Why does this balloon have -1 holes?

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  • čas přidán 29. 07. 2021
  • Thank you to BetterHelp for sponsoring this video! To get 10% off your first month of therapy, go to betterhelp.com/standupmaths to sign up today.
    If you are need of urgent mental health support please check for crisis help lines available in your country.
    USA: www.mentalhealth.gov/get-help...
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    Do check out Jordan Ellenberg's book Shape. This video was inspired by Chapter 2.
    www.nytimes.com/2021/06/21/bo...
    www.jordanellenberg.com/book/...
    Support me on Patreon and I will post you a free torus balloon. I hope I don't regret this. / standupmaths
    Here is Sam Hartburn's geogebra file: www.geogebra.org/m/yjtjxr2n
    Trouser animations thanks to:
    Bentley Davis BentleyDavis.com
    Em Raymond / techcavy
    Kalina Panteleeva kalinadoesc...
    Thanks to Visual Topology & Geometry for "Punctured torus homeomorphism". • Punctured torus homeom...
    Me cutting two joined cylinders in half way back in 2015. Good times. (At 29:29.) • Four Dimensional Maths...
    CORRECTIONS:
    - When talking about the Euler Characteristic of the torus at 16:29 I say the value of zero is "only on our friend the torus" which is technically wrong. In the moment I was just talking about the sphere and the torus but loads of other shapes have an Euler Characteristic of zero. Like the cylinder.
    - I'm undecided if the string method of thinking about holes at 17:04 was helpful. I could have talked about the dimension of the boundary manifold, but that felt like I was repeating the previous bit too much and wanted a different way to think about it. Not sure if this counts as a 'correction' per se, but I just needed to talk to someone about it. Thanks for listening.
    - Let me know if you spot any other mistakes!
    Filming and trouser sewing by Alex Genn-Bash
    Editing by Michelle Martin
    Graphics by Sam Hartburn
    Doughnuts later eaten by Matt Parker
    Music by Howard Carter
    Design by Simon Wright and Adam Robinson
    MATT PARKER: Stand-up Mathematician
    Website: standupmaths.com/
    US book: www.penguinrandomhouse.com/bo...
    UK book: mathsgear.co.uk/products/5b9f...
    Nerdy maths toys: mathsgear.co.uk/
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 3,5K

  • @standupmaths
    @standupmaths  Před 2 lety +1589

    It's true. I have the world's supply of torus balloons and I'm posting them free to all of my Patreon supporters. Sign up before 7 August and get a balloon full of holes! patreon.com/standupmaths

    • @theBestInvertebrate
      @theBestInvertebrate Před 2 lety +131

      I see what you're up to, buying up the supply of torus balloons so that the only way to topologicaly indulge is to go through you, nefarious.

    • @theBestInvertebrate
      @theBestInvertebrate Před 2 lety +18

      I jest.

    • @derekkuldinow5790
      @derekkuldinow5790 Před 2 lety +9

      Where'd you get that shirt, Matt?? Is it something particularly interesting or just a nice design?

    • @mikeblank8034
      @mikeblank8034 Před 2 lety +4

      I'm curious because you label the toroid loop as both a 2d hole and a 1d hole, is that correct? If that is the case then does the straw have both a 1d and 2d hole also? Love your videos! 😊

    • @feliciabarker9210
      @feliciabarker9210 Před 2 lety +23

      Controlling the world's supply of toroidal balloons is the next step in your descent to maths supervillainy.

  • @collin4555
    @collin4555 Před 2 lety +6737

    "Topology is a very big area of mathematics"
    Yeah, but it's continuously deformable into a small area

  • @johnbeauvais3159
    @johnbeauvais3159 Před 2 lety +3678

    “The jam inside this donut is not mathematically relevant” this might be my favorite line ever

    • @KrackerUncle
      @KrackerUncle Před 2 lety +110

      Because we cant answer if there is any.
      Its schrodingers jam.

    • @jmr
      @jmr Před 2 lety +46

      That could have been a line from an episode of "The Big bang Theory".

    • @jmr
      @jmr Před 2 lety +15

      @@KrackerUncle Your response could have been a second line

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Před 2 lety +8

      The jam fills a hole though.
      Or at least it should

    • @ainidirieiais
      @ainidirieiais Před 2 lety +2

      @@KrackerUncle in this case, it is mathematically relevant :)

  • @BlankPicketSign
    @BlankPicketSign Před 2 lety +1210

    Captain: "HOW MANY HOLES DO WE HAVE IN OUR AIRSHIP?!"
    Me: "Well first let us explore the Euler Characteristics of the..."
    Also Me: *Gets thrown off to my death

    • @LAK_770
      @LAK_770 Před 2 lety +52

      I’m liking this steampunk novel so far, keep it up

    • @arrowed_sparrow1506
      @arrowed_sparrow1506 Před 2 lety +90

      @@LAK_770 unfortunately it becomes very one dimensional later on.

    • @datpudding5338
      @datpudding5338 Před 2 lety +11

      @@arrowed_sparrow1506 at least the flight path has double the dimensions xD

    • @gildopesce
      @gildopesce Před rokem +3

      AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH

    • @mihailmilev9909
      @mihailmilev9909 Před rokem +1

      @@LAK_770 where is the rest of it lol

  • @grug57
    @grug57 Před rokem +228

    The jokes, the maths, the visual aids - I just love this video as a whole.

    • @K1lostream
      @K1lostream Před rokem +10

      You missed the opportunity to say the ways you love this video are many-fold.

    • @grug57
      @grug57 Před rokem +4

      ​@@K1lostream the math in this video is so great - you couldn't poke any holes in it

    • @fractional_factorial1539
      @fractional_factorial1539 Před rokem +5

      As a hole*

    • @E-AnyaForger
      @E-AnyaForger Před rokem +1

      Me smirking at the thought of visual aids :)

    • @grug57
      @grug57 Před 8 měsíci

      @@dot1298 thats what im sayin

  • @firestormdb
    @firestormdb Před 2 lety +739

    "I have bought the world's supply of toroidal balloons" sounds like the world's daftest supervillain plot

  • @Xalies
    @Xalies Před 2 lety +1472

    I think he's ability to break a bagel perfectly on the line is underrated

    • @dandynoble2875
      @dandynoble2875 Před 2 lety +35

      I think that speaks more to the low quality of the bagel than his ability. Pretty easy to break the yoga mats they call bagels you find at the grocery store.

    • @necaton
      @necaton Před 2 lety +17

      *his

    • @Lampe2020
      @Lampe2020 Před 2 lety +5

      I also wondered how he got that perfectly flat breaking surface!

    • @theentertaner
      @theentertaner Před 2 lety +13

      I read this before i watched the video and was waiting for him to split a bagel down the middle but as a normal person would if they were to eat it

  • @frankhooper7871
    @frankhooper7871 Před 2 lety +394

    It took me a while to realise that you were using the balloon as a model of a sphere - my first thought was that the balloon was in essence a disc as I was considering that it could be flattened topologically once you untied the place where you blew it up.

    • @RobertShippey
      @RobertShippey Před rokem +4

      Yes I was the same.

    • @MrEscape314
      @MrEscape314 Před rokem +22

      Yea I agree. The balloon was a disc to begin with.

    • @gw6667
      @gw6667 Před rokem +5

      Yup, he started cutting a hole and I was like, "hey, wait, what? Oh, sphere."

    • @danieldaugherty918
      @danieldaugherty918 Před rokem +15

      right I was like "no the balloon is a disc and now it has 1 hole"

    • @spicyoreos74
      @spicyoreos74 Před rokem

      Me too

  • @JollyGreenWizard
    @JollyGreenWizard Před rokem +25

    What this video really teaches us is how to turn the decorations and snacks for a small party into a tax write-off

  • @pyglik2296
    @pyglik2296 Před 2 lety +1092

    The worst thing about topology is drawing with markers on doughnuts.

    • @oldcowbb
      @oldcowbb Před 2 lety +54

      i literally screamed NOOOOO

    • @deyesed
      @deyesed Před 2 lety +12

      Squeak squeak

    • @tremkl
      @tremkl Před 2 lety +88

      I was terrified he was going to do that, but he only drew on a bagel, which is slightly less bad.

    • @anuragjuyal7614
      @anuragjuyal7614 Před 2 lety +7

      @@bland9876 damn! 😂😂

    • @guepardo.1
      @guepardo.1 Před 2 lety +24

      Not to mention ruining a pair of perfectly good trousers.

  • @kitludd465
    @kitludd465 Před 2 lety +949

    dont apologise for confusing trousers and pants, after all topologically they're the same

    • @OriginalPiMan
      @OriginalPiMan Před 2 lety +33

      I was thinking the same. I'm glad I scrolled far enough to find someone with the same idea.

    • @rhamph
      @rhamph Před 2 lety +35

      Don't forget the g-string! Trousers is pants is g-string.

    • @andrewsparkes8829
      @andrewsparkes8829 Před 2 lety +26

      @@rhamph Ah, but that depends on how lacy the g-string is.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 2 lety +20

      Just wearing my favorite punctured torus.

    • @OriginalPiMan
      @OriginalPiMan Před 2 lety +9

      @@andrewsparkes8829
      Well if you're getting into those kinds of specifics, then jeans have belt loops that are holes, and then pants and trousers are not necessarily topologically synonymous.

  • @GiatrasKon
    @GiatrasKon Před 8 měsíci +6

    Man, Swiss cheese must be the bane of topologists' existence

  • @mbyard356
    @mbyard356 Před 2 lety +109

    Well, now I know why I wasn’t able to find any “donut balloons” for my kid’s birthday party. Gee, thanks Matt! 😂

    • @tuffcat8572
      @tuffcat8572 Před 2 lety +3

      True story? He ruined so many plans with that.

  • @subnatural5341
    @subnatural5341 Před 2 lety +835

    Topologist jokes before: "Topologists can't tell a doughnut and a mug apart."
    Topologist jokes now: "Topologists can't tell jeans and g-strings apart."

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 2 lety +99

      Topologists are never going to see anyone in a g-string anyway.

    • @badlydrawnturtle8484
      @badlydrawnturtle8484 Před 2 lety +234

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      That's just it, though; they see EVERYONE in a g-string.

    • @skyjoe55
      @skyjoe55 Před 2 lety +89

      @@badlydrawnturtle8484 if there wearing a skirt wouldn't that be the same as wearing a mug?

    • @FireStormOOO_
      @FireStormOOO_ Před 2 lety +60

      @@skyjoe55 I can see the animation in my head now. Send help

    • @dielaughing73
      @dielaughing73 Před 2 lety +21

      @@skyjoe55 that'd be an annulus

  • @SquareWaveHeaven
    @SquareWaveHeaven Před 2 lety +637

    "When you put a hole in something, the number of holes goes up"

    • @standupmaths
      @standupmaths  Před 2 lety +470

      - Matt Parker, 2021

    • @michaelhutson6758
      @michaelhutson6758 Před 2 lety +39

      Unless... there's such as thing as a NEGATIVE hole...

    • @EphraimP
      @EphraimP Před 2 lety +94

      Unles you add a hole to a net then you have less holes

    • @ManjotSingh-sf2ri
      @ManjotSingh-sf2ri Před 2 lety +50

      @@EphraimP well u can still have more holes if you drill a super narrow hole with a needle into the threads so that they dont break

    • @Smitology
      @Smitology Před 2 lety +5

      @@michaelhutson6758 There is. If you add a "cavity" in something, kinda like a cyst, that's not exposed to the surface, that's a negative hole.

  • @mattomanx77
    @mattomanx77 Před rokem +36

    He knew EXACTLY what he was doing bringing in a torus balloon and saying "Things are gonna get a lot worse"
    Things always get worse when you start bringing those in

  • @themightymcb7310
    @themightymcb7310 Před 2 lety +110

    Whenever the "holes" type questions came up, my first critical thought on the question was immediately to consider that straws and clothing are 3D objects, which immediately complicates things for me in such a way that I'm honestly just out of my depth. This video helped me work out some of the more abstract ideas around topology. Good stuff!

  • @ahorribleperson3302
    @ahorribleperson3302 Před 2 lety +482

    "Things are gonna get a lot worse"
    *Ominously brings out a second balloon*

  • @DrTrefor
    @DrTrefor Před 2 lety +2028

    This is such a fun intro to the Euler Characteristic! I think it's kinda sad that so often we don't expose students to these accessible ideas from topology until late in an undergrad program, but there is no reason it can't be explored way way earlier.

    • @MuttFitness
      @MuttFitness Před 2 lety +27

      I got a BS in math and learned none of this

    • @Necrotoxin44
      @Necrotoxin44 Před 2 lety +34

      @@MuttFitness As it turns out, mathematics is full of a lot of different disciplines, haha. I also got a BS in math, but at my university I concentrated in 'pure math', and so I did learn this stuff. It would depend on your concentration, but I could also well imagine a more general and spread out math curriculum might miss some of this stuff.

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 Před 2 lety +12

      probably because it’s totally useless outside math

    • @jajssblue
      @jajssblue Před 2 lety +2

      Completely agreed!

    • @zacharym7000
      @zacharym7000 Před 2 lety +12

      I've always found maths sorta dry but stuff like this makes me genuinely interested. I love seeing people take complex subjects and break them down for the laymen like me.

  • @reaganduggins5279
    @reaganduggins5279 Před 2 lety +39

    This is easily one of the best, most intuitive explanations of any topological concept that I have seen.

  • @dinoeebastian
    @dinoeebastian Před rokem +64

    I'm astonished at how he's able to hold a doughnut in his hand without eating it

    • @jaisenroa4219
      @jaisenroa4219 Před rokem +5

      you could tell that he wanted it when he was holding it

  • @mokopa
    @mokopa Před 2 lety +224

    11:51 Matt apologises to blue balloon for being mean to it about calling its homology class horrible
    13:18 Matt continues insulting balloon's homology class right in its face

    • @Scootfairy
      @Scootfairy Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah Matt really tore him a new hole.

  • @mr.johnson3844
    @mr.johnson3844 Před 2 lety +1268

    I can't believe he established a temporary monopoly on the distribution of *torus* balloons in order to make being his Patreon supporter more desirable. This is peak economics.

    • @user-pr6ed3ri2k
      @user-pr6ed3ri2k Před rokem +16

      taurus balloons

    • @wcbq
      @wcbq Před rokem +8

      taurus balloons

    • @user-pr6ed3ri2k
      @user-pr6ed3ri2k Před rokem +5

      @@wcbq i agree

    • @omegonchris
      @omegonchris Před rokem +35

      @@user-pr6ed3ri2k the shape is called a torus. Taurus is a zodiac sign and constellation derived from the Latin word for a bull.

    • @user-pr6ed3ri2k
      @user-pr6ed3ri2k Před rokem +24

      @@omegonchris ur late to the convo
      he said taurus balloons before
      probably hinted by the fact that the comment was edited and the word torus is bolded out

  • @krzysztofwysocki76
    @krzysztofwysocki76 Před 2 lety +99

    Hi, regarding 2-d holes mentioned at 18:00, how about explaining this as "how many gases you can fill in the spaces created by manifold without mixing them together?" for instance you can have oxygen inside the sphere and nitrogen outside, which defines the number of 2d holes of sphere as 2.

    • @blackmber
      @blackmber Před rokem +16

      You might have to subtract 1 because the sphere and the torus each have 1 two-dimensional hole and can separate 2 gases.

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 Před 6 měsíci

      This is mathematically inaccurate. As demonstrated in the video, the number of 2D holes of a sphere is 1, not 2. The Euler characteristic of a sphere is 2, but this is because spheres include 1 0D hole.
      3D space can always be filled by 1 gas without mixing, in the absence of higher dimensional holes. Introducing one 2D hole allows 2 gases, but it can get complicated once you also introduce holes of other dimensionalities.

  • @wombat4191
    @wombat4191 Před 2 lety +4

    30:00 and it becomes even more creepier when you imagine how someone would wear them when treated as the same shape as regular trousers.

  • @DeathlyTired
    @DeathlyTired Před 2 lety +721

    If the barrier to entry to a subject is that you've got to be as smart as Poincaré , Riemann, Betti & Noether, I think, at that point, it's acceptable to simplify things a bit.

    • @jako7286
      @jako7286 Před 2 lety +38

      Yeah, people like me, who don't know their asymptote from a hole in a graph need to keep things simple.

    • @MrAlRats
      @MrAlRats Před 2 lety +8

      Most people believe that P is not equal to NP. Which means, in essence, that the ability to verify the solution to a problem is trivial compared to actually coming up with the solution in the first place. Developing the mathematical framework for studying a class of problems is considerably more difficult than merely understanding it after it has been fully developed. More or less, what one person can understand any other can as well. The only barrier to entry to any subject are having access to content created by those who understand the subject and self-motivation.

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 Před 6 měsíci +1

      The entry barrier does not require you to be as smart as Poincaré, Riemann, Betti, and Neother, just as how the entry barrier to using a computer does not require you to be as smart as Claude Shannon (there are plenty of idiots who know how to use a computer).

  • @MmKayUltra1
    @MmKayUltra1 Před 2 lety +991

    You keep asking about the pair of trousers but never told us the number of belt loops which I feel are important.

    • @theBestInvertebrate
      @theBestInvertebrate Před 2 lety +37

      I mean he kinda did, as you can see from the animations and it's euler's characteristic it has no belt loops.

    • @H2SO4pyro
      @H2SO4pyro Před 2 lety +62

      @@theBestInvertebrate Then you'd have to wear them with suspenders, which add 2 additionnal holes. So they'd be equivalent to 2 trousers glued back to back, or a 4 legged trousers

    • @ericbsmith42
      @ericbsmith42 Před 2 lety +63

      Also, almost every pair of trousers has at least one button hole.

    • @FineOtter
      @FineOtter Před 2 lety +40

      Maybe they were jeggings the whole Time?

    • @mydemon
      @mydemon Před 2 lety +53

      Its a mathematical pair of pants.

  • @valentincorman1578
    @valentincorman1578 Před 2 lety +14

    Now I wonder how the machine to make the toroidal ballons looks like.
    Great video, super interesting content, as always. Thank you!

  • @Martin_Huetter
    @Martin_Huetter Před 5 měsíci +5

    as a 3D artist working with 3d objects and surfaces every day and "morphing" them into flat 'sweing patterns' (UVspace) this is in a very weird way super fascinating.
    Explains really well how you would map a flat texture (a plane) onto a torus.

    • @pauldubois0
      @pauldubois0 Před 4 měsíci

      This is my problem with the jeans animations. The original jeans can be uv mapped with no seams, which I guess is another way of saying they can be embedded in the 2d plane.
      The sewn-legs jeans cannot.
      So, if they are modeled as surfaces rather than volumes, they must be different shapes.

  • @Sicarine
    @Sicarine Před 2 lety +166

    And then the sequel. "How many holes does a punctured Klein Bottle have?"

    • @theBestInvertebrate
      @theBestInvertebrate Před 2 lety

      I think 0?

    • @BlueBeBlue
      @BlueBeBlue Před 2 lety +10

      It's a really good ideia, maybe it has a 3d hole? Idk

    • @Nerketur
      @Nerketur Před 2 lety +1

      Given that it's made from connecting two mobius strips of opposite directions, I think two.
      Puncture and it becomes two joined mobius strips. So from 0 to two

    • @samuelthecamel
      @samuelthecamel Před 2 lety +1

      @@Nerketur You can't put one hole in it and get two more holes! (Or maybe you can. Idk, I'm not a topology expert)

    • @Noname-67
      @Noname-67 Před 2 lety +1

      2 holes, it'd be 2 mobius strips or an annulus and a mobius strip, it hard to imagine but 2 holes either way

  • @TheTallCurlyOne
    @TheTallCurlyOne Před 2 lety +207

    "Ignore the fact that there may or may not be jam inside of this doughnut, that's not mathematically relevant." You say while not confirming the jam status so it's now in some schrodinger's doughnut superposition shenaniganry. Which to be fair is still not mathematically relevant.

    • @hyperfox0934
      @hyperfox0934 Před 2 lety +24

      *exasperated physicist sighing*

    • @grepgrok8735
      @grepgrok8735 Před 2 lety +14

      Actually, if there IS jam and we consider the doughnut to be exclusively dough, then the jam creates a void (aka 2d hole) which would make the doughnut a sphere instead of a solid ball, which is extremely mathematically relevant. Thus, a doughnut hole (aka a solid bit of dough) is what he should have used to represent a ball.

    • @brendanh8193
      @brendanh8193 Před 2 lety +9

      So, to say this poetically, "is the jello hollow? Such states set said Schroedinger superposition shenanigans sour." Or to quote that great poet, Homer, "Doh!"

    • @joewilson3393
      @joewilson3393 Před 2 lety +2

      I wonder if I can look up any of my old math teachers and get their opinion on the mathematical relevancy of jam? I'm sure that won't be a strange question coming from a student 20 years later....

    • @ReimerGodt
      @ReimerGodt Před 2 lety

      #AlfFromMelmac would love Schrödingers cat oven backed, filled with plum jam.
      I believe.

  • @syriuszb8611
    @syriuszb8611 Před 7 měsíci +4

    As engineer I often encountered word "manifold", especially in CAD programs. I never could get a solid explanation, and after a while I just assumed "it's just a thing, a shape" but never thought it was actually correct enough to have mathematician agree with that poor definition! But I learned today that it unifies shape name between dimensions.

  • @ar_xiv
    @ar_xiv Před 7 měsíci +1

    I like that the hand drawn animation actually got it the most correct by showing the transition to the figure 8 “cord”

  • @craigstephenson7676
    @craigstephenson7676 Před 2 lety +847

    I would recommend you don’t get sponsored by better help again. The organization is very shady and overstates the level of involvement actual experts have. There are plenty of CZcams videos explaining this in further detail

    • @MarieKaltoft
      @MarieKaltoft Před 2 lety +43

      Bumping this in hopes he sees it!

    • @vladimirlenin843
      @vladimirlenin843 Před 2 lety +45

      It's alright
      No one is gonna use it

    • @cretinousmartyr3522
      @cretinousmartyr3522 Před 2 lety +118

      Yeah just let him collect these paychecks and skip the ad if it bugs you, but since it does matter, I think the message he delivers during the ad read feels more like a "seek counseling in if you feel you need it" more than "go use my better help link" compared to many other ad reads and that's a respectable message I'd say

    • @Applecraftpro
      @Applecraftpro Před 2 lety +17

      @@RobABankWithABagel The problem isn't as bad anymore, if you watch the phillp defranco update he did at one point he says they have majorly improved and have made there marketing clearer so while he still wont be doing sponsorships with them he doesn't think other creators should be discouraged from doing so. If you want more info you can watch his video but basically while they still have a bad rep and honestly I probably wouldn't use their services, they have fixed the issues so there isn't really any moral problems with taking a sponsorship.

    • @5h4d0w5l1f3
      @5h4d0w5l1f3 Před 2 lety +8

      @@Applecraftpro sure would be great if they put effort into proving that and explaining the changes that they've made rather than continuing ad campaigns totally not acknowledging that. but cool, you go fight for this unknown internet business. they probably need and appreciate it.

  • @ThePlacehole
    @ThePlacehole Před 2 lety +357

    Patreon exclusive: Matt wears the mathematically "equivalent" trousers.

    • @dathaniel9403
      @dathaniel9403 Před 2 lety +22

      He’d be an honorary member of the Ministry of Silly Walks.

    • @dwagincon4841
      @dwagincon4841 Před 2 lety +45

      You been the onlymaths exclusive

    • @MuzikBike
      @MuzikBike Před 2 lety +7

      jesus

    • @katyungodly
      @katyungodly Před 2 lety +9

      Someone would be into that 😂

    • @ashtonhoward5582
      @ashtonhoward5582 Před 2 lety +27

      I think you'll find that that's on his OnlyTopologists channel.

  • @stephenj9470
    @stephenj9470 Před 2 lety +28

    I understood very little from this video. And yet I watched it to the end, because Matt is so mesmerizing.

  • @Almrond
    @Almrond Před 2 lety

    This is the content I truly love. Your title made me think, and I continued to do just that throughout watching. Thank you for the thought.

  • @leorussellmoore3329
    @leorussellmoore3329 Před 2 lety +176

    "Now, from personal experience, it's pretty hard to draw on a doughnut. It's a lot easier to draw on a bagel. Although technically, still a doughnut." - think this has to be my absolute favourite Matt quote now. Had to pause the video cause I was laughing too much.

    • @nixel1324
      @nixel1324 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm pretty sure I remember the video where he learned that, the one where he turned a bagel into two interlocked rings.

  • @Devlinator61116
    @Devlinator61116 Před 2 lety +385

    "Whenever you put a hole in something, the number of holes goes up."
    *Nets have entered the chat.*

    • @parodoxis
      @parodoxis Před 2 lety +56

      You'd have to stick a needle into the rope to split it in two, yes forming another hole. Just tearing the rope in one spot is tearing the net, not really "putting a hole in it" though we say it that way

    • @TatharNuar
      @TatharNuar Před 2 lety +25

      Fabric is just a really tight net.

    • @parodoxis
      @parodoxis Před 2 lety +24

      @@TatharNuar by a loose definition, yes, and in that sense the fabric of reality is nets all the way down.
      But if we don't stop somewhere and just call it a "surface", none of the stuff in this video applies.

    • @karl810
      @karl810 Před 2 lety +5

      @@parodoxis fish net tights get holes all the time, I cant think of any other way of explaining it, they're definitely holes.

    • @parodoxis
      @parodoxis Před 2 lety +14

      @@karl810 if you consider the fishnet to be one fabric, sure. But if you see the net as a bunch of holes, then no, you have not created a hole, you've actually joined two or more holes. Thus the number of holes goes down, thus you're losing holes not adding them.

  • @black-snow
    @black-snow Před rokem +9

    Waiting for the children's book "How many holes does it have?'

  • @angulinhiduje6093
    @angulinhiduje6093 Před 9 měsíci +2

    i do a bit of 3d modeling, i used terms like "non manifolds" without every questioning them.
    to me it was just the software term for "mistakes" that created holes.
    very good video

  • @CRASDFGH
    @CRASDFGH Před 2 lety +206

    I remember when this video was titled "How many holes do things have"
    It was a simpler time.

    • @standupmaths
      @standupmaths  Před 2 lety +122

      It was a more simple time when everything was smooth and closed.

    • @sven_lu_
      @sven_lu_ Před 2 lety +20

      @@standupmaths *clothed

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat Před 2 lety +5

      It was a more path-connected time when every loop could be contracted to a point.

    • @p0gr
      @p0gr Před 2 lety +1

      @@EebstertheGreat you mean simply connected.

    • @slarzyer
      @slarzyer Před 2 lety +1

      there is no wholes in 2d ....a pair of pants has 3 holes one for each leg and the hole around it

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 Před 2 lety +146

    Fun fact about Jordan Ellenberg: He has one of the lowest Erdos-Bacon numbers, having cameoed as a math professor in the film 'Gifted'.

    • @matthewevans7703
      @matthewevans7703 Před 2 lety +13

      I remember seeing that cameo, he seemed like he was genuinely excited about the math that he wasn’t even teaching to a class

  • @AlexanderWC
    @AlexanderWC Před rokem +5

    Just burst out laughing at 4am because of that damn balloon noise with no warning

  • @JamesF0790
    @JamesF0790 Před 2 lety +9

    Aw, I missed out on a toroidal balloon :( Still, such is life. Thanks for the mind bending holes talk Matt!

  • @alancash6420
    @alancash6420 Před 2 lety +71

    I hired Matt to do balloon animals at my kid's birthday party. Reception was mixed, but they liked the n-dimensional hyper-sausage dog

  • @photelegy
    @photelegy Před 2 lety +538

    PLEASE: Let there be an astronaut currently on the ISS, which is a patreon ...
    I want a video of Matt explaining how he had to manage to get a balloon on to the ISS 😂

    • @garychap8384
      @garychap8384 Před 2 lety +51

      I want Matt to explain what he was doing with a childs pants. Where's the child??? This video is deeply disturbing.

    • @petemagnuson7357
      @petemagnuson7357 Před 2 lety +40

      He could probably back out by saying that aren't "anywhere in the world", but I don't doubt he would find a way

    • @stevenutter3614
      @stevenutter3614 Před 2 lety +12

      Patron*, not patrion.

    • @brendanh8193
      @brendanh8193 Před 2 lety +4

      Don't worry, he can easily change his question into how many holes in a saxophone. See the Olympic closing ceremony for proof. While we are at it, what shape can be made from the Olympic rings?

    • @GummieI
      @GummieI Před 2 lety +9

      Easy fill it with helium and just send it away at the right moment, and they will be able to catch it at the ISS

  • @Mr_pumpkin_
    @Mr_pumpkin_ Před 2 lety +2

    🤣 7:26 "have some fun with the trousers up and down"

  • @kennethmitchell1960
    @kennethmitchell1960 Před 2 lety +1

    I cannot describe the levels of discomfort each time that marker touches that poor precious bagel

  • @rickseiden1
    @rickseiden1 Před 2 lety +404

    "So it's like they're all the members of the same one terrible homology class."
    "There is only one true parabola!"

    • @nanamacapagal8342
      @nanamacapagal8342 Před 2 lety +12

      Cue the illuminati-esque spiritual experience.

    • @quacking.duck.3243
      @quacking.duck.3243 Před 2 lety +13

      Gloria in x-squaris.

    • @nanamacapagal8342
      @nanamacapagal8342 Před 2 lety +4

      @@quacking.duck.3243 NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

    • @GaryFerrao
      @GaryFerrao Před 2 lety +5

      😂 that was his best video ever. his beginnings of video editing. look where he is now 😎

    • @sankang9425
      @sankang9425 Před 2 lety +5

      @@GaryFerrao lol. He basically shoved in every sound and video effects that he could use

  • @gordonwiley2006
    @gordonwiley2006 Před 2 lety +48

    Topology is my favorite part of math that I constantly feel like I *almost* get.

    • @sixstringedthing
      @sixstringedthing Před 2 lety +2

      Back in highschool I felt that way about quadratic equations, now I'm not even close. 🤔

    • @98danielray
      @98danielray Před 2 lety

      that may as well be the case forever if the only exposure to it is random youtube pop-sci-esque videos.

  • @komicalican
    @komicalican Před 2 lety

    That is just amazing. Great work!

  • @schnitzel9003
    @schnitzel9003 Před 2 lety +1

    *Torus balloon enters the room*
    Looners: *Heavy Breathing*

  • @Quantris
    @Quantris Před 2 lety +94

    you need to animate that deformation with someone wearing the pants the whole time

    • @columbus8myhw
      @columbus8myhw Před 2 lety +9

      Wearing pants normally corresponds to having one leg through the sewn-together pantlegs and the other through the space between the pantlegs

    • @Quantris
      @Quantris Před 2 lety +11

      @@columbus8myhw indeed, but I want to see the inbetween states in their full glory
      maybe it would lead to a fashion revolution

    • @TechCavy
      @TechCavy Před 2 lety +7

      Challenge accepted

    • @worstuserever
      @worstuserever Před 2 lety +5

      czcams.com/video/Y-Hml5Qgrs0/video.html

  • @GwynPerry
    @GwynPerry Před 2 lety +77

    14:00 Matt tears a perfect slice across the bagel with his bare hands. I couldn't make a cut that clean with a bread knife.

  • @Greyorange_
    @Greyorange_ Před rokem

    Best Blender tutorial I've seen so far

  • @placeboantwerp4312
    @placeboantwerp4312 Před 2 lety

    Great work Matt. Love this one.

  • @shaunsaggers
    @shaunsaggers Před 2 lety +150

    "Ignore the fact that there may or may not be jam inside this doughnut, that's not mathematically relevant"
    One of my favourite statements ever.

  • @plackt
    @plackt Před 2 lety +249

    I didn’t “flatten” the straw to get “one hole”, I just started with a solid cylinder and drilled… one hole.

    • @grantnichol4496
      @grantnichol4496 Před 2 lety +4

      Or cut two holes in the balloon and stretch. -1 + 2

    • @ANDELE3025
      @ANDELE3025 Před 2 lety +3

      So you bore in a entrance hole and a exit hole.

    • @henrik.norberg
      @henrik.norberg Před 2 lety +14

      @@ANDELE3025 So by your definition you can't bore one hole i a wall or anything with a thickness? You always get one entrance and one exit hole. How do bore one hole then? A pit has to be a hole then? By you definition a hole can not exist, only two holes.

    • @plackt
      @plackt Před 2 lety +3

      @@ANDELE3025 No, I bore a hole which has two entrances and two exits, neither of which are, in and of themselves, holes.

    • @ANDELE3025
      @ANDELE3025 Před 2 lety +6

      @@henrik.norberg A hole by (functional) definition a lack of material on a section of a object. This is relative to the context of the type of object.
      Surface topology doesnt account for that because in pure algebraic topology you only care about the relation of manifolds to declare something a hole. However even that is a field specialized definition as really any manifold border to nothing is in practice a hole.
      The relation to context of the object is the crucial part as its why a cylinder in which you bore a relatively wide hole from whatever side you decided to be a top, you can also no longer define it as a cylinder but as a cup. But that cup has technically no hole then as a cup with a hole would leak. Similarly a ring is technically just a hole. And a pit isnt a hole in the planet earth but it is in the ground when you walk next to it (you know, why holes in the ground on the street tend to get repaired).
      Its why we set axioms and why the entire section on defining number of holes by counting odd and even ones was relevant as it can have -3, -1, 0, 1, 2 or 3 holes depending on how funky you wanna get (tho i believe most people would say 0 or 1 when we are talking about it in practice).

  • @chuckghaly
    @chuckghaly Před 2 lety

    Loved the animation 👌 great presentation

  • @rogercline5377
    @rogercline5377 Před 2 lety +3

    I think part of the issue is this: A hole in a two-dimensional surface is not the same thing as a hole in the three-dimensional solid of which that two-dimensional surface is a skin.

    • @tichu7
      @tichu7 Před 2 lety

      I can't believe I had to scroll so far down to find someone who articulated this. If you describe a hole in a straw as something a liquid can pass through, the straw has one hole no matter how squashed the straw is. If you describe it as two holes, with one end being where the liquid enters, and the other end being where it exits, it still has two holes, as long as we're talking about a 3 dimensional straw.

    • @rogercline5377
      @rogercline5377 Před 2 lety

      @@tichu7 Going by this logic...and counting a hole in a two-dimensional surface as one hole...then we can view a straw as a hollow cylinder with two holes. OR we can view a straw as a plane curved into a cylindrical shape with zero holes...just space surrounded by that cylindrical plane.

    • @tichu7
      @tichu7 Před 2 lety

      @@rogercline5377 Exactly what I'm thinking. What we call a hole is dependent upon how big the hole is compared to the 2-dim shape. But geometrically speaking, anything outside that shape is a hole...that just happens to be bigger than that shape. Even a disc with no apparent hole could be reframed as having one hole (technically of infinite size) that's bigger than the disc.

  • @lightspiritblix1423
    @lightspiritblix1423 Před 2 lety +33

    "From personal experience, it's pretty hard to draw on a donut. It's a lot easier to draw on a bagel."

  • @DrakiniteOfficial
    @DrakiniteOfficial Před 2 lety +450

    I appreciate the explanation of the differences between torus and doughnut, ball and sphere, and circle and disk. I didn't really consider that there was such a rigid difference between the definitions of each two.

    • @zlac
      @zlac Před 2 lety

      So, when you deform a square, do you get a circle or a disc?

    • @twt1524
      @twt1524 Před 2 lety +3

      It’s about dimension ex 1d, 2d, 3d. Circle 1d. Disk 2d. Torus 2d(only has surface area). Donuts since they’re solid objects are 3d. A sphere is the 2d surface of a 3d ball.

    • @twt1524
      @twt1524 Před 2 lety

      “Flatten” a square you get a circle . The 2d surface of a cube can be “flattened” into a 2d disk

    • @zlac
      @zlac Před 2 lety +3

      @@twt1524 So square is just a perimeter - just like the perimeter of a disk is called a circle, right? How is a surface surrounded by a square called?

    • @iain_nakada
      @iain_nakada Před 2 lety

      @@twt1524 I'm not sure you do. The 2d surface of a cube has a 2d hole in it, a 2d disc has no holes in it. (If we're talking topology and holes still.)

  • @nateleavy5189
    @nateleavy5189 Před 4 dny

    “The Taurus has two holes: one in the center, and one in the middle” thank you Matt

  • @DevynPlaysGames
    @DevynPlaysGames Před 2 lety

    I forgot the joy these videos bring

  • @DeclanMBrennan
    @DeclanMBrennan Před 2 lety +150

    Said the sphere to the torus: "I don't like your holier-than-thou attitude."

    • @slarzyer
      @slarzyer Před 2 lety +1

      a hollow sphere has 1 hole in the center ..this entire math is fake cause it assume there is a hole in a 2d object that has no thickness

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 2 lety +9

      @@slarzyer Not all holes are one-dimensional. Matt explained it: The empty volume inside the sphere is actually a two-dimensional hole, and you could thread an area through it in 4D.

    • @slarzyer
      @slarzyer Před 2 lety +2

      @@davidwuhrer6704 a balloon is only a deformed disc not a sphere with a hole in it...so once a hole is added it can be reformed into a disc so not a hole just a dimple on the surface... such as the surface of a golf ball where the dimple fills the the entire center... so a solid sphere with a dimple on the surface is not a hole its just a big dimple so to get a hole in a golf ball it must have an exit point giving 2 holes to the surface
      so to have a "hole in a balloon" it must pierce both sides leaving one hole behind after deformation

    • @oxey_
      @oxey_ Před 2 lety

      @@slarzyer I think what you're saying is true in 3 dimensions but not in all dimensions

    • @slarzyer
      @slarzyer Před 2 lety

      @@oxey_ i was finding it hard to put words to it....and was referring more to the theory of holes not topology...i believe the fault comes with the definition of what a hole is not that a balloon has negative holes....

  • @CaptLoquaLacon
    @CaptLoquaLacon Před 2 lety +131

    Buys a reusable straw
    Makes it impossible to re-use
    Matt, you're a monster!

    • @theBestInvertebrate
      @theBestInvertebrate Před 2 lety +13

      Indeed far worse for the environment than just using a single use straw.

    • @mestiarcanus
      @mestiarcanus Před 2 lety +23

      No, he just made it possible for multiple people to use simultaneously by making more (shorter) copies! If he'd cut along the length and ended up with a disc, then he'd be a monster.

    • @notmyname327
      @notmyname327 Před 2 lety +2

      How many holes does a turtle have? How about a turtle with a straw?

    • @fi4re
      @fi4re Před 2 lety +4

      Just use a homeomorphism to stretch the straw fragments back into whole straws!

    • @turbofjes2021
      @turbofjes2021 Před 2 lety +1

      That's not how reusable straws work, thankfully.

  • @davialves5264
    @davialves5264 Před 2 lety +1

    Video: "Why this baloon has -1 holes"
    Me: *"How to turn a sphere inside out" flashbacks*

  • @WindyNight114
    @WindyNight114 Před 2 lety

    I’m loving this channel!

  • @saxbend
    @saxbend Před 2 lety +28

    Euclid: Square the circle? Good luck with that.
    Topology: Hold my beer!

  • @youtubersingingmoments4402
    @youtubersingingmoments4402 Před 2 lety +37

    You have successfully semantically satiated the word "hole" for me. Thanks.

  • @jakecarpenter1838
    @jakecarpenter1838 Před rokem +3

    A topologist dips his mug into his doughnut

  • @nugboy420
    @nugboy420 Před rokem +1

    That balloon noise is so outrageously loud hahahaha

  • @ReyMysterioX
    @ReyMysterioX Před 2 lety +463

    Oh yes, topology, the best meme-able field of mathematics. Seeing people argue wether a pair of trousers has 2 or 3 holes is literally one of the funniest things ever because you can clearly see how it breaks their minds…

    • @arididomenico6974
      @arididomenico6974 Před 2 lety +4

      can it have one hole?

    • @LeeSpork
      @LeeSpork Před 2 lety +40

      @@arididomenico6974 No, that would be a skirt

    • @Ditocoaf
      @Ditocoaf Před 2 lety +68

      Problem is that the definition of "hole" used in topology isn't the only definition. If you dig a classic "hole in the ground", topologically that isn't any hole at all. To most people in casual situations, a hole is a break in the *visible outer surface* of something.
      Like most endless internet discussions, it would go away if there was a separate word for every imaginable concept, but alas that is impossible.

    • @40watt53
      @40watt53 Před 2 lety +1

      It's 2 right?

    • @quin2910
      @quin2910 Před 2 lety +1

      Why are there 2 arguments? My first thought is to mould it into a double torus for 2 holes. But google says 3 holes sphere

  • @BrainyBrunetteBarbie
    @BrainyBrunetteBarbie Před 2 lety +42

    Matt saying “that’s a relief” whilst talking about topology made me chuckle.

  • @gsittly
    @gsittly Před rokem

    "Have fun with the trousers up and down" 😆👌🏻

  • @scottytremaineplays9461

    This is the best explanation of Euler characteristics I’ve ever seen - and it’s what my masters was on

  • @aaronbredon2948
    @aaronbredon2948 Před 2 lety +233

    My father specialized in Sheaf Theory within Algebraic Topology.
    He had some fun math jokes based on topology (including capturing a lion in the desert by erecting an empty cage then performing an inversion on the desert to put the lion inside the cage, if I remember correctly)
    Of course I can barely follow the concept, let alone the actual math.

    • @fuuryuuSKK
      @fuuryuuSKK Před 2 lety +75

      Said inversion is left as an exercise to the reader

    • @aaronbredon2948
      @aaronbredon2948 Před 2 lety +84

      @@fuuryuuSKK and technically, you should lock yourself inside the cage so you end up outside after the inversion, rather than inside with the lion.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Před 2 lety +9

      Ooh! I'd forgotten that joke. (It's been a loooong time.) It's a great one if you want weird looks and very confused people. :D

    • @nikkiofthevalley
      @nikkiofthevalley Před 2 lety +4

      All I can imagine an "inversion" would look like is a mesh (the computer graphics definition) flipping into the shape of the cage. Is that right or is it some wacky BS thst looks like it's travelling into the 4th (spatial) dimension?

    • @studentjohn
      @studentjohn Před rokem

      @@aaronbredon2948 This is why you have engineers whose job it is to actually apply the maths.

  • @carlosgomez2305
    @carlosgomez2305 Před 2 lety +46

    11:35
    Matt: *draws a point*
    Matt: "the pointless"

  • @rhandhom1
    @rhandhom1 Před 2 lety +1

    That first animation is satisfying to watch.
    Also, who else expected him to bite into one of the doughnuts?

  • @jonpatchmodular
    @jonpatchmodular Před 2 lety

    44:00 this video is blowing my mind. At first I was annoyed that you said a donut is not a torus, but then you proceed to demonstrate their different amount of holes

  • @luca6819
    @luca6819 Před 2 lety +274

    So now when asked how many holes does a straw have, I can fearlessly answer: "There are two holes!". Thank you zero dimensional holes for existing

    • @gregoryfenn1462
      @gregoryfenn1462 Před 2 lety +25

      If you swish and then stretch a straw you can get a disk with one puncture in it easily, so by the opening assumptions in the video that means it has one hole 🕳?

    • @waterierStone
      @waterierStone Před 2 lety +5

      It's OK just cover one side you still have a hole. Cuz English or maybe topology who knows

    • @vaclavjebavy5118
      @vaclavjebavy5118 Před 2 lety +4

      @@gregoryfenn1462 i think that's the real scientific answer

    • @VivekYadav-ds8oz
      @VivekYadav-ds8oz Před 2 lety +14

      Then there's not one zero dimensional holes, there's infinite of them. So technically you can always answer infinite.
      Don't thank me for making topology the easiest branch of mathematics 😎

    • @lantami1199
      @lantami1199 Před 2 lety +25

      @@gregoryfenn1462 There is one 1-dimensional hole (where the liquid flows through) and one 0-dimensional hole (cause the straw exists)

  • @whee2390
    @whee2390 Před 2 lety +69

    I didn’t expect stand-up comedy and mathematics to merge so well, but you definitely make it work!

  • @leuenbergemo
    @leuenbergemo Před 2 lety +1

    He re-used the hell out of that re-usable straw ... good luck re-using that annulus! :)

  • @gradyjones7017
    @gradyjones7017 Před 8 měsíci +1

    12:48 I thought the sharpie on the blue balloon was a hair on my screen

  • @Bare_Essence
    @Bare_Essence Před 2 lety +74

    "Ignore the fact there may or may not be jam inside this doughnut, that's not mathematically relevant" lol
    I'm going to mention that at the doughnut shop when they try to charge me more for that type.

    • @AlRoderick
      @AlRoderick Před 2 lety +15

      I don't envy the people working in donut and bagel shops near college towns, everyone working in them has definitely heard an unsolicited topology lecture.

    • @sixstringedthing
      @sixstringedthing Před 2 lety +2

      It may not be relevant mathematically, but it's hugely relevant on a personal level (jam/jelly filled is my favourite and now I want one).

    • @ashtonhoward5582
      @ashtonhoward5582 Před 2 lety +1

      There's also a hole that they use to fill the donut with.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sixstringedthing I like custard ones

  • @Joe_Payne
    @Joe_Payne Před 2 lety +22

    He missed the joke "Its a torus you donut" 😂

  • @gerrykavanagh
    @gerrykavanagh Před rokem

    Wonderful synergy between this video and a recent Mathologer video on hypercubes

  • @Brunoenribeiro
    @Brunoenribeiro Před 2 lety

    7:19 loved how you turned those trousers into CGP Grey's face

  • @delecti
    @delecti Před 2 lety +283

    Wait, is there controversy about whether "0" is even? How is that ambiguous, of course it is. It's a bit of a weird case, but it passes all of the tests of evenness, and none the tests of oddness.

    • @MuttFitness
      @MuttFitness Před 2 lety +107

      I don't know. It seems odd to me.

    • @Happy_Abe
      @Happy_Abe Před 2 lety +58

      @@MuttFitness odd that you think that way

    • @arnauds2222
      @arnauds2222 Před 2 lety +39

      0ddly enough, it does.

    • @MuttFitness
      @MuttFitness Před 2 lety +21

      @Jacob Coblentz that's odd

    • @Happy_Abe
      @Happy_Abe Před 2 lety +61

      @Jacob Coblentz I don’t think anyone “even” feels it should be odd
      People probably feel it should be neither and that eveness and oddness only apply to nonzero integers
      I don’t feel this way just sharing what these maybe think

  • @xanthoconite4904
    @xanthoconite4904 Před 2 lety +20

    wow, I saw the title and was like: ok, I need to see this

  • @noahdoss1967
    @noahdoss1967 Před 10 měsíci

    I’m glad that topology has left me with the ability to know how to put on trousers where the legs have been sewn together

  • @erikswanenberg8719
    @erikswanenberg8719 Před rokem

    great channel really enjoying

  • @Alnakar
    @Alnakar Před 2 lety +20

    Matt deserves a medal for not taking a bite out of those doughnuts, every time he picked them up!

  • @Lykrast
    @Lykrast Před 2 lety +76

    A straw actually has an infinite number of small holes stacked on top of each other.

    • @standupmaths
      @standupmaths  Před 2 lety +60

      This is my new favourite take.

    • @boynamedcate
      @boynamedcate Před 2 lety +12

      Similarly, a balloon is actually just the outer shell of an infinite number of balloon-shaped holes which are nested like Russian nesting dolls.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 2 lety +6

      All matter is just an infinite number of quarks, which are topologically balls, I think.

    • @samuelthecamel
      @samuelthecamel Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 They are not balls, but are instead point-like objects which wouldn't have any holes.

    • @menyazavutdavid
      @menyazavutdavid Před 2 lety +1

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 balls lol

  • @ogmakefirefiregood
    @ogmakefirefiregood Před 10 měsíci

    I have explored this question in depth.

  • @WtbgoldBlogspot
    @WtbgoldBlogspot Před 2 lety +1

    "Zero is even. Don't @ me." 😂

  • @tsawy6
    @tsawy6 Před 2 lety +144

    Hey, I appreciate the honesty with the therapy recommendation! Yet another thing to put on the list of "Reasons Matt Parker is a cool dude"!
    ...it's a long list! Including the fact that he's able to whip out a toroidal balloon, and it's utterly unsurprising.

    • @thaddeuscosse9527
      @thaddeuscosse9527 Před 2 lety +5

      Do your research before going to better help. They were just involved with a scandal with the quality of the therapists.

  • @ktkrelaxedscience
    @ktkrelaxedscience Před 2 lety +1

    I love it when simple ideas get taken to the extreme like that. Messing with our minds! 😊

  • @firstlt2
    @firstlt2 Před měsícem

    Did he really say that topology is a relief?! Awesome!