Informal History of Physics

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 04. 2020
  • Stephen Wolfram gives a brief history of physics from Aristotle to Newton to Einstein and beyond---including simple conceptual explanations, historical footnotes and a few ideas about the future of the field.
    Originally livestreamed at: / stephen_wolfram
    Follow us on our official social media channels:
    Twitter: / wolframresearch
    Facebook: / wolframresearch
    Instagram: / wolframresearch
    LinkedIn: / wolfram-research
    Contribute to the official Wolfram Community: community.wolfram.com
    Stay up-to-date on the latest interest at Wolfram Research through our blog: blog.wolfram.com
    Follow Stephen Wolfram's life, interests, and what makes him tick on his blog: writings.stephenwolfram.com
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 228

  • @cristianfcao
    @cristianfcao Před 4 lety +99

    It's a warm summer evening in ancient Greece...

  • @Seekthetruth3000
    @Seekthetruth3000 Před 3 lety +69

    This guy got his PhD in physics when he was 21 years old!

    • @alexwilson8034
      @alexwilson8034 Před 2 lety +8

      At Cambridge and Dick Feynman was his advisor

    • @AlbinoWhiteGuy
      @AlbinoWhiteGuy Před 2 lety +1

      That is pretty crazy, he does a great job of explaining complicated ideas in an understandable way.

    • @parthasur6018
      @parthasur6018 Před 5 měsíci +4

      He does not have a batchelors or masters degree in anything! He dropped out of Oxford because he thought he had nothing new to learn in the BSc (or BA) course! He has a PhD from Caltech, I believe, and worked with Feynman no less.

    • @bigoptions
      @bigoptions Před 3 měsíci +1

      Good reason to listen to him, but his opinion differs a great deal with most other PhD's. Kind of makes what he has to say more important than what his degree is doesn't it. Would you believe him even more if he was a millionaire? lol

    • @chrisrecord5625
      @chrisrecord5625 Před 2 měsíci +2

      He was 20!

  • @bariswheel
    @bariswheel Před 4 lety +27

    What a masterpiece of a post, please continue !

  • @romancech1962
    @romancech1962 Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you so much! Please continue posting, the way you present material is very intuitive and immensely useful.

  • @fernando.liozzi.41878
    @fernando.liozzi.41878 Před 4 lety +8

    Thanks Stephen!

  • @marcusedwards1443
    @marcusedwards1443 Před 4 lety +44

    Absolutely loving these talks. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and work!

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 4 lety +1

      I find the Wolfram Mathematica user guide oddly satisfying and hilarious at the same time.

  • @ricardoruiz127
    @ricardoruiz127 Před 3 lety +21

    This is the 2nd time I watch this video. On my first watch, being foreign to the sciences, I was totally lost. On my re/watch, after consuming many smaller videos on the particulars, I was able to enjoy the talk MUCH more! Thank you so much for sharing a chronological development of physics in a consumable manner! It was very helpful to my understanding!

  • @dynamikeloveyou
    @dynamikeloveyou Před rokem +2

    Thank you Stephen Wolfram for your astonishing work. I discovered you through lex fridmans podcast amd have relistened to those podcasts several times. Ive been through your and your colleagues 2018 (i think) hypergraphic analysis of euclids geometry. Dazzling!
    Ive got A new kind of science at the ready on my table. I just need to do a few weeks of push ups and yoga to be able to lift it up without straining my back.
    In addition to your wonderful insights two things i have appreciated in your work have been: your comment about intellectual self confidence being instrumental to your elaboration and integrarion of your own ideas toward their coherence and explanatory power. I also appreciate your genuine enthusiasm for and gifts of explanation.
    Bravo and many thanks

  • @ronaldronald8819
    @ronaldronald8819 Před 3 lety +4

    It is amazing that in a short time so many things are discovered and more or less understood. It is a miracle that i can lay on the couch with my laptop listening to one of the most brilliant scientist telling me all about it. We live in a somewhat troubled golden age that i wish more people could enjoy.

  • @KevinKovach
    @KevinKovach Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you so very much for this!

  • @jimlaguardia8185
    @jimlaguardia8185 Před 2 měsíci

    Love your lectures, Steve. Thank you!

  • @rohscx
    @rohscx Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the great post!

  • @superdan1009
    @superdan1009 Před 2 lety +3

    Mr Wolfram, you're the man. Please keep up the amazing work you're doing and please keep telling us about it. I just watched your presentation on "Computation and the Fundamental Theory of Physics" at the Royal Institution and I was really impressed and I would like to know everything about your project and how it is going into the future.

  • @PaulFeakins
    @PaulFeakins Před 3 lety

    I like the way Wolfram talks, it's very precise and clear.

  • @ninadesianti9587
    @ninadesianti9587 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @katiemiaana
    @katiemiaana Před 4 lety +4

    Physics is such a difficult subject but I followed this because you are a very good teacher.

  • @rh7686
    @rh7686 Před 27 dny

    Thank you Dr Wolfram!

  • @dharmatycoon
    @dharmatycoon Před 2 lety +2

    This video is a treasure, thank you!

  • @youtuberpatternlearning6263

    Thanks Stephen

  • @tripp8833
    @tripp8833 Před 4 lety +42

    This is incredible that Stephen is able to give an entire history of physics with no notes or anything. What a genius.

    • @warhag
      @warhag Před 4 lety +10

      he has notes you can clearly see how he glances over the top of the camera

    • @migkillerphantom
      @migkillerphantom Před 4 lety +11

      You don't need to be a genius to talk clearly and consistently at length about a topic you know in and out. Mr Wolfram is obviously of genius level intelligence, but this part is just knowledge and not directly related to that fact. You can meet perfectly average people who will be able to lecture you about their fields of expertise without any reference material.

    • @macfive4597
      @macfive4597 Před 4 lety +3

      Actually quite easy to talk about something you know lots about.
      Source, am a dumbass, can talk about useless shit I know a lot about.

    • @vinko8237
      @vinko8237 Před 3 lety

      Without notes he forgot about Kepler (31:00) with his ellipses and empiric laws, and Newton (26:00) with his gravity and calculus!!! At least a few lines, Stephen! And how could you forget the vacuum (46:15) and its French revolution, or the revolution and its vacuum... now I'm confused.
      Anyway, I enjoyed your history. Thank you!

  • @II-we2yp
    @II-we2yp Před 4 lety

    What a wonderful talk, particularly enjoyable listening to nowadays ie during lock down in London.

  • @finojose
    @finojose Před 4 lety

    Thank you Mr. Wolphram it was really fantastic!

  • @MrDryrye
    @MrDryrye Před 4 lety

    Thank you

  • @gaulindidier5995
    @gaulindidier5995 Před 4 lety +6

    We need you on the Portal , Mr.Wolfram!

  • @____uncompetative
    @____uncompetative Před 2 lety +1

    This was wonderful.

  • @DadOfAturkey
    @DadOfAturkey Před 3 lety

    wow! thankyou painting my veranda listening to this wonderful man share his knowledge. reliving my high school physics and more.

  • @KevinKovach
    @KevinKovach Před 4 lety +1

    You are in credible. Please don't ever stop!

  • @maheshkansakar9007
    @maheshkansakar9007 Před 3 lety

    Thanks so much!

  • @charlesnutter127
    @charlesnutter127 Před 3 lety

    Nice! Thank you!

  • @gotogymsportwear
    @gotogymsportwear Před 3 lety

    Many thanks Wolfram.

  • @markoshivapavlovic4976
    @markoshivapavlovic4976 Před 4 lety +1

    Happy to see your views and discuss further the physics and math with you. :)

  • @paulxavier431
    @paulxavier431 Před 2 lety +1

    Love your love for natural phenomenon.

  • @rogersmith2549
    @rogersmith2549 Před 4 lety +1

    Many books behind you!! Interesting!!!

  • @hectorrivas7655
    @hectorrivas7655 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you Mr. Wolfram

  • @Jim-kc3gx
    @Jim-kc3gx Před 3 měsíci

    I very much enjoy your posts, videos, I know so little and then it’s a matter of retrieval you’re doing it Beautifully!

  • @Gamma3
    @Gamma3 Před 4 lety +3

    Un gran saludo desde Argentina de un humilde aspirante a entrar al instituto balseiro, cuna de Maldacena. Mis felicitaciones por su increíble aporte a la ciencia

  • @crazyspace3913
    @crazyspace3913 Před 4 lety

    Thank You

  • @seanmellows1348
    @seanmellows1348 Před 2 lety

    Excellent synopsis.

  • @migkillerphantom
    @migkillerphantom Před 4 lety +11

    Hey Stephen, how important do you think it is to understand the history behind the ideas to understanding the ideas themselves? I personally find that it's much easier to understand some mathematical model or another if I understand what people were thinking at the time they came up with it.

    • @JustNow42
      @JustNow42 Před rokem +2

      Totally agere, science history is actually compulsory in my country but it is way too little and most teachers are not well inducated in this subjrct. I do not think it is important or interesting to know about Kings and how many concubines they had or the wars, it is actually not even explained correctly why wars occur, which is the only aspect of possible interest.

  • @Kuldeep-vb8mi
    @Kuldeep-vb8mi Před 2 měsíci

    You are a very good teacher. Please make a course. Thank you.

  • @amazias9213
    @amazias9213 Před 4 lety

    It was great ! Tnx a lot

  • @rh001YT
    @rh001YT Před 4 lety

    Very engaging and satisfying

  • @shubhamtalks9718
    @shubhamtalks9718 Před 2 lety

    This is gold.

  • @goddamn4012
    @goddamn4012 Před 4 lety

    Mr. Wolfram I used your brief summary of Stat Mech and Thermodynamics in my online lectures (after citing it).

  • @rg3412
    @rg3412 Před 2 lety +4

    This is phenomenal stuff Stephen! It seems to me very very few people have your breadth of knowledge when it comes to physics and it’s history

  • @atricnina
    @atricnina Před 4 lety +1

    Hyped

  • @back2d_lobby
    @back2d_lobby Před rokem

    Total legend.

  • @dcterr1
    @dcterr1 Před 3 lety +1

    Very good, thorough lecture on the history of physics! I'm kind of surprised you didn't mention Niels Bohr though. He was one of the pioneers and chief architects of quantum theory and was the first to explain the stability of atoms as well as the spectrum of hydrogen. You also didn't mention the EPR paradox and quantum entanglement, or Bose-Einstein condensates. But I guess it's next too impossible to cover all the important developments in the history of physics! Good job!

  • @anidanga
    @anidanga Před 4 lety

    Love you!

  • @rogersmith2549
    @rogersmith2549 Před 4 lety

    Pretty pretty interesting continue like that

  • @mthai66
    @mthai66 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you for bringing the focus back on to history for a moment. I teach Engineering students who think they don't need to know who John Von Neumann is "because we have computers now". God help us if this continues.

  • @hasnaamagdi4473
    @hasnaamagdi4473 Před 3 lety

    thanks a lot :)

  • @rg3412
    @rg3412 Před 2 lety +3

    I wish all these lectures were available on Spotify so we can listen to them in an airplane

  • @ryanthomas9693
    @ryanthomas9693 Před 4 lety

    haven't gotten this revved up about something in awhile. Has he done his theory explanation yet? Or released the video starting it?

  • @pellythirteen5654
    @pellythirteen5654 Před 4 lety +12

    You're forgiven for almost forgetting to mention Newtons contribution before resuming 18e-century physics. Very entertaining presentation !

  • @poiitidis
    @poiitidis Před 4 lety +1

    Interesting. I've been also working on this the past 1-2 years. Will be following.

  • @DaCoil-di8pn
    @DaCoil-di8pn Před 4 lety

    Will follow with interest. Thank you.

  • @j.h252
    @j.h252 Před 4 lety +18

    Must say, I'm very impressed by humble Stephen Wolfram,
    much more than by Eric Weinstein who is acting out much more vanity being hurt by rejections of orthodox circles as by media and classical science.
    Think Wolfram is more driven by childlike interests than speculating to get a Nobel Prize some day, and he is also not interested in trademarks and authorship of some banal wordings as Eric is, hammering them penetrantly into minds so they keep on sticking and can be claimed as originated by a very special mind. Being interested in physics since a long time, started to see these emperors with no cloth like Eric. detecting an immense void inside the nothingness-loudspeakers of physics, not having achieved much I'd say for the last 50 years, Krauss, Tyson, Carroll etc. Whereas ordinary people get impressed by some equations and complexity-talk, putting these loudspeakers on high pedestals they don't deserve, I had my aha moments already. So we see lots of pretending blinders in public with their nothings, shallow thinkers wanting to appear as new Einsteins. I think Wolfram is different here, smart, humble, interest driven, and if someone I know has the substance to further Einsteins physics, its probably him and not the army of pea counters of orthodoxies.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 4 lety +3

      I do love that he presents the building of his 'theory' live, and I enjoy listening to their brainstorming sessions. It is a privilege to participate to discussions like that, it is inspiring and fantastic. But presenting the 400++ years of physics only to highlight where everybody has gone wrong before proving that his new theory actually outdoes the orthodox theory does not meet my standards of defining extreme humility. Not that I care about humility. It's overrated. You do need both curiosity and confidence as big as fuck to present new ideas.

    • @andytaylor3462
      @andytaylor3462 Před 3 lety +3

      These comments were beautiful ✌🏼👍🏻

    • @____uncompetative
      @____uncompetative Před 2 lety

      Dr Brian Keating hosted a discussion with both of them which might change your opinion about them (but you'll have to see all of it):
      czcams.com/video/OI0AZ4Y4Ip4/video.html

  • @markkennedy9767
    @markkennedy9767 Před 2 lety +1

    What a wonderful summary of the history of physics. However I think classical mechanics with Lagrange and Hamilton and maybe Fourier's development of Fourier analysis were overlooked

    • @mntlblok
      @mntlblok Před rokem

      Lagrangians, Hamiltonians, Fourier transforms - all fall into the category of those things too far over my head (for me) to waste further time on. Wonder what percentage of folks out there watching this *do* understand them.Very happy that there are folks like you who "get it", but I'm thinking that those sorts of things have little in common with the level of discourse in Stephen's fine overview. Heck, I even started getting nervous when he brought up Boltzman. 🙂 I believe I also heard mention of Maxwell's equations being partial differential equations. Shivers!

  • @AmericanMoonOdysee_com
    @AmericanMoonOdysee_com Před 2 lety +1

    I liked this. Thank you. Very clear. Concise. You have a good mind sir.

  • @HeliumXenonKrypton
    @HeliumXenonKrypton Před 4 lety +1

    Science is a pursuit that draws together so many different cultures across time, it really is the heritage of all humanity. A very beautiful thing.
    At the 2:02:00 minute mark ... "... there is no aether, but then there is an aether...".
    I have to remark that this is exactly what I've been suspecting about Michelson-Morley for quite some time. I don't know how ... but it seems as if somehow they may have asked "which-way" and somehow it is buried in the experiment and we're just not seeing it. That's my suspicion but I have absolutely no valuable reason to back that up.
    I actually do believe that the aether is not dead, quantum field theory is the strongest area of QM (or so I've heard) and it makes zero sense that waves can travel without a medium, and I'm not at all sold on the idea that pure information is a suitable medium for wave propagation.

  • @SpiritusBythos
    @SpiritusBythos Před rokem

    Have you seen Laird Scranton's work on the Dogan?

  • @user-ws1qf7ol4k
    @user-ws1qf7ol4k Před 6 měsíci

    So interesting! All the people that somehow leaped beyond what was known in their time!

  • @adamkadmon6339
    @adamkadmon6339 Před rokem

    That was pretty damn good.

  • @eapenninan4950
    @eapenninan4950 Před 2 lety

    👍thanks

  • @giandelliturri8784
    @giandelliturri8784 Před 4 lety

    I would appreciate and really learn a lot if this video had annotation in the time pane. I don't quite understand what it means for a neutrino to be only left handed.

  • @perjespersen4746
    @perjespersen4746 Před 4 lety +2

    26:16 Thank god! I was fearing he tried some hipster version of the story without Newton. It was bugging to the point that I was considering stopping.

  • @alexandersumer4295
    @alexandersumer4295 Před 3 lety

    Please do History of Computing

  • @TheRosyCodex
    @TheRosyCodex Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome talk but I feel Archimedes deserves more credit, wrote the first laws of physics: buoyancy and leverage/balance as well as basically did the first computations in calculus

  • @mmorrison3843
    @mmorrison3843 Před 4 lety +2

    Just read your 'Finally ... Fundamental ... Beautiful' paper. Great stuff so far. I'll need to digest and go over it another few rounds, but I must say I, I'm very impressed. Blown away actually.

  • @Bleeebloo
    @Bleeebloo Před 2 měsíci

    My Hero

  • @jadefreeman6952
    @jadefreeman6952 Před 2 lety

    you can see why things only decay so far in the multi-way graphs, it vaguely corresponds to the platonic solids

  • @digbysirchickentf2315
    @digbysirchickentf2315 Před 4 lety +1

    Why is the Higgs Field valid when the ether was dismissed, surely the problem of relative movement through the field remains? Thanks for a great talk.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 4 lety

      The interaction with the Higgs field is independent on your velocity, it is dependent only on your acceleration. That's very Newton Second.

  • @truthlivingetc88
    @truthlivingetc88 Před 4 lety +1

    when the brainiest dude is also the nicest dude you get the best lecture on the history of physics ever delivered on the internet. hey S W : best of success with the new project !

    • @mthai66
      @mthai66 Před 6 měsíci

      I think it's more accurate to say he's one of the most stubborn people alive: so stubborn in fact that he's the only person who kept the 80s computational paradigm going into the current era.

    • @truthlivingetc88
      @truthlivingetc88 Před 6 měsíci

      Interesting. How would you characterise the 80s computational paradigm and in what ways would you say he kept it going ?@@mthai66

  • @aminemohamedaboussalah6169

    Dear Stephen,
    First thank you for the video. I am a great follower of your channel and I like your videos very much.
    I would like to make a small remark about the history of physics: you started with the Babylonian and Greek era and then suddenly you moved to the 16th century. I think it would have been more correct to give credit to the Arab-Persian and Indian civilization as well since their contributions are not less.

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, I was disappointed that their important contributions were totally left out of this. Science is a human endeavour, not just a western European one.

  • @arbiforumnow
    @arbiforumnow Před 4 lety

    Thank you!

  • @shivameucci4545
    @shivameucci4545 Před 4 lety +3

    Fantastic video!!
    1:08:40 I think you'd be very interested in some finer details on some historical points that are little known but a matter of record. This paper I've published will provide an enlightening perspective of the odd little misunderstandings around relativity but support your observations. You can find it on the Arxiv or google it as "History of the NeoClassical Interpretation of Quantum and Relativistic Physics"
    Additionally you'll be surprised to know interesting little tidbits I could explain beyond this paper such as the fact that the 1887 Michelson was not actually null and had the characteristic sine wave of readings one would only get from a unidirectional effect, but that's a very long story (about interferometry details) and one needs to survey much of Michelson's work and understand the context of his "1/40th" statement that led to confusion about the results. Regardless, from MacCullagh to Kelvin, up through Einstein, there is a unified view that wends its way up to the modern day that only a deep study of history reveals; which seems to be an interest you and I share.
    1:12:39 Here you make a point I've been working almost daily for 15 years to establish more widely and promulgate. Your wording indicates you might have actually run into a few of my thousands of pages of publicly available work (high level explanations) or a derivative of it or perhaps someone else who has.
    I'm part of a discussion group of physicists, biologists, and computer scientists exploring how these sorts of topics (like networks) relate to neuroscience, fundamental cellular biomechanics, semiotics, and eventually AGI. (one of which is a notorious rebel among nobel laureates.) I think you'd really bring a lot to the discussion if you joined us. In fact your discussion about Ads/CFT corresponds with a discussion going on right now and makes me suspect we are probably only socially separated by a single degree.

  • @animanoir
    @animanoir Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks my banna friend

  • @mthai66
    @mthai66 Před 6 měsíci +1

    6 quarks for Marky Mark!

  • @EvanMisshula
    @EvanMisshula Před 4 lety +1

    I love your rebuttal to the baconian tradition, "if the theory has enough aesthetic integrity, keep going."

    • @EvanMisshula
      @EvanMisshula Před 4 lety

      35 minutes in

    • @mntlblok
      @mntlblok Před rokem +1

      Reminds me of Feynman and his order to throw out the theory if it doesn't match experiment. Then he and Gell-mann publish theirs that didn't match, but the experiments were later proven wrong. 🙂

  • @stumccabe
    @stumccabe Před 4 lety +14

    I think Newton is turning in his grave - Robert Hooke got mentioned first !

    • @andytaylor3462
      @andytaylor3462 Před 3 lety +1

      26:10 😲 Wait .. wait .. we forgot talking about this little guy called Newton 🤣🤣 priceless Stephen 👍🏻

  • @giakon1
    @giakon1 Před rokem

    Kepler said that the motion of the planets should be elliptical.... from the heliocentric point of view it could also be 'seen' like this, while the motion is imperfect spiral-shaped considering the center of the galaxy (which is not a hole!)

  • @sheeteshaswal
    @sheeteshaswal Před 4 lety

    35:00 dirac said that better go for a theory is beautiful even though experiments dont agree with it instead of a theory that is ugly but experimentally correct.

  • @416dl
    @416dl Před 4 lety +1

    The freeway is Interestate 280; my contribution at a former SuperShuttle Driver...cheers.

  • @JFJ12
    @JFJ12 Před 11 měsíci

    In hindsight it is a bit odd that the connection between magnetism and electricity was discovered so late in the scientific trajectory. It might as well have been discovered by the Ancient Greek or even the Ancient Egyptians, 5000 years ago.

  • @avichein2702
    @avichein2702 Před 2 lety +1

    My only comment is on Stephen's interpretation of what Copernicus did. Copernicus thought his theory was better because it was more elegant and beautiful than Ptolemy. He wasn't just trying to improve the technical details of Ptolemy (in fact his predications were worse). He was a neo platonist. I got this from reading Kuhn's The Copernican Revolution and Own Gingrich's Nicolas Copernicus Making the Earth A planet

  • @oliverseipel4547
    @oliverseipel4547 Před 3 lety

    Boltzmanns theorem is called correctly eta-Theorem not aitch-Theorem ;)

  • @giakon1
    @giakon1 Před rokem

    the hypothesis of the nodes of the ether is not silly at all, on the contrary.

  • @chrisofnottingham
    @chrisofnottingham Před 2 lety +1

    This is a great level of coverage versus depth for the keen armchair physicist like me

  • @EeekiE
    @EeekiE Před 4 lety +2

    I don't enough about about physics or maths, but I'm pretty good at spotting charlatans and cranks. This guy seems very genuine and excited about what he's potentially uncovering.

    • @JaySmith91
      @JaySmith91 Před 4 lety +1

      Modern psychology teaches us that charlatans convince even the most intelligent people in society. Stephen Wolfram is obviously an intelligent person, but he also has had some sort of grandiose sense of self-importance; a god complex. He published a verbose book and presented some sensationalist talks on 'game of life' type algorithms, promising them to be 'a new kind of science'. It turns out it was a lot of self-delusion. There has been a lot of strong criticism about that book - As I see it, he desperately wants the world to be discrete, completely ignoring the success of quantum mechanics explaining the wave-nature of the universe. In some ways he's like a Plato-worshipper with a 21st century education. I know I've only focussed on the negatives of Dr Wolfram, but I want to stress that we need to really stop worshipping people like Stephen as infallible geniuses, and really need to learn that not only can we ourselves be duped by scams and pseudoscience-peddlers, we can fool ourselves. It's in our psychology; it's in our DNA.

    • @devilsolution9781
      @devilsolution9781 Před 2 lety

      @@JaySmith91 science is always about proving competing ideas, we dont know if his theories are right or wrong until proven otherwise, but he obviously has a string foundation from which to base his ideaa from.

  • @scientifico
    @scientifico Před 8 měsíci

    While I appreciate wolfram, his beginning section on greek traditions in physics is missing the "source codes' from kemet. In kemet, you get closert to a theory of everything more than anything in the greeks, romans, enlightenment, all the way to quantum mathematics of the late 19th century. And only now are mathematicians and philosophers touching waht was long forgotten by egypt.

  • @user-il9vr9oe7b
    @user-il9vr9oe7b Před měsícem

    So you have groups of points, you have to connect all the points as only one point connecting to one other point and more than one point in a group linked to more than one in another group is forbidden.
    I call it the polygon problem of connecting sides

  • @chiphill4856
    @chiphill4856 Před 3 lety

    Without notes! Impressive!

  • @chrisrecord5625
    @chrisrecord5625 Před 2 měsíci

    The Roman philosopher-poet Lucretius' scientific poem "On the Nature of Things" (c. 60 BC) has a remarkable description of the motion of dust particles in verses 113-140 from Book II. He uses this as a proof of the existence of atoms:(Brownian Motion to follow)
    Observe what happens when sunbeams are admitted into a building and shed light on its shadowy places. You will see a multitude of tiny particles mingling in a multitude of ways... their dancing is an actual indication of underlying movements of matter that are hidden from our sight... It originates with the atoms which move of themselves [i.e., spontaneously]. Then those small compound bodies that are least removed from the impetus of the atoms are set in motion by the impact of their invisible blows and in turn cannon against slightly larger bodies. So the movement mounts up from the atoms and gradually emerges to the level of our senses so that those bodies are in motion that we see in sunbeams, moved by blows that remain invisible.

  • @Jim-kc3gx
    @Jim-kc3gx Před 3 měsíci

    From Oregon USA

  • @mntlblok
    @mntlblok Před rokem

    I *think* I just learned that the "plum pudding" model was not J.J. Thomson's concept (though he accepted and approved of it) but rather *William* Thomson's, but was associated with J.J.'s electron discovery. Unrelated Thomsons.

  • @alibaax5346
    @alibaax5346 Před 2 lety +1

    I got my masters in physics at 37
    He got his PhD at 20 wow

  • @trunxkuntrunxkun409
    @trunxkuntrunxkun409 Před 4 lety

    I have just read your blog at wolframs website and I am eagered to looking forward your progress

  • @davezick800
    @davezick800 Před 2 lety

    working without notes., as always...I nearly laughed at the part "Oh, I forgot something...There was that guy Newton" (paraphrased) lol. When you teach something all of the time, it is easy to work without notes btw but not so much with one-time lectures

  • @user-ws1qf7ol4k
    @user-ws1qf7ol4k Před 6 měsíci

    Snell's law! Boyle's law, Hooke's law! Wow!