The Story of Maths
Marcus du Sautoy, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford, escorts you through the most important of all intellectual disciplines. Mathematics is the Empress of the Sciences. Without her, there would be no physics, nor chemistry, nor cosmology. Any field of study depending on statistics, geometry, or any kind of calculation would simply cease to be. And then, there are the practical applications: without maths there’s no architecture. No commerce. No accurate maps, or time-keeping: therefore no navigation, nor aviation, nor astronomy. She is all-powerful: and she rules ruthlessly. Imperious and unyielding, mathematics brooks no dissent and tolerates no error. In an age of uncertainty, mathematics is the only discipline that generates knowledge that’s immutably, incontestably, and eternally true. In this landmark series of films for BBC FOUR, Marcus du Sautoy, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford, escorts viewers through the history of this most important of all intellectual disciplines. In a journey that takes him through the ages and around the world, he examines the development of key mathematical ideas and shows how, in a multitude of surprising ways, mathematical ideas underpin the science, technology, and culture that shape our world. As Marcus shows, mathematics was part of the bedrock of intellectual life in the world’s great civilisations. It was central to the survival of some of the world’s most powerful empires. And even today, mathematical knowledge remains the motor-force that drives the modern world. The films in this ambitious series offer clear, accessible explanations of important mathematical ideas but are also packed with engaging anecdotes, fascinating biographical details, and pivotal episodes in the lives of the great mathematicians. Engaging, enlightening and entertaining, the series gives viewers new and often surprising insights into the central importance of mathematics, establishing this discipline to be one of humanity’s greatest cultural achievements.
This program traces the development of mathematics in the Medeteranean region beginning with the Egyptians through the formalized geometry of the Greeks. Along the way a few remarkable methods emerged that predated formal mathematical methods by a thousand years.
In India Marcus du Sautoy discovers how the symbol for the number zero was invented and in the Middle East he looks at the invention of the new language of algebra and the spread of Eastern knowledge to the West.
By the 17th century, Europe had taken over from the Middle East as the world's powerhouse of mathematical ideas. Great strides had been made in understanding the geometry of objects fixed in time and space. The race was now on to discover the mathematics to describe objects in motion. Marcus explores the work of Rene Descartes and Pierre Fermat, whose famous Last Theorem would puzzle mathematicians for more than 350 years. He also examines Isaac Newton's development of the calculus, and goes in search of Leonard Euler, the father of topology or 'bendy geometry', and Carl Friedrich Gauss who, at the age of 24, was responsible for inventing a new way of handling equations - modular arithmetic.
After showing how fundamental mathematics is to our lives, Marcus du Sautoy explores the mathematics of ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia and Greece. In Egypt, he uncovers use of a decimal system based on ten fingers of the hand, while in former Mesopotamia he discovers that the way we tell the time today is based on the Babylonian Base 60 number system. In Greece, he looks at the contributions of some of the giants of mathematics including Plato, Euclid, Archimedes and Pythagoras, who is credited with beginning the transformation of mathematics from a tool for counting into the analytical subject we know today.
|
Marcus du Sautoy | Self - Presenter |
|
Eleanor Robson | Self - Cambridge University |
|
Nikolai Vavilov | Self - Prof. / St. Petersburg State University |
|
Annette Imhausen | Self - Cambridge University |
|
Jackie Stedall | Self - Newton fan / Oxford University |
|
Daniel Bernoulli | Self - Professor of Geology |
|
Erwin Stein | Self - Prof. / Hannover University |
|
June Barrow-Green | Self - Mathematician |
|
Henk Bos | Self - Prof. / Utrecht University & Aarhus University |
|
Joe Dauben | Self - Mathematician |
|
Herbert Breger | Self - Leibniz Archives / Hannover |
|
Christopher Anagnostakis | Self - Albertus Magnus College |
|
Yuri Matiyasevich | Self - Mathematician |
|
Leonhard Euler | Self - Ancestor of Leonhard Euler |
|
John Britton | Self - Yale University |
|
Samuel Patterson | Self - Mathematician |
|
Sylvie Garnier | Self - Maison Musée René Descartes |
|
Gygorgy Kovacs | Self - Curator / Bolyai Museum |
|
Peter Sarnak | Self - Mathematician |
|
Fritz Nagel | Self - Director / Bernoulli Archive |
|
Serafina Cuomo | Self - Imperial College |
|
Samuel Patterson | Self - Göttingen University |
|
Jim Carlson | Self - Clay Mathematics Institute |
| Director | David Berry |
|
| Robin Dashwood |
|
|
| Karen McGann |
|
|
| Writer | Marcus du Sautoy | |
| Producer | Kim Duke, Catherine McCarthy, David Okuefuna, David Berry, Kemi Majekodunmi, Robin Dashwood, Christina Lowry, Krysia Derecki, Karen McGann | |
| Photography | Justin Evans, Jonathan Young | |
| Nr Discs | 1 |
|---|---|
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Location | 8A003V2 |
|---|---|
| Watched | |
| Index | 761 |
| Added Date | Oct 04, 2013 11:39:42 |
| Modified Date | Feb 19, 2016 10:31:34 |
Wiskunde is het fundament van de wereld. Zonder wiskunde is er geen natuurkunde, geen scheikunde, geen sterrenkunde, geen architectuur en geen economie. Elke wetenschap of studie die afhankelijk is van statistiek, geometrie of welke calculatie dan ook zou zonder wiskunde niet kunnen bestaan.
In deze 4-delige serie onderzoekt Professor Marcus du Sautoy de ontwikkeling van belangrijke wiskundige principes en de invloed van deze principes op onze en vroegere beschavingen. Het onderzoek voert o.a. naar Egypte, China, India, Rusland, het Midden Oosten, Europa en Amerika en langs historisch belangrijke wiskundigen als Descartes, Newton, De Fermat en Gauss. Onderweg wordt het beeld van wiskunde als fundament voor wetenschap, technologie en cultuur steeds helderder.
Een boeiende en verhelderende serie over een van de grootste prestaties van de mensheid.
Marcus Peter Francis du Sautoy (Londen, 26 augustus 1965) is professor wiskunde aan de Universiteit van Oxford. Zijn academisch werk bestaat voornamelijk uit getallentheorie. Du Sautoy is bekend geworden met zijn werk op het gebied van het populariseren van wiskunde. Hij schrijft o.a. voor The Times en The Guardian.