Mathematics
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Mathematics is the abstract science of numbers, quantity, structure, space, and change. It involves the study of patterns, relationships, and logical reasoning, using symbolic representations and rigorous proofs. Mathematics is divided into various branches, including arithmetic, algebra, geometry, calculus, and statistics. It serves as a foundational tool in science, engineering, economics, and many other fields, enabling the formulation and analysis of models to solve real-world problems. The discipline has evolved over millennia, contributing significantly to technological and scientific advancements.
For more information, see the Wikipedia entry on Mathematics.
Related linksCollection linksFor more information, see the Wikipedia entry on Mathematics.
- Why life is more interesting with extra pi
- Why Do Exact Equations Become Unpredictable?
- Egyptian Fractions and the Greedy Algorithm - Numberphile
- X Value
- Collatz Conjecture in Color - Numberphile
- UNCRACKABLE? The Collatz Conjecture - Numberphile
- The unexpected maths problem at work during the women's World Cup
- Roger Penrose explains Godel's incompleteness theorem in 3 minutes
- Elliptical Pool Table - Numberphile
- The numbers that are too big to imagine
- Omniknot
- Coordinate Plane Closure
- Explaining the SECRET of Penrose Patterns
- Division Notation
- Why Is 1/137 One of the Greatest Unsolved Problems In Physics?
- The Reciprocals of Primes - Numberphile
- Euler's Formula - Numberphile
- Weird Unicode Math Symbols
- Twin Proofs for Twin Primes - Numberphile
- Big Factorials - Numberphile
- Rounding
- Why π^π^π^π could be an integer (for all we know!).
- Michael Says Prime Numbers for 3 Hours
- Is The Metric System Actually Better?
- Goldbach Conjecture - Numberphile
- Numerical Sex Positions
- Benford's law
- All the Numbers - Numberphile
- What is a Number? - Numberphile
- The Most Wanted Prime Number - Numberphile
- Witness Numbers (and the truthful 1,662,803) - Numberphile
- What is the factorial of -½?
- Infinitely Many Touching Circles - Numberphile
- The Doomsday Algorithm - Numberphile
- The Simplest Math Problem No One Can Solve - Collatz Conjecture
- The Volume of a Sphere - Numberphile
- Parabolas and Archimedes - Numberphile
- How they found the World's Biggest Prime Number - Numberphile
- Matt Parker: Stand-up Maths Routine (about barcodes)
- Stand-up comedy routine about Spreadsheets
- Protecting Privacy with MATH (Collab with the Census)
- Don't Know (the Van Eck Sequence) - Numberphile
- How many chess games are possible?
- 357686312646216567629137 - Numberphile
- Fibonacci Mystery - Numberphile
- Euclid's Big Problem - Numberphile
- The Discovery That Transformed Pi
- What was the first (known) maths mistake?
- The Dollar Game - Numberphile
- A proof that e is irrational - Numberphile
- The Riemann Hypothesis, Explained
- Inca Knot Numbers - Numberphile
- How modern mathematics emerged from a lost Islamic library
- The Feigenbaum Constant (4.669) - Numberphile
- The Golden Ratio (why it is so irrational) - Numberphile
- From The MIT Press Reader
- Large Number Formats
- The myth of being 'bad' at maths
- The simple maths error that can lead to bankruptcy
- Solving the Three Body Problem
- The violent attack that turned a man into a maths genius
- The maths problem that could bring the world to a halt
- Tribonacci Numbers (and the Rauzy Fractal) - Numberphile
- Is zero an even number?
- Loop (graph theory)
- Noli turbare circulos meos!
- ANU QRNG – Quantum random numbers
- Zeno's Paradox - Numberphile
- Path-based strong component algorithm
- Kosaraju's algorithm - Wikipedia
- Cycle (graph theory)
- Strongly connected component
- Tarjan's strongly connected components algorithm
- Directed graph
- Graph theory
- Euler's identity
- Mandelbrot set
ENGLISH COLLECTIONJUNE 13, 2025 AT 22:53:21 UTC