKnowThat Před rokem

    I always knew what pi represented, but the simplicity of how Archimedes discovered it is astonoshing.
    Is there a mathematical proof that the ratio of the diameter and circumference is always pi?

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před rokem +2

      I'm afraid you'll need a mathematician not an artist for that! 😄

  • @jayfusion555
    @jayfusion555 Před 19 hodinami

    I wonder who taught him, and where? Keep going back... 😊👍🏿

  • @adityamishra7711
    @adityamishra7711 Před rokem

    Yippiyay.. !!! Wowie 👏...
    Good job though seriously

  • @donaldduck6122
    @donaldduck6122 Před rokem +2

    damn the part where he explained how pi came to be blew my mind

    • @gray3589
      @gray3589 Před rokem

      (⁠ ⁠ꈍ⁠ᴗ⁠ꈍ⁠)
      Makise Kurisu sugoi.

    • @gray3589
      @gray3589 Před rokem

      In time, go back

  • @Lightmaker5
    @Lightmaker5 Před měsícem

    Chuck Norris needed a pick up truck, so he invented pi.

    • @andy42x
      @andy42x Před měsícem

      I'm dopey and don't get it. 😢

  • @Name-ps9fx
    @Name-ps9fx Před 4 měsíci

    I always thought he used geometry and trig to get a precise number....he used a 6-sided hexagon inside a circle worked out the circumference of that, then made it into a 12-sided shape and got the circumference, made _that_ into a 24-sided etc etc until he'd made a 96 sided shape and was able to figure out pi to about 10 digits.
    Good effort though, certainly at the conceptual level of probably most people.

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 4 měsíci

      for non mathematician visual thinker, this comes as a revelation. You may be right... but so might I!

  • @Jessie_kimm
    @Jessie_kimm Před 4 lety +2

    6:13 oh boy i do not know how to count like that 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😅😅😆😆

  • @paulhanger7242
    @paulhanger7242 Před rokem

    I think if you explained this to school kids they would enjoy mathematics more. Such a great demonstration

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před rokem +1

      That's why I made the video. Mathematicians wouldn't think to explain this for visual thjinkers!

    • @user-hl2go8tw7n
      @user-hl2go8tw7n Před 10 měsíci

      Hello ! Please tell me if the circle was smaller and stopped to say 2 and something ? What happen ?

  • @tunein6765
    @tunein6765 Před 4 lety +3

    If only he compared the radius to the circumference instead of the diameter
    Now everyone learns about pie instead of tau

  • @ShivamKumar-zr2qi
    @ShivamKumar-zr2qi Před 2 lety

    Wow

  • @smithlo4092
    @smithlo4092 Před 8 dny

    I think what if the story is, someone try to use a wheel with diameter is 1 2 3 4 6 and then measure the circumference. all of those ended up not a whole number. then they stop, take a break and eat some pie. After that they try again with diameter is 7 and this time the circumference is 22 and it's a whole number. So, I call it a pi. Yes I made this up.

  • @thatsdaniellelol
    @thatsdaniellelol Před měsícem

    Is the book still available??

  • @someguynotnamedjaylenharmo5431

    Happy pi day everyone

  • @DaltonKevinM
    @DaltonKevinM Před rokem

    There must have been some calculation that someone performed whose answer was pi, and it wouldn't make sense for the known numbers of that calculation to be some ugly addition/subtraction or multiple of pi so I've always wondered how we got pi in the first place. I do still wonder how they continued to calculate the least significant numbers during the discovery of pi.

  • @wywot
    @wywot Před 16 dny +1

    Would a Shredded Wheat carton do just as well?

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 16 dny

      Crunchy nut cornflakes is best. They were Archimedes fave 😆

  • @sugardaddy9721
    @sugardaddy9721 Před 3 lety +1

    Why not the formula be Diameter x Pi? I mean, Iget that 2 x radius is diameter. But woupd t it be shorter if we just use diameter x pi.

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 3 lety +1

      because r is the basic unit and is used in all other circle/sphere formulae. It's easier to keep it all simple to D x pi is correct.

    • @sugardaddy9721
      @sugardaddy9721 Před 3 lety

      @@shooraynerdrawing wow, thanks for the extra information. I wish I had a math teacher like you when I was in school

  • @jfarinhote
    @jfarinhote Před 4 měsíci

    You said something very important, had you been explained like that, you would have understood it way faster.

  • @stericsrv669
    @stericsrv669 Před 2 lety

    Being a maths student, it's very time consuming😒... but understood well...👍👍😃

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 2 lety

      Yes, true... but it's for non-maths students to understand! lol

  • @R1ester
    @R1ester Před rokem

    8:23 why did you put the dot on the middle it looks like multiplication sing put the dot on bottom!!!

  • @dalvirajesh9928
    @dalvirajesh9928 Před 2 lety

    U r good 👍

  • @zprime4624
    @zprime4624 Před 2 lety

    Sir i dont know if you are seeing this but im begging. Please tell me the name of your background music
    Its really awesome 😭

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 2 lety

      it was written for me especially by the wonderful @cleffernotes czcams.com/users/cleffernotes

    • @zprime4624
      @zprime4624 Před 2 lety

      @@shooraynerdrawingThank you but Sir i tried to look for it there are so many songs 😥

  • @Jessie_kimm
    @Jessie_kimm Před 4 lety +2

    6:37 OMG HOW YOU KNOW!!!!!! Maybe thats why i dont know how to count like that😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @deadmausish
    @deadmausish Před rokem

    wwhere did the 34 m come from? Was with you until you said 2 * pi etc ..why 2 * ?

  • @user-zy7mc2ci9t
    @user-zy7mc2ci9t Před 2 měsíci

    I didn’t even know what pi until my dad and the guy explained it to me

  • @LesleLeBang
    @LesleLeBang Před 3 lety +5

    -Take the first three odd integers: 1,3,5
    -Double them thusly: 113355
    -Divide the last three by the first three thusly: 355/113
    There ya go, Pi accurate to 6 decimal places!

    • @OXIR
      @OXIR Před 3 lety

      Oh thank you for this information

    • @shooraynerdrawing
      @shooraynerdrawing  Před 3 lety

      Doesn’t help nonmathematicians who are visual thinkers! 😃

  • @exuconton
    @exuconton Před 10 dny

    Get any cyliner and a long enough piece of non-strech strand. Easier

  • @nonya69
    @nonya69 Před 3 lety

    "I'm an artist. Not a mathematician" haha

  • @bsastarfire250
    @bsastarfire250 Před 10 dny

    How I like a large container of coffee.....