Numbers too big to imagine

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
  • In mathematics, tetration is an operation based on iterated, or repeated, exponentiation. By using operations such as tetration, pentation or hexation we can create enormous numbers. Graham’s number is one of the most famous big numbers, but there are many even bigger numbers.
    Chapters:
    00:00 First Hyperoperations
    00:35 Tetration
    01:26 Infinite Towers
    02:12 Higher-level operations
    03:23 Graham's Number
    04:45 TREE(3)
    07:00 Giant Numbers
    Music:
    ‪@AlekseyChistilin‬
    LEMMiNO - Cipher - • LEMMiNO - Cipher (BGM)

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @digitalgenius111
    @digitalgenius111  Před 8 měsíci +4929

    From 7:26 all the greater-than signs (">") should be pointing in the other direction ("

  • @ChessGrandPasta
    @ChessGrandPasta Před 8 měsíci +8557

    it still amazes me to think that if you were to pick a random positive integer the chance that it's bigger than Graham's number tends to 100%.

    • @no_name4796
      @no_name4796 Před 8 měsíci +844

      Yeah infinity is just that big lol

    • @alansmithee419
      @alansmithee419 Před 8 měsíci +1031

      The idea of generating a completely random positive integer seems bizarre to me, because no matter what result you get there should be a 100% chance that the number generated should've been bigger, since there are always infinitely many more integers larger than it but there must be finitely many smaller than it (otherwise you don't have an integer; all integers are finite).
      If you generate 3 such random numbers, does each have to be bigger than the last? It should be a 100% chance right?
      What if you look at the third number first, and then look at the second number you generated? There should now be a 100% chance that it is bigger than the third...
      I don't think the concept itself makes sense.

    • @cc1drt
      @cc1drt Před 8 měsíci +243

      to “pick” a random positive integer it needs to first exist. The irony of this is functionally speaking the chance that its bigger than graham’s number is ZERO

    • @alansmithee419
      @alansmithee419 Před 8 měsíci +166

      @@cc1drt The probability of an action resulting in a certain outcome being 0 also requires the action to be completable. So really the probability is not 0, but "NA" (Not Applicable - as in the question can't be answered)

    • @alansmithee419
      @alansmithee419 Před 8 měsíci +31

      @@randomaccount2448 If it were at all possible, you would be guaranteed to pick an integer, because you only have integers to pick from. You can't pick something that isn't in the set.

  • @soup9242
    @soup9242 Před 8 měsíci +2143

    I find it funny how TREE(1) is 1, TREE(2) is 3, and TREE(3) is some ungodly huge number.

    • @abendbg
      @abendbg Před 8 měsíci +54

      YEAH IKR

    • @DeetotheDubs
      @DeetotheDubs Před 7 měsíci +381

      A perfect example of, "Boy, that escalated quickly."

    • @Jipsy7969
      @Jipsy7969 Před 7 měsíci +197

      And tree 4 is your weight in tonnes

    • @dustypaladin9216
      @dustypaladin9216 Před 7 měsíci +17

      Imagine tree 4

    • @Noneyettocome
      @Noneyettocome Před 7 měsíci +13

      I didn't understand that tree number 🧐

  • @shawnheim5043
    @shawnheim5043 Před 4 měsíci +304

    Tree 1: 1
    Tree 2: 3
    Tree 3: Unimaginably huge number beyond the realm of human comprehension

  • @ashagupta3464
    @ashagupta3464 Před 6 měsíci +173

    And still, all of them are closer to zero than infinity

    • @suryanshushekharrollno417c8
      @suryanshushekharrollno417c8 Před 21 dnem +4

      Shower thoughts be like:

    • @PraiseChristTheGod
      @PraiseChristTheGod Před 20 dny +2

      actually, Infinity is NOT a number you can be either closer or further away from. Infinity is a concept for something that doesn't HAS NO END. something without limit. The real numbers are infinite, because they never end.

    • @Elfcheg
      @Elfcheg Před 19 dny

      @@PraiseChristTheGodtrue but they are the smallest infinity. And there are infifnities much bigger.

    • @twt1524
      @twt1524 Před 17 dny +1

      ⁠​⁠@@PraiseChristTheGod By definition, every number is closer to zero than infinity. In the universe of the pure mathematics (like Platonism), (♾️ᐨ) through (♾️ᐩ) are necessary for almost every branch of maths.
      **I didn’t know Platonism was a word until I read the definition of Platonic😂

    • @uchraltamir1246
      @uchraltamir1246 Před 7 dny

      ​@@PraiseChristTheGodYes infinity is minus maximum to positive maximum

  • @user-zb1wc3rz9f
    @user-zb1wc3rz9f Před 8 měsíci +2940

    Even though TREE(3) completely dwarfs g63, I love Graham's Number because you can somewhat appreciate just how insanely massive it is when you express it in terms of how many 3s and exponentiation towers exist even just in g(0). In comparison, the tree function is like... "Yeah here's some confusing rules, we go from 1, to 3, to practically-but-not-quite forever"

    • @poruzu
      @poruzu Před 8 měsíci +43

      Fax

    • @Vhite
      @Vhite Před 8 měsíci +85

      Personally I prefer TREE(3), since it's based on relatively simple rules that are able to bloom into such a big number without touching the infinity.

    • @alexandertaylor7316
      @alexandertaylor7316 Před 8 měsíci +276

      ​​@@Vhite my issue with TREE(3) is that you can say it's larger than Graham's number, but there isn't really an easy way to show it, so the default answer is "believe me bro".

    • @user-je3sk8cj6g
      @user-je3sk8cj6g Před 8 měsíci +164

      @@alexandertaylor7316
      Well, THREE(3) is demonstrable, but you basically need a math PhD... So it is indeed "believe me bro" for at least 99.999% of everybody.
      On another topic, I dare say, mathematicians overthink waaaaay too much...

    • @microscopicallysmall
      @microscopicallysmall Před 8 měsíci

      @@user-je3sk8cj6g 3(3)

  • @marasmusine
    @marasmusine Před 8 měsíci +1533

    I do like how we can't write down Graham's number even if we inscribed a digit on every particle in the visible universe, but we do know what digits it ends in (last digit is 7).

    • @sylencemouse1860
      @sylencemouse1860 Před 8 měsíci +67

      How do we know that

    • @johnhawkins5314
      @johnhawkins5314 Před 8 měsíci +464

      ​@@sylencemouse1860 well every power of 3 ends in 1, 3, 9 or 7 starting at the zeroth power.
      So as long as you can show that Graham's number is 3^(4n+3) or 3^(4n-1) then you know it ends in 7
      Now I don't understand Graham's Number well enough to show that, but presumably, that is how it would work

    • @Redditard
      @Redditard Před 8 měsíci

      much appreciated!! @@johnhawkins5314

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Před 8 měsíci

      @@johnhawkins5314 TREE^g63(g63) where the exponent acts like it does in sin^

    • @WaltonGFilm
      @WaltonGFilm Před 8 měsíci +23

      ​@johnhawkins5314 I have a similar theory. Well stated.
      Basically, math, patterns, observe and compare said pattern to which "power of 3 digit" each of the earlier phases of G would land on.
      Then yeh......??

  • @moonbeamskies3346
    @moonbeamskies3346 Před 7 měsíci +245

    I can personally attest to the fact that tree(3) is a large number because I stayed up all night with pens and paper testing it by drawing trees and I never came to the end. I had well over 400 trees drawn in that time and didn't seem to be near the end of possible trees. I fell asleep and dreamed of trees combinations.😮

    • @pedrocoelho5562
      @pedrocoelho5562 Před 7 měsíci +33

      a true scientific mind! Don't take things for granted, proof is required :)

    • @melonneleh777
      @melonneleh777 Před 6 měsíci +13

      Wow! I really respect the dedication 🫡

    • @edgepixel8467
      @edgepixel8467 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Nice. Keep going.

    • @thesenate1844
      @thesenate1844 Před měsícem +2

      I still don't quite understand the rules on how TREE works. What does "not embedded in previous tree" mean exactly?

    • @ckv1985
      @ckv1985 Před měsícem

      ​​@@thesenate1844you cannot steal the tree

  • @Kormit537
    @Kormit537 Před 8 měsíci +174

    Then there's penatration

  • @RoyaltyInTraining.
    @RoyaltyInTraining. Před 8 měsíci +498

    I never thought a number could scare me, but G1 is already so stupidly and mindbogglingly big that it does the trick.

    • @blackjacktrial
      @blackjacktrial Před 8 měsíci

      What about g3^^^^^^3?

    • @kunalkashelani585
      @kunalkashelani585 Před 8 měsíci +23

      And when you figure that any upcoming number is practically so much bigger than the previous one, that it's just ridiculous!

    • @reshmidas8152
      @reshmidas8152 Před 8 měsíci +10

      Beware this vid can giv u a numberphobia

    • @liam.28
      @liam.28 Před 8 měsíci +4

      look up "busy beaver function"

    • @Sahl0
      @Sahl0 Před 7 měsíci +1

      g0 is insane

  • @_Norv
    @_Norv Před 2 měsíci +35

    Finally, a good way to measure the ratio of chips to air in a lay’s packet of chips.

  • @niviera7807
    @niviera7807 Před 7 měsíci +34

    I opened CZcams to listen to some music and here i am watching a man teaching me math

  • @ycajal
    @ycajal Před 8 měsíci +948

    This is mind-boggling in so many tree levels

    • @madamada219
      @madamada219 Před 8 měsíci +18

      I see what you did there😎

    • @Mountain_2
      @Mountain_2 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Cant even comprehend level 0

    • @New-Iron-Edits
      @New-Iron-Edits Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@Mountain_2Gotta be in 4th grade.

    • @RedGallardo
      @RedGallardo Před 8 měsíci +4

      That's why I hate it when people so recklessly use infinity as a number to count with. Infinity is way bigger than any of these numbers. Infinitely bigger. In fact, tree(3) n-ated by tree(3) where n=tree(3) would still be infinitely smaller than infinity. Which is why it's pointless. They say "infinity+1 is bigger". I say it's not, infinity already contains infinity+1 and infinity+infinity and infinity power infinity, and tree(infinity). It's not limited with any finite answer so assuming anything may be bigger is just illogical. But it's easy to imagine. A perfect mathematical circle has infinite sides. All possible trees in the palm of your hand.

    • @-Oddity
      @-Oddity Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@@RedGallardoThe more you think about, the less infinity seems like a number and more like some incomprehensible eldritch horror from another dimension.

  • @nidadursunoglu6663
    @nidadursunoglu6663 Před 8 měsíci +310

    The fact that its easier to imagine infinity than a really big number is insane. Its easy to know infinity goes forever but its almost impossible how big would a pile of 7 tetrated by 7 number of apples

    • @ryomaanime4563
      @ryomaanime4563 Před 8 měsíci +37

      because you don't imagine infinity, you imagine something that doesn't end
      It's close but not the same, it help to understand what it is but you don't imagine it
      Anyway human brain is bad with big number. And it doesn't have to be this big before the brain goes "yeaaaah something like that maybe, doesn't matter when it's this big"
      Just imagining a 20km thing is hard as heck. You can try to picture it next to thing that size but it's already to a point where the only thing we could compare to are pictures made from the sky
      And it's downright impossible to understand how big are the earth, the sun or the solar system.
      Very small number aren't easier tbh

    • @thezone5840
      @thezone5840 Před 8 měsíci +3

      A google to the googleth power. Infinity as it will take beyond the heat death of the universe to calculate those numbers.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Před 8 měsíci +2

      This makes no sense; infinity is not 'imagining something going on forever.' First off, you cannot imagine that, because all you are doing is imagining something going, then ceasing to imagine that, so you haven't gotten anywhere close to imagining forever, and lastly, infinity is an infinitely large entity, not a 'process that keeps going.'
      So you are so terrible at imagining infinity that you have fooled yourself into thinking you could more easily imagine infinity than a really large number, which only speaks to the fact that imagining infinity is far harder than imagining any finite number, no matter how large.

    • @tubegerm6732
      @tubegerm6732 Před 8 měsíci +22

      ​@@pyropulseIXXIfound a pseudointellectual! infinity is definitely easier to imagine than tree(3). infinity is easy, it's infinity, and basic logic that we take for granted stops working there. everyone knows that, simple. but with numbers like tree(3) there isn't anything fundamentally different bewtween them and say, 31. they're both just positive integers. but the scale pf tree(3) is so unimagineably massive, that it becomes easier to think about it as just being "basically infinity" dispite having much more in common with integers that we use every day than with infinity. and that there's the rub. we think of tree(3) as being equivilent to infinity, because that concept is easier to comprehend than tree(3)'s true size.

    • @minecraftveteran7410
      @minecraftveteran7410 Před 7 měsíci

      Hello there! I think the reason Infinity is easy to understand, is down to the basic understanding we have on the concept of Infinity. We may know it as "never ending", but once you start building up your foundation from there, contradictions start appearing everywhere. But then you realise the exact same thing can be said for TREE(3) or g(64). In conclusion; we might have a better understanding of these large numbers than Infinity. I hope you can see my view, and thanks for reading!

  • @Aerma
    @Aerma Před 6 měsíci +46

    I love this video - explains complicated topics extraordinarily simply. Would love a part 2 covering even bigger numbers :)

    • @Soothsayer_98
      @Soothsayer_98 Před 6 měsíci

      lol says you, at 1:50 my brain turned off and i didn't catch anything past that

    • @InsaneI
      @InsaneI Před 3 měsíci +2

      Geometry Dash reference?!

    • @LexxGee1234
      @LexxGee1234 Před 2 měsíci

      *what do I expect*

    • @TheCaregiverSITMOB
      @TheCaregiverSITMOB Před 9 dny

      hi aerma i like your gd lore video

  • @dante7228
    @dante7228 Před 7 měsíci +7

    Wrong video at 5 o'clock after waking up.
    It just obliterated my brain...

  • @EnerJetix
    @EnerJetix Před 8 měsíci +1073

    This video felt like a combination of Numberphile’s videos on the topics, but with neat animation as visuals instead. Very well done

    • @megubin9449
      @megubin9449 Před 8 měsíci +3

      didnt think id see you here

    • @EnerJetix
      @EnerJetix Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@megubin9449 we seem to all be getting recommended the same underrated math channel

    • @qwertek8413
      @qwertek8413 Před 8 měsíci +35

      It would be easier to just say it felt like a 3blue1brown video.

    • @EnerJetix
      @EnerJetix Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@qwertek8413 yeah, but that wasn’t the first thing I thought of

    • @idogaming3532
      @idogaming3532 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Why do CZcams views freeze at 301?

  • @galacticdiamondz6425
    @galacticdiamondz6425 Před 8 měsíci +207

    7:41 You need to swap the > signs for < signs.

  • @livingthemcdream
    @livingthemcdream Před 7 měsíci +15

    Just so you know, you just explained exponentiation better than literally every teacher I have had up until now in less than 30 seconds

  • @aprilbrandon3441
    @aprilbrandon3441 Před 3 měsíci +14

    I feel like I don’t know anything now

  • @caspermadlener4191
    @caspermadlener4191 Před 8 měsíci +310

    The general way to construct enormous numbers like this is:
    1. Pick a HUGE ordinal. You have to be able to prove that it is well-ordered, so it can't be infinite, it should be recursive.
    2. Make a function based on thay ordinal.
    Ordinals are complex subjects, but necessary at the "basis" of mathematics (which is not an important part).
    For every concrete rule to create ordinals, there is a unique ordinal that can't be created with this rule.
    Graham's function doesn't use that big of an ordinal, since its definition is very straightforwards. The ordinal should even be described by Peano axioms.
    But the TREE function uses the small Veblen ordinal. That is quite a big ordinal.

    • @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar
      @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar Před 8 měsíci +23

      Please do a video over your fascinating comment.

    • @0x6a09
      @0x6a09 Před 8 měsíci

      doesn't tree use buchholz's ordinal?

    • @ser_igel
      @ser_igel Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@0x6a09 i thought it used ackerman's ordinal..

    • @tabainsiddiquee7611
      @tabainsiddiquee7611 Před 8 měsíci

      @@MyOneFiftiethOfADollar I recommend this series: czcams.com/video/LsQR2gHQYUc/video.html
      Specifically Part 9 goes over the Veblen ordinals

    • @caspermadlener4191
      @caspermadlener4191 Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@0x6a09 Wikipedia says that the small Veblen ordinal is used, on both the page about Krustal's tree theorem (the reason why TREE exists as a function) and on the page about the small Veblen ordinal.

  • @mike1024.
    @mike1024. Před 8 měsíci +263

    I get that the TREE concept is a bit hard to describe, but I feel like some semblance of how we know it is finite yet much larger than Graham's number would have been appreciated.

    • @Z3nt4
      @Z3nt4 Před 7 měsíci +39

      The problem with trying to explain it is that the explanation itself requires a much deeper understanding of mathematics than it seems. I'll go on a -slightly- pedantic rant and then try a metaphor to explain it anyway, and apologies if at some point this comes across as condescending. It's not, I'm just trying to _really_ make it as simple as possible. Apologies also to whoever this oversimplification might offend.
      To most people, mathematics is just another science subject out there, but the reality is that it goes so deep and is so vast as to, in my opinion, be larger than all the other subjects (physics, chemistry, engineering...) combined. The mathematics taught at highschool level feels comparable to learning to say Ni hao, which is "hello" in Mandarin and Cantonese, and calling that being fluent in all the Chinese dialects. A lot of the proofs out there, even for things that seem like they should be "easy" to talk about, require a completely different dialect of mathematics to talk about. You need to peel it back to the abstract logic and go from there. An example of one such dialect (first order logic) would be the following sentence: ∀x ∀y ∀z x ≤ y∧y ≤ z → x ≤ z (for every X, every Y, every Z such that X is smaller than Y and Y is smaller than Z, it follows that X must be smaller than Z). It expands the concrete analysis of, say, an equation, to an abstract observation about variables without worrying about what those variables actually are.
      For this specific problem of the TREE function, we need to take another step back into second order arithmetic, which is used to further expand and talk about some properties and relations between mathematical objects. For instance, the sentence ∀P ∀x ( Px ∨ ¬Px ) would fall under this category (for every formula P and every variable X, either that formula with that variable is true, or _not_ that formula with that variable is true). It is within this dialect of mathematics speaking about properties of objects that we can construct a proof both that the TREE function is finite for any finite values passed to it and that TREE(3) is much, much larger than Graham's number.
      Rant and semi-formal explanation over, I'll put it in software terms, which bears striking resemblance to mathematics on many levels but is much easier to grasp:
      Picture a random mechanic in a random videogame that you can toy around with, familiarize yourself with and learn to use (can be something as simple as jumping). But to know _how_ and _why_ it works the way it does beyond "press this button and it jumps", you need to learn the programming language it's coded in, and go dive into the code. And then you might realize that just from the code you don't fully grasp how it does what it does, and you need to actually _learn how the programming language itself is built_ and go almost all the way down to how the machine functions at a physical level in order to know how the actual code works, and only then fully understand the mechanic. TREE(3) is one of these mechanics, it's concept is very simple, but to actually know how and why it works the way it does you need not only to look at the code, but know how the programming language it's coded in works itself. Those would be first and second order arithmetic, whilst playing the game is just regular math.

    • @mike1024.
      @mike1024. Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Z3nt4 hmm fair enough. I'm confident I can understand a real explanation, but if it would be exceptionally long winded and too hard for most, that might explain why he didn't put it in. I can read your statement of the transitive property by the way. :-) do you know of a video or paper that explains it properly?

    • @Z3nt4
      @Z3nt4 Před 5 měsíci

      @@mike1024. A proper explanation (which I'm not privy to) requires some deeper undestanding of graph theory, in which I am no expert and don't necessarily know of any readily available resources on the topic. However, if you're set on going down the rabbithole I guess you could start by looking up Kruskal's tree theorem and working your way back from there (which is NOT trivial by any means).
      The massive TL;DR is that under graph theory you can prove that any tree (the mathematical object 'tree') of the same type as the ones built through the TREE function must be finite. How one would go about proving that in the first place is beyond me, but that's the tool for the job.

    • @mike1024.
      @mike1024. Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Z3nt4 I'll play around with it! I've taken a couple of graph theory classes and seen some tree based proofs. Thank you.

    • @cindyegweh7559
      @cindyegweh7559 Před 3 měsíci

      Here's a way to put it in scale, brak an atom in half and get a hydrogen quark, an unbelievably small substance, fill the entire observable universe with those quarks and were about 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000001% of grahams number, lets shrink this quark filled universe to the size of a quark, then fill the universe up with it, repeat this roughly a million times and chances are, your number is still smaller the tree(3) by ALOT, when i say alot, I mean you can divide tree(3) by the amount of atoms in this universe and itll still be higher than the extremely densely packed universe
      This probably didn't help

  • @KiatHuang
    @KiatHuang Před 4 měsíci +3

    The best exposition I've seen so far on large numbers with precise descriptions and excellent graphics. The narrator's voice is perfect for describing mathematics in English. At university I always preferred maths lecturers who did not have English as their mother tongue - less fluff, focus on diction.

  • @tinotino8349
    @tinotino8349 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I cant wait for the octation update!

  • @CoolGuyVan
    @CoolGuyVan Před 8 měsíci +511

    People like you are able to make math more interesting 👍

    • @NevertahnProduction
      @NevertahnProduction Před 8 měsíci +6

      if you understand math in the first place, that is

    • @vincentjiang6358
      @vincentjiang6358 Před 8 měsíci +3

      This video is severly underated

    • @greenlll121
      @greenlll121 Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@@vincentjiang6358nuh uh not the video only the guy who made it is also underrated

    • @steffenbendel6031
      @steffenbendel6031 Před 8 měsíci

      but only finitely more interesting. Maybe around the factor TREE(TREE(3))

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Před 8 měsíci +4

      math is more interesting on its own; what you just admitted is that you are not interesting and need someone else to program your mind with ideas that are interesting on their own.
      This guy is not making math more interesting; he is literally just talking about the math, and the math is interesting on its own. I am amazed at people such as yourself

  • @hellowow4631
    @hellowow4631 Před 8 měsíci +149

    I don't think that we would even have colours for the seeds remaining for TREE(TREE(3))

    • @JustAHuman-gb5go
      @JustAHuman-gb5go Před 8 měsíci +1

      TREE(TREE(TREE(3))

    • @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj
      @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj Před 8 měsíci +72

      After TREE(3,600,000), We would run out of humanly distinguishable colors.
      After TREE(16,777,000), We would run out of RGB 32-bit colors.

    • @kepler_22b83
      @kepler_22b83 Před 8 měsíci +39

      The limited resources of this universe can not accomodate a representation of this number... But, although colors in the visible spectrum are finite, there may be no ceiling to how much energy a photon can pack... Neither a lower limit on how low the photon's frequency is possible. So, whether we'll run out of colors is questionable, we would run out of energy faster.
      P.S: if you want to destroy the universe, task an AI singularity with calculating every TREE(TREE(3)) tree. Tell it not to stop until it got the answer.

    • @bicksinormus
      @bicksinormus Před 8 měsíci

      @@MatthewConnellan-xc3ojSSCG(3.6m) perhaps?

    • @paolarei4418
      @paolarei4418 Před 8 měsíci +15

      ​@@MatthewConnellan-xc3ojAfter TREE(TREE(TREE(....... we would run out of TREES cause we used too much paper to write them on papers

  • @mohankrishna2442
    @mohankrishna2442 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Less than a minute into the video and things got out of hand!! Amazing video and explanation.

  • @samjohnston1887
    @samjohnston1887 Před 8 měsíci +171

    Took a test one year that had a question about a card game and it asked about the number of possibilities. My answer ended up being 2 tetrated up 100 times. I’d never seen tetration before but I was super proud of finding the answer.

  • @Orestekoa
    @Orestekoa Před 8 měsíci +527

    The highest one actually is called penetration but I doubt any mathematician's ever experienced it or used it

  • @gravysamich
    @gravysamich Před 7 měsíci +4

    i gotta be honest... i finished your video and thought, "thats it?" i will give you credit, you are the first person to explain arrow notation that actually made sense to me. i just felt like all your video was is just saying, "hey there are some big numbers!" maybe next time explain the numbers significance a little better. grahams number in particular is very interesting because it relates to describing higher dimensional objects.

  • @Excrecity
    @Excrecity Před 4 měsíci +8

    Its crazy to think that no matter how big a number u can think of its still closer to 0 than it is closer to infinity

    • @cardndmch
      @cardndmch Před 3 měsíci +1

      disagree, you should just put the number 5

    • @stone5401
      @stone5401 Před 2 měsíci

      Infinity isnt a number

    • @Excrecity
      @Excrecity Před 2 měsíci

      @@stone5401 i didn’t say infinity is a number

    • @adangertodanger3651
      @adangertodanger3651 Před 20 dny

      ​@@stone5401Neither is 0

  • @ionic7777
    @ionic7777 Před 8 měsíci +69

    I like your explaination of the TREE function, much more easy to understand on a basic level!

  • @bergnerm
    @bergnerm Před 8 měsíci +47

    This is a good video, but one problem I have is that whenever anyone is explaining how big TREE(3) is, they explain the rules of how it's generated, but they never say how they know it's so huge. It basically boils down to "trust us... it's REALLY big". How do they know it's bigger than Graham's Number? What kind of mathematics do you use to show this--obviously not "trust me"!

    • @astralphoenix69
      @astralphoenix69 Před 6 měsíci +3

      i think the same

    • @yxx_chris_xxy
      @yxx_chris_xxy Před 4 měsíci +4

      The finiteness follows from Kruskal's tree theorem. It's not something that can be explained in a youtube comments section.

    • @bergnerm
      @bergnerm Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@yxx_chris_xxy I figured it was something quite complex, but all of the youtube videos I see on it have dumbed it down too much. Maybe you could do a video at least explaining Kruskail's tree theorem, in simplified terms, and at least allude to the techniques used to compare two gargantuan numbers like g(64) and TREE(3).

    • @user-ct8rh2re4d
      @user-ct8rh2re4d Před měsícem

      Graham's Number is G64 not G63. G1 is 3^^^^3 not G0.

  • @rahumor7556
    @rahumor7556 Před 4 měsíci +2

    So I like incremental idle games, they give big numbers and oftentimes feel trivial when you look at the next milestone. That is what Tree(tree(g63)) feels like. Its what silliness do I have to accomplish to reach that number.
    Love the video keep up the good work.

  • @AyarPortugal
    @AyarPortugal Před 5 měsíci +1

    Crazy stuff, thank you so much for sharing, very insightful and interesting.

  • @weeblordgaming6062
    @weeblordgaming6062 Před 8 měsíci +54

    When u have completed 3 semesters of calculus but are still very scared right now

  • @dimitrinotfound
    @dimitrinotfound Před 8 měsíci +81

    The fact that the number of real numbers between 0 and 1 is way laaaarger than any of the numbers discussed here is creepy

    • @JordanMetroidManiac
      @JordanMetroidManiac Před 8 měsíci +20

      Seems like you found a good way to imagine infinity, if it’s giving you the creeps.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Před 8 měsíci +7

      how stupid; there is no finite amount of real numbers between 0 and 1, so this is utterly obvious and not creepy at all

    • @zbz5505
      @zbz5505 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@pyropulseIXXI< I have to be an asshole on the Internet for no reason whatsoever.

    • @Nivleknosnhoj
      @Nivleknosnhoj Před 7 měsíci +1

      Good thing that maths is a close imitation but fundamentally an imitation of reality irrespective of it's unreasonable utility in bits and bobs and things that make you go hmmmm. 😊

    • @Nivleknosnhoj
      @Nivleknosnhoj Před 7 měsíci +2

      But maybe yeah I'm more than likely wrong maybe maths is the only thing that's real and it's reality that's the charade

  • @eyeballdoorknob2330
    @eyeballdoorknob2330 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I’m having trouble sleeping thx for showing me this because it really helps me sleep

  • @QuentinStephens
    @QuentinStephens Před 8 měsíci +5

    There's one thing I don't understand about tetration: the exponents do not follow the power of a power law (a^m^n = a^mn). At 1:03 we have 3 tetrated to the 4th which is equated to 3^3^3^3, but by the power of a power law that latter value is equal to 3^(3*3*3)

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před 8 měsíci +4

      That's because doing something like (a^m^n) using the power law means you're just bundling it into a single exponentiation term. With tetration of a number, you have to start at the top of the tower and work your way down - that's how the larger numbers are built as you're defining a new concept/sequence.
      So 3^3^3^3 = 3^(3^(3^3)), noting the brackets to determine order. This then works out to be 3^(3^27), or 3^(7.62x10^12), or three to the power of 7.62 trillion.

    • @QuentinStephens
      @QuentinStephens Před 8 měsíci

      @@TheSpotify95 Thanks.

  • @charredUtensil
    @charredUtensil Před 8 měsíci +31

    There was a great thread on the XKCD fora back around 2010 where a bunch of nerds tried to outcompete each other for largest number without just incrementing previous numbers. The forums are gone now but I think TREE showed up by the third page and by the fifth someone had a number that exceeded the "largest number" yet discovered. I wasn't able to follow along at the time but this definitely helps. Now if only I could find that thread and try to understand some of the larger numbers...

    • @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj
      @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj Před 8 měsíci +1

      E:NN(x) is x^^^^^…x with x+1 up arrows. I just thought of it.

    • @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj
      @MatthewConnellan-xc3oj Před 8 měsíci +1

      And then you can just go on with E:NN(E:NN(E:NN(E:NN… to insane lengths.

    • @charredUtensil
      @charredUtensil Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah I think the largest numbers used some technique where they turned infinite numbers into mind bogglingly big non-infinite numbers somehow

    • @worldprops333
      @worldprops333 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@MatthewConnellan-xc3oj E:NN(x) = x^...x+1...x
      E:NM(x) = E:NN(E:NN...x)))...) with x nestations of the E:NN function onto x
      E:NM2(x,y) = same nestation on E:NM, with y nestations.

    • @Lexivor
      @Lexivor Před 8 měsíci +1

      I remember that thread from XKCD, it was an epic thread with hundreds of posts. After studying the math for quite a while I was able to understand most of it. That thread got me deeply into large numbers for a couple of years. I made about fifty pages of notes on large numbers, including a couple dozen of the numbers listed on that thread.

  • @St2ele
    @St2ele Před 8 měsíci +14

    Thank you for taking these concepts and editing a video with visual proof with examples for all of them. This is some of the best work I've seen! Keep it up!

  • @newsgo1876
    @newsgo1876 Před 4 měsíci +2

    This is the first time I heard about the operation of level >=4. Thank you for enlightening me.

  • @gopalsamykannan2964
    @gopalsamykannan2964 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thanks for your explanation !

  • @tabularasa_br
    @tabularasa_br Před 8 měsíci +38

    Inifity always seemed magical to me. When I was a little child, I used to cry when trying to conceptualize the fact that the Universe (might) be infinite, or the sheer fact that there is not a "final number", and that things can always be bigger. I was overwhelmed by this as if I were an old archeologist beholding a non-euclidean Eldritch abomination from a parallel dimension in a Lovecraftian tome.
    As of today, mathematics is one of my favorite subjects, even though I was terrible at it at school. Finding this channel was like finding a precious gem!

    • @PanthereaLeonis
      @PanthereaLeonis Před 8 měsíci +16

      I had come to terms with infinity, that there is no end. I had not come to terms with how insanely large finity could be!!

    • @gazabo-gam463
      @gazabo-gam463 Před 7 měsíci +2

      When I was little I also thought things like that, about how we are the only thing that exists.
      There is nothing after death there is no way to escape since this is the only thing of the only thing.
      I was a weird 8 year old kid.

    • @apollyon1
      @apollyon1 Před 6 měsíci +2

      same. I think there should be maths appreciation at school where we get taught cool shit about what maths can do but don't actually have to do any sums. like I can appreciate sports without having to jog you know!?

  • @rickb_NYC
    @rickb_NYC Před 8 měsíci +100

    I'd love more treatment of the tree function. I don't quite understand how it can get so big. Maybe going further with many examples of how it can grow. Also, is there an equation for it? (I assume there is, and bet it has factorials.)

    • @samcertified7178
      @samcertified7178 Před 8 měsíci +18

      x! grows slower than x^x which doesn't even come close to tetration. The levels of recursion required to represent a number as large as Graham's number (let alone TREE(3)) go well beyond factorial.

    • @Danpg79Roblox
      @Danpg79Roblox Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@samcertified7178and (x!)! Grows unfathomably fast...
      1!! = 1! = 1
      2!!, same thing
      3!! Though...
      3!! =6!
      6! = 720

    • @denshi_lives29
      @denshi_lives29 Před 8 měsíci +8

      Factorial world be great great great great grandkid when compared to those Pappas

    • @gareth2736
      @gareth2736 Před 8 měsíci +2

      I struggle to get my head both around that and also hoe if tree 3 is so big tree 4 or tree 1000 are still finite.

    • @pi_man3
      @pi_man3 Před 8 měsíci

      @@gareth2736eventually you will run out of trees because of previous trees

  • @Seyleine_
    @Seyleine_ Před 5 měsíci +2

    This is so interesting, thinking that such big no.s could exist is mind boggling.also I was super excited to hear cipher here 😅.

  • @EdithKFrost
    @EdithKFrost Před 7 měsíci +4

    Math teacher: Please find the next term of the sequence: 1,3,…
    People who know the game of trees: 😢

  • @alexandremenino2006
    @alexandremenino2006 Před 8 měsíci +9

    anime vilains explaining how much times stronger they are from the protagonist

  • @jezze419
    @jezze419 Před 8 měsíci +29

    Small critique, at the end you use the greater-than symbol > wrong which can lead to confusion

  • @kamitebyani5309
    @kamitebyani5309 Před měsícem

    Great video , fast to the point . I enjoyed it .

  • @huseynmmmdov9593
    @huseynmmmdov9593 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Loved and subscribed!

  • @IAmNumber4000
    @IAmNumber4000 Před 8 měsíci +13

    It’s fascinating that these numbers are so big that computation with them is impossible, since even ^4 3 is greater than the number of Planck volumes in the observable universe.

  • @The_NSeven
    @The_NSeven Před 8 měsíci +19

    Great video, one of the best I've seen this week! Love big numbers

  • @markosskace514
    @markosskace514 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Nicely explained tetration and higher operations. I always get confused thinking about them.

  • @josephdouglas6482
    @josephdouglas6482 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is an insanely good way to describe these things. I was an accounting major in college, I did a Business Calculus class and several other courses based around statistics and predictions, and when you show how you got to the limit of n as x approaches thing, it's amazing that you built it up from just simple succession and addition.

  • @mathisr.v3627
    @mathisr.v3627 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Your video is awesome ! It’s very well done in the details !

    • @paolarei4418
      @paolarei4418 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Why im seeing ya in all vids now LOL

    • @yeochxd
      @yeochxd Před 6 měsíci +1

      hi mathis, found ya

    • @sosantos5893
      @sosantos5893 Před měsícem

      Mathis! Of course we can keep on going after omegafinruom right?

  • @Amphy2k
    @Amphy2k Před 8 měsíci +26

    One of these days I pray to see someone finally explain Large Number Garden Number. It’s the current largest number and no matter how much I read about it, I still feel like I don’t understand it fully.

    • @big_numbers
      @big_numbers Před 8 měsíci +4

      It’s best to think of uncomputable numbers as diagonalizing over the process of creating functions itself.

    • @megubin9449
      @megubin9449 Před 8 měsíci +7

      its not exactly the largest number, but it is the largest well-defined number.

    • @ieatcarsyum8248
      @ieatcarsyum8248 Před 8 měsíci +15

      I just made a larger number: Large Number Garden Number + 1

    • @TomFoster-en5uc
      @TomFoster-en5uc Před 7 měsíci

      @@ieatcarsyum8248hahaha large garden number+2

    • @TheUnovanZorua
      @TheUnovanZorua Před 7 měsíci

      What's that? I don't study complex math, so I've never heard of it.

  • @Farfocele
    @Farfocele Před 8 měsíci +4

    This video blew up - and for good reason! This explains giant numbers very well. Thanks for the video!

  • @bijipeter1471
    @bijipeter1471 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Thank you, so much

  • @gosnooky
    @gosnooky Před 7 měsíci +3

    Mind blowing when you consider that it's not possible to even store such a number physically, even if each digit only took up a single Planck unit of space.

  • @angularpy
    @angularpy Před 8 měsíci +29

    Wow, this was a super clear explanation.
    Thanks for sharing this knowledge! 🧠💡

  • @Weird_Jae
    @Weird_Jae Před 8 měsíci +8

    Mind got blown again, just realized these operations can probably be done inversely. So then, Super-roots and Super-logarithm would exist.

  • @vibecheck663
    @vibecheck663 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Love the LEMMiNO music

  • @TetrisMobileGamerz
    @TetrisMobileGamerz Před 4 měsíci +3

    7:48 Even though it is incredibly massive, It doesn't come close to SSCG(3), SSCG(4), SSCG(5), and SSCG(SSCG(3)).

  • @alvintuffing
    @alvintuffing Před 8 měsíci +4

    3 hexation 3 is a mathematical operation that belongs to the hyperoperation sequence. It is also known as hexation and is the sixth operation in the sequence. The hyperoperation sequence is an infinite sequence of arithmetic operations that starts with a unary operation (the successor function with n = 0) and continues with the binary operations of addition (n = 1), multiplication (n = 2), exponentiation (n = 3), tetration (n = 4), pentation (n = 5), hexation (n = 6), and so on.
    The hexation operation can be defined recursively in terms of the previous operation, pentation, as follows:
    a ↑↑↑↑↑↑ b = a ↑↑↑↑ (a ↑↑↑↑↑↑(b-1))
    where a and b are positive integers.
    For example, 3 hexation 3 can be calculated as follows:
    3 ↑↑↑↑↑↑ 3 = 3 ↑↑↑↑ (3 ↑↑↑↑↑↑(2))
    = 3 ↑↑↑ (3 ↑↑(3 ↑↑(3 ↑↑(3 ↑ 3))))
    = 3 ↑↑ (3 ↑^(4) 27)
    = 3 ↑^(5) 7,625,597,484,987
    Therefore, 3 hexation 3 is equal to 7,625,597,484,987.

    • @alvintuffing
      @alvintuffing Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sure! As I mentioned earlier, Graham’s number G63 is equal to 3 ↑↑↑… (with 63 arrows).
      To express this number in scientific notation, we can use the following steps:
      Convert the number to decimal notation by writing it as a power tower of 3’s:
      3 ↑↑↑... (with 63 arrows) = 3^(3^(3^(3^(3^(... (with 63 threes) ... )))))
      Count the number of threes in the power tower. In this case, there are 63 threes.
      Subtract 1 from the number of threes to get the exponent of the scientific notation. In this case, the exponent is 62.
      Write the significand or mantissa by dividing the original number by 3 raised to the power of the exponent:
      3 ↑↑↑... (with 63 arrows) / (3^62) = 1.611... × 10^19728
      Therefore, Graham’s number G63 expressed in scientific notation is approximately 1.611 × 10^19728.
      I hope this helps! Let me know if you have any other questions.

  • @madladam
    @madladam Před 8 měsíci +4

    I've been asking this question for a year. Love the style and narration. Instant Sub

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Před 8 měsíci

      it took you a year to not learn, yet keep asking, a question that a literal 6 year old could figure out on their own in less than 12 seconds

    • @madladam
      @madladam Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@pyropulseIXXI I discovered power towers on my own, essentially tetration and I learned of Graham's number, but didn't understand it. I never knew it was actually called tetration until now, nor the official notation. But you sir, have had a difficult day, to be sure. I am deeply sorry for any stress in your life, and I want you to know that there are so many people who love you; and they still love you, even if you write snarky comments on CZcams.

  • @jyto87yo987
    @jyto87yo987 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Amazing videos my man

  • @BoredOutOfMyMIND47
    @BoredOutOfMyMIND47 Před 2 měsíci +9

    My friends describing when I’ll get a girlfriend:

  • @Jonasz314
    @Jonasz314 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Minor nit - on the last slide, the Greater signs you use are inverted, you mean to say that Tree(3) is greater than g(1000) but it shows g(1000) > Tree(3), and than tree(3) > tree(4). I think it's clear when you listen to the audio, but someone watching it with no audio will be very confused.

  • @Kris_with_Banana
    @Kris_with_Banana Před 8 měsíci +5

    You can see here, the limitless possibilities of math, otherwise known to mathematicians as "fuck it, more"

  • @DavidHT
    @DavidHT Před 8 měsíci

    I love how the characters are drawn. I'd love to know how this was done.

  • @DoFliesCallUsWalks
    @DoFliesCallUsWalks Před 4 měsíci +1

    makes inaccessible infinity seem even more unimaginable.

  • @pikaboy2dios841
    @pikaboy2dios841 Před 8 měsíci +3

    this is mind boggling in a good way

  • @TaranVaranYT
    @TaranVaranYT Před 8 měsíci +5

    This is how I learned about hyperoperations. My symbols that I use are right isosceles triangles that split down from the 90° angle right in between each. My symbol for Succession is an outline circle.

  • @DutchFurnace
    @DutchFurnace Před 3 měsíci +1

    The Toddler's Theorem is the biggest number ever. "Your number, +1!"

  • @Sebastian-gf2fk
    @Sebastian-gf2fk Před 7 měsíci

    Underrated channel !!!!

  • @mrsillytacos
    @mrsillytacos Před 8 měsíci +11

    4:18 it goes to g64, not g63...

    • @itzashham797
      @itzashham797 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Since he started it off with 3↑↑↑↑3 as G0 it makes sense in this video
      If he had started off with 3↑↑↑↑3 as G1 then it would be G64 instead of G63

  • @idontknowmusictheory532
    @idontknowmusictheory532 Před 8 měsíci +12

    Very interesting. Awesome job!

  • @yaboijosephhh
    @yaboijosephhh Před 7 měsíci +3

    me up at 12am watching this when i don’t even fully understand basic algebra

  • @gsilva877
    @gsilva877 Před 7 měsíci

    Very well explained.

  • @shaunnotsean4308
    @shaunnotsean4308 Před 8 měsíci +61

    Isn't graham's number g64? Either way, it's huge. You made a difficult concept somewhat easy to understand. Great video!

    • @PeaceTheBall
      @PeaceTheBall Před 8 měsíci +54

      it's g64 if you define 3^^^^3 as g1, but in this video it's defined as g0

    • @TheSpotify95
      @TheSpotify95 Před 8 měsíci +3

      The only difference in this video was that g1 (hexation) was defined here as g0, and g2 (the thing with so many arrows we can't write it down) was defined as g1. The principles are still the same.

    • @rodjacksonx
      @rodjacksonx Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@TheSpotify95 - The principle's the same, but it still matters if it's literally wrong, especially THAT wrong. That's like saying that a google is 1 followed by 99 zeroes. Sure, you're close conceptually, and may still make your point, but you're literally giving the wrong definition of something with a very clearly stated and well-known definition, and you would fail by putting that answer on any test.

    • @Instructor876
      @Instructor876 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@rodjacksonxGoogol. Be precise when criticizing others about precision. 😉

    • @rodjacksonx
      @rodjacksonx Před 7 měsíci

      @@Instructor876 - If you find that comparable enough to be worth mentioning, more power to you.

  • @generichuman_
    @generichuman_ Před 8 měsíci +11

    It's really difficult to get an intuition for how big TREE(3) is if you only have Knuth up arrow notation in your tool box. In the fast growing hierarchy, grahams number is on the order of f_omega+1, and if we continue to build larger ordinals to stick into the fast growing hierarchy, we exhaust omega by reaching an infinite tower of omegas which is epsilon naught, an infinite tower of that is epsilon 1, we can continue this and have other ordinals in the subscript of epsilon like epsilon sub omega, or epsilon sub epsilon naught, or even an infinite nesting of epsilons which is zeta naught. We can continue with an infinite nesting of zetas which is eta naught, and to avoid exhausting the greek alphabet we can move on to veblen notation in which epsilon naught is phi 1, zeta naught is phi 2 etc. We can create veblen functions with other ordinals as the argument like phi sub omega, and we can even have infinite nestings of veblen functions which is gamma naught, it then moves on to extended veblen notation which is messy so I switch to using infinite collapsing functions. Infinite collapsing functions define a very large ordinal that "collapses" to a well defined one when put into a function. We have a set that contains {0,1,omega, Omega} where Omega is our large ordinal. We define an ordinal that is the smallest ordinal that can't be constructed using this set using addition, multiplication and exponentiation, which turns out to be an infinite tower of omegas which is epsilon naught. This is Phi(0). We then add epsilon naught to the set and ask what the next ordinal is that can't be created using the set which is epsilon one, so Phi(1) = epsilon one. This continues on, but the function gets stuck at an infinite nesting of epsilons. To bail us out, we can plug Omega into the function and get zeta naught. We continue in this way bailing out the function with constructions of Omega when it gets stuck to reach larger and larger ordinals. Psi(Omega) = zeta naught, Psi(Omega^2) = Eta naught, Psi(Omega^x) = Phi sub x, Psi(Omega^Omega) = Gamma naught, and Psi(Omega^Omega^omega) which is the small veblen ordinal, is roughly on the scale of TREE(3). If you want an in depth deconstruction of this, it's on my channel, just search Giroux Studios.

    • @kishorejuki5450
      @kishorejuki5450 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Dang bro

    • @xxUrek
      @xxUrek Před 8 měsíci +8

      ah, yes, i know some of those words.

    • @handtomouth4690
      @handtomouth4690 Před 8 měsíci +8

      Sir, this is a youtube comment section.

    • @gpt-jcommentbot4759
      @gpt-jcommentbot4759 Před 8 měsíci

      People on the internet are not going to understand bro don't bother explaining FGH to them.

    • @seejoshrun1761
      @seejoshrun1761 Před 8 měsíci +3

      You know all that, but you don't know how to use paragraphs

  • @sounakbhattacharya9646
    @sounakbhattacharya9646 Před 7 měsíci

    Mind blown! Thank you Sir!!!!!🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @DeterminedCharcoalEater
    @DeterminedCharcoalEater Před 7 měsíci +1

    wow.
    you made addition sound complex.
    HOLY CRAP

  • @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar
    @MyOneFiftiethOfADollar Před 8 měsíci +32

    This is a little too easy, but I have ask "what is the smallest large number that ONE can imagine"?

  • @football_cr7_fan10
    @football_cr7_fan10 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Great video ❤

  • @carealoo744
    @carealoo744 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Thank you for finally explaining simply what an up arrow notation actually is, I've been trying to figure that out for a while:)

  • @sander_bouwhuis
    @sander_bouwhuis Před 7 měsíci +3

    Personally, I'm a big fan of tetration because it is easy to explain to laymen, yet already leads to incredibly large numbers.

  • @alansmithee419
    @alansmithee419 Před 8 měsíci +7

    1:32
    Expressions like this are usually said to be undefined since the only realistic way to get an infinity is to be calculating a limit (infinity not being a number), so the 1 may be a limit as well, in which case the way you got to one would determine the result - it is not always 1.
    e.g. (1+1/n)^n as n --> inf gives e, not 1 as the expression "1^inf=1" would imply, even though the exponent tends to infinity and the base tends to 1. So in this regard we cannot define 1^inf=1, and you'll run into similar problems with tetration.

  • @spieagentl
    @spieagentl Před 8 měsíci +8

    Am I mistaken, or are the greater than signage in the last section flipped?
    Regardless, this was a very informative and well-made video! Thank you for the lesson!

  • @vantarinitel
    @vantarinitel Před 8 dny

    TREE3 makes my brain feel warm and happy and fuzzy inside ❤

  • @penzolotl
    @penzolotl Před 8 měsíci +1

    man i cant even comprehend the concept of like ten thousand grains of sand in my hand, how am i supposed to imagine whatever these are

  • @VaraNiN
    @VaraNiN Před 8 měsíci +3

    What's the music starting @ 3:48 called?
    Ah, nvm, should have read the description, lol. It's "Lemmino - Cipher"

  • @JordanMetroidManiac
    @JordanMetroidManiac Před 8 měsíci +3

    This has me wondering. How does Tree(3) compare to the busy beavers function?
    After revisiting the busy beaver function, of course the busy beaver function grows faster than Tree(n), lol. And that’s because it is possible to write an algorithm that computes Tree(n), which means eventually BBF(n) > Tree(n).

  • @denispol79
    @denispol79 Před měsícem

    I loved that moment from numberphile, when they mentioned the information density limit.
    You physically can't remember these insanely large numbers- because in the process your brain will inavitably collapse into black hole.

  • @legendsiva1075
    @legendsiva1075 Před 8 měsíci +7

    2:07 not fourty four... It is four four 🙂

  • @williamz363
    @williamz363 Před 8 měsíci +16

    7:26 are the inequality signs backwards?

  • @Cattivone
    @Cattivone Před 7 měsíci +1

    Every time I try to grasp how big Tree(3) is I never understand the way someone has been able to declare this is actually bigger than something else.

  • @CheeseSummoner
    @CheeseSummoner Před 7 měsíci +2

    3:18 really good way to show 2 hexation 2 would be 4

  • @magicmulder
    @magicmulder Před 8 měsíci +5

    I like how mathematicians see it as a game to come up with ever larger numbers without using existing ones (obviously you can always say “n+1” for every n thrown at you).
    Rayo’s number was a bit of a cop out b/c it’s basically just “the largest number you can ever come up with under the rules” but not constructive at all.

    • @tom-lord
      @tom-lord Před 7 měsíci

      Rayo's number is like saying "the biggest number you can define on a big piece of paper", but nobody knows how it would actually be written. And all of the other "big" numbers like TREE(3) can be defined on a much smaller piece of paper. So yeah, it's a bit of a cop out.

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@tom-lord Graham's number was actually used in a proof as upper limit, of course you can always build bigger towers, use more arrows etc.
      There's some short computer program that prints out a number larger than TREE(3) but smaller than Rayo's, and the cool part is how to prove it actually stops.

    • @tom-lord
      @tom-lord Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@magicmulder I meant Rayo's number. Typo, sorry.