StarTalk Radio - The Beauty of Mathematics, with Jeremy Irons

Episode Date: November 18, 2016

This week, Neil Tyson explores the language of the universe and the life of self-taught math genius Ramanujan. With Jeremy Irons and Matthew Brown from “The Man Who Knew Infinity,” co-host Eugene ...Mirman, mathematician Ken Ono, Mona Chalabi, and Bill Nye.NOTE: StarTalk All-Access subscribers can listen to this entire episode commercial-free. Find out more at https://www.startalkradio.net/startalk-all-access/ Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. Welcome to the whole of the universe of the American Museum of Natural History. This is StarTalk, and I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson. Tonight, we're talking about mathematics, the language of the universe. And we're featuring my interview with actor Jeremy Irons and film director Matthew Brown on the film The Man Who Knew Infinity. So, let's do this.
Starting point is 00:00:54 So, I've got with me comedic co-host Eugene Merman. Eugene, welcome back. Great to be here. All right. Good to have you. And I've got with me a real live mathematician. They do exist in the world. Ken Ono. I'm right here. Glad to be here. So you're a professor of math at Emory University. That's right. And you're also a consultant and associate producer. It's crazy. The film The Man Who Knew Infinity. That's right. That's right. That's cool. It's totally cool.
Starting point is 00:01:23 No, it's good that Hollywood is looking for people with that kind of academic expertise to help this situation. So tonight we're going to get into the beauty and genius of mathematics. But before we do, let's get a sense of how they told the story in The Man Who Knew Infinity. Let's check out the movie trailer. From an Indian clerk ill-educated in Madras, Let's check out the movie trailer. What would you stand for? You can ask him yourself. You intend to invite him here? Don't forget me.
Starting point is 00:02:09 I could never. Are you Runganudin by chance? Oh, ha ha. Don't be intimidated. Great knowledge comes from the humblest of origins. For the good of everybody, you should attend some lectures. But I'm here to publish. We need proofs of your work.
Starting point is 00:02:29 But they are right, sir. I hadn't completed that proof. How do you know? I just do. You don't pull a stunt like that in my class. Now get out! How do you know that theorem? It came to me.
Starting point is 00:02:40 These steps you want, I do not know how to do. Where do you think you're going? This is our home. Don't you know what I've given up to be here? I have nothing. You wanted to know how I get my ideas. God speaks to me. There are no proofs.
Starting point is 00:03:01 We're just supposed to take him at his word? No. You're to take him at mine. There are no proofs that can determine just supposed to take him at his word? No, you're to take him at mine. There are no proofs that can determine the outcome of the matters of the heart. We are merely explorers of infinity in the pursuit of absolute perfection. I owe you so much. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:03:19 It's I who owe you. OU. Whoa. Some powerful stuff. So the film starts Dev Patel. That's right. And he's a well-known actor. From Slumdog Millionaire. Yeah, from Slumdog Millionaire. And he's portraying the Indian math genius, Ramanujan.
Starting point is 00:03:49 Exactly. Excellent. And also Jeremy Irons. Right. As his mentor. G.H. Hardy. Yeah, and he's playing G.H. Hardy, a famous English mathematician. So we don't often see mathematicians as the main character of a movie.
Starting point is 00:04:04 Maybe they'll throw one in because they've got to solve something, and you go in and come out of their character. This one, the main character is a mathematician. That's right. And so that's impressive for me that there'd be a feature-length film fully produced with real actors on this subject. And really good actors. A super quality film, by the way.
Starting point is 00:04:21 Really good actors. In fact, one of the really good actors is Jeremy Irons. And in fact he and the director Matt Brown came through town. So I nabbed them put them in my office and I asked Jeremy Irons who's playing the British mathematician J.H. Hardy
Starting point is 00:04:37 I asked him what first hooked him on this story. Because to get such star power, something's got to click in ways that no one can predict, not even the director. Because to get such star power, something's got to click in ways that no one can predict, not even the director. So let's check it out. This boy knew things which could not be imagined. And where does that come from?
Starting point is 00:04:57 And I was very interested in playing the relationship of this very closed English mathematician, slowly opening up to the amazement of this man who he would dream. And when he was meditating, his god, Namagiri, would place the, as he would describe his discoveries, would place these calculations on his tongue. And then he'd be able to write them down. And my character is an atheist. Didn't believe in God.
Starting point is 00:05:30 G.H. Hardy. G.H. Hardy. So how do you explain that? I mean, for me it was... He's like, take that! It's the wonder of, you know, as Shakespeare says, there is more to excelling on Earth than is dreamt of in our philosophy. We think we know everything.
Starting point is 00:05:44 I mean, you scientists, We think we know everything. I mean, you scientists, you think you know everything. You have knowledge. Stephen Hawking doesn't believe God exists. I mean, how can you say that? When you say the good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe it, I would say the good thing about God is that it's true whether or not you believe it. Share me irons.
Starting point is 00:06:05 So, Ken, what do you make of his explanation, that God placed these formulas on his tongue? Well, you can take that at many different levels. I'm not Hindu. I don't have goddess Namagiri helping me, at least I don't think so. Well, you don't recognize it. I don't know. Maybe I do. But honestly, there's so much about Ramanujan
Starting point is 00:06:19 that we don't understand. He left behind notebooks, but he didn't write down his methods. There are almost no words in his notebooks. So certainly there's something very mysterious about everything that is Ramanujan that we can't explain. So let's hear more from my interview with Jeremy Irons and Matt Brown from the film The Man Who Knew Infinity. Let's check it out. I had no idea what I was getting into. None. It's been a 12-year journey to get the film made. 12 years?
Starting point is 00:06:46 12 years. Why? I think that... What's wrong with what? What's wrong with Hollywood? No, it was just... I think it's the... In terms of astrophysics, 12 years is a blink of an eye. That's true.
Starting point is 00:06:57 Thank you. Thank you. It's very true. In a billion years, it's just the bat of an eyelash. No, I think Hollywood was a little intimidated by the subject matter, so that took a long time. So it was a book based on a book? It was a book. It was Robert Canigal wrote the most incredible biography, The Man Who Knew Infinity. I've read this book probably more than any other book I've ever read. It is a wonderful biography about the life of the math genius, Ramanujan, who was at the turn of the century, he had no formal education to speak of. He was discovering whole fields of mathematics and rediscovering fields. I think when he was
Starting point is 00:07:31 12 or 13, he thought he had discovered trigonometry. 12 or 13 years old. Yes. At 12 or 13 years old, he discovered trigonometry, the entire field. And then he went into school only to find out that it had already been discovered, and he was deeply disappointed. But that was sort of the story for him in life, that he was out there on his own. He was a real outlier, and eventually— And no one knew this because he was living in India. Yeah, he was in Madras, India, and he had actually flunked out of college twice because he was so obsessed with his mathematics, and so he really toiled in isolation for a really long time until he finally got a job
Starting point is 00:08:11 as a clerk at the Port Trust in Madras, and with the help of some people there that believed in him, they sent off three letters to three mathematicians at Trinity College, Cambridge, and two of them were immediately dismissed as hoaxes. And the third letter by G.H. Hardy, the character that Jeremy portrays, he wasn't sure at first, and then he recognized something in it, and it just got under his skin,
Starting point is 00:08:36 and he realized that this man was legitimate. So tonight we're going to get into the story of how you discover a math genius. What that takes, how that happened in that case. Is that something we can duplicate? Is it something we should set agencies loose to try to find? And also we're going to explore the beauty of math. And for many people, those two words don't belong in the same sentence.
Starting point is 00:09:03 Am I right? Maybe I'm the only one that thinks the other way. No. So you advised on this film. And you're a professional mathematician. Oh, yeah, I'm a professional. Yes, I believe you. Just confirming.
Starting point is 00:09:17 It would be weird to get an amateur mathematician. Be like, that equation's close enough. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We don't want the amateurs on the stage here. So could you tell us why Ramanujan's work is so important? And why it may still matter today? When was this? This was how long ago?
Starting point is 00:09:34 So Ramanujan went to Cambridge during World War I. This would be Cambridge, England. England. This is 100 years ago. And he went there at a time when well India was under English you know they were they were an English colony basically so culturally it was very difficult but why does Ramanujan matter now well he matters now because it's an amazing story he left behind three shabby notebooks that were still
Starting point is 00:09:59 studying today and we discover that the formulas that he wrote down are useful for studying things like string theory and quantum gravity subjects that didn't even exist when he was alive it was like he was an incomplete prophet and so um i've been studying him for 30 years and a lot of the best mathematicians have and it's crazy it's hard to believe it so so he's playing a role in many people's lives but including and perhaps especially yours. Oh, definitely. I first learned about Ramanujan, a two-time college dropout,
Starting point is 00:10:31 when I was in high school. I needed to know that it was okay to not be a straight-A student. So he was first a role model for me and an inspiration in that way. But it was only in graduate school. You started as a flunky? I dropped out of high school. You could have used Slash as a role model, too. I could have.
Starting point is 00:10:48 I almost did. Okay. So I did. I dropped out of high school, and I fought with my parents because I didn't want to get straight A's and great test scores, only to discover that my father, who is a mathematician, looks up to himself a two-time college dropout. My father, who is a mathematician, looks up to himself a two-time college dropout, and that was such welcome news. That was awesome to hear that you didn't have to be a straight-A student.
Starting point is 00:11:15 You didn't have to go through this inelastic system and be successful. I have a very similar story. My father was a mathematician, and I was a terrible student. You didn't have Ramanujan. That was probably what led me to comedy instead of math. Wait, wait. So impactful in your life was this awareness of Ramanujan that you wrote kind of a memoir? I did.
Starting point is 00:11:37 I did. What was that? So it's called My Search for Ramanujan. Oh, wait, wait, wait. Oh, oh, oh. Whoa. It just appeared oh, oh. Whoa. It just appeared on my table. Wait, my search for Ramanujan.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Yes, how I learned to count. Right, and that's actually a pun because for... Was he a count? That would be the easiest way for it to be a pun, but I'm sure you have another. It was actually about finding self-confidence. How to matter to. How to matter in your, exactly.
Starting point is 00:12:09 Yes. Right. So I really. I understand. So I wrote this book because as a professor at Emory, we got a lot of students that are totally stressed out about test scores and getting into a top graduate school when honestly, none of that really matters at the end of the day right and so i wanted to share my weaknesses when you know most of my students
Starting point is 00:12:30 wouldn't believe that any of what i wrote was actually true so from what i know of your work yeah uh you you work on a pair of equations called rogers ramanujan identities that's what is that some of those things oh these are actually the formulas that ramanujan identities? What is that? Some of those things. These are actually the formulas that Ramanujan wrote in the letter that he wrote to Hardy that Hardy recognized as pure genius. Believe it or not, when Hardy received that letter 100 years ago, he didn't understand those equations, and we only figured them out 100 years later,
Starting point is 00:13:00 just two years ago. What made him recognize it as genius as opposed to be like, this is all just cuckoo numbers. Right, because... Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's a very good point. Yeah, because if Hardy doesn't know what he's looking at,
Starting point is 00:13:11 and Hardy knows that he himself is an important, famous mathematician, why say this is brilliant and 100 years we'll figure it out rather than say this is crazy, it's just gibberish. So that's an amazing statement because most mathematicians at the time
Starting point is 00:13:24 dismissed Ramanujan as a crackpot. It actually took Hardy, who may have been the only man alive at that time, to recognize that there could have been some value in these crazy expressions. Sometimes it takes a genius to recognize a genius. That's what I tell people. So, all right. So how could G.H. Hardy look at something he himself doesn't understand yet assert that it's genius? So what Hardy said is the equation that Ramanujan wrote down was so far-fetched,
Starting point is 00:13:54 there had to be some truth in it because no one would have the imagination to equate two so very different objects. So his accounting is God touched his tongue and it came out. Or touched his pen, but it was his tongue, whatever. He wrote them down. He wrote like a math Bible. That's what his claim is. It's very funny that you say that. He's like an incomplete prophet in many ways.
Starting point is 00:14:16 We are still mining those notebooks. I'm not alone. Good. I wish I was alone. I wish I could have it all to myself. Yeah. But, no. So when you're a math genius, it works to have God put formulas on your tongue.
Starting point is 00:14:32 Or be very good at math. Or work for a monogen. Would you analogize him to Mozart? Actually, many people have. Many people have. Who at a young age just writes down whole symphonies and there it is. Exactly. And where are the erasures? Where are the practice notebooks?
Starting point is 00:14:49 No. Oh, I wish we knew. It's all there. Who knows where it is? But are you suggesting that the way Ramanujan did it is somehow more beautiful than the way others have solved their mathematical problems? Well, I mean. Are you value judging the No, I'm not. ...the beauty of their work.
Starting point is 00:15:06 Well, in all fairness, paper was very expensive in India at the time that Ramanujan lived. So he worked on a slate. And he worked in his head? And he worked mostly in his head, and he only recorded his conclusions in his notebooks. So we'll never know how he actually came about
Starting point is 00:15:22 all of his works. It's very different from what we do. We take classes, we read papers, and then there are open problems. But you value that as beauty and elegance. Oh, absolutely. I value both, honestly. You can be an important mathematician in many different ways. Even with paper?
Starting point is 00:15:40 Well, and computers now, yeah. No, I agree. Every profession needs its kings and its Carters, and there's nothing wrong with being a Carter. Most of us are Carters. What's a Carter? Someone who does the day labor. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:15:53 I was like, why are you bringing Jimmy Carter into this? So more on genius and the beauty of mathematics when StarTalk returns. We're back on StarTalk. And we're featuring my interview with actor Jeremy Irons and director Matt Brown for the movie The Man Who Knew Infinity. And I had to learn, how did Jeremy come to play the role of the famous British mathematician G.H. Hardy?
Starting point is 00:16:29 Let's check it out. Of course, you needed a Brit to play that role. Are you thinking this guy at the time, or what? Yeah, I mean... When does he come into the equation? He comes into the equation... You like the way I said that? When does he come into the equation?
Starting point is 00:16:42 Yeah. You're so technical. I mean, you know, it took a while to, I guess, to get the gumption to even ask somebody of Jeremy's stature to do this film. So you hope and dream that somebody would play this kind of a role. But Jeremy read the script, and then I think I gave him A Mathematician's Apology, which was a book written by G.H. Hardy, and I think that really resonated with him. G.H. Hardy is the mathematician in Cambridge who discovered. Yeah. It's a beautiful piece of writing. I mean, he was a very creative man beyond just mathematics.
Starting point is 00:17:23 He's a beautiful writer as well. So he really made mathematics something that I think he could talk about emotionally. I think people often think of mathematicians as sort of esoteric and out there and are intimidated by it. And these are real people. They're not all just madmen scribbling on a wall. Ken, how do you feel about math? Are you a madman scribbling on the wall? No, I'm not a madman scribbling.
Starting point is 00:17:47 That's just what a madman would say about his own. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, but think about it. Math is, admittedly, one of the most feared subjects in school. The phrase, I was never good at math, is probably uttered more than I was never good at any other subject in the curriculum.
Starting point is 00:18:03 And so, what gives there? Think of it this way. If you were an athlete, if you were training for a marathon, you wouldn't just expect to be fast at it. You'd have to practice, right? And so I think the reason people often say they're not good at math is because there's this belief that if you're good at math, you were just born with it.
Starting point is 00:18:19 And that's just like so untrue, right? So how do you convey to people that you just encounter in the street that math is something beautiful? Well, I don't actually do that for a living. I do that in my classes. Okay. See, okay, wait, wait, back up. No, I'm with you. All right.
Starting point is 00:18:36 So I, an astrophysicist, can grab anybody by the lapels in the street and tell them something completely beautiful about the universe. And I think they will agree with my sentiment on its beauty. That's right. So can you do that with math? Well, now that... Okay, so let me give you an example. Let me tell you something you probably didn't know. So every March we celebrate Pi Day.
Starting point is 00:18:58 Pi Day? March 14th. By the way, I'm wearing a Pi tie. Well, okay. So here's the thing. I'm still showing my tie. Okay. So while you're showing your tie, I'll tell you.
Starting point is 00:19:14 So there are people that even memorize like 100 digits of Pi or 1,000 digits of Pi. Yeah, my son did that once. It's kind of out of control. I think it's a little weird, honestly. Your son's a little weird. I said, that's weird. So, I think something is beautiful when you get patterns out of things that are like, you don't expect to see patterns out of like... Serial killers? So check this out.
Starting point is 00:19:37 What's their killing pattern? You're exactly right. That's the first thing they talk about in the police precinct. But with Beth... So getting back to Pi, so, Ramanujan was one of the people who could tame Pi, and believe it or not, he could tell you exactly what Pi was
Starting point is 00:19:50 by just writing down the odd numbers in order. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11. He gave a procedure to exactly calculating Pi. So you said he tamed Pi. Yeah, it's not true that Pi is 3.1415 and eventually nobody knows. If you're willing to be creative and rethink how you would write down that number, Ramanujan showed you a way, and it only took writing down.
Starting point is 00:20:13 So I think we've got an image of one of his expressions of pie. Let's check it out. There you go. Do you see all those squares? 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. Everyone knows what comes next. 11 followed by 13 by thirteen that's another way to write pi this is actually how I would write pi and it's beautiful
Starting point is 00:20:29 the three point the one one four one five mess that's that sequence of one squared three like an infinite fraction goes on forever but it there's no it's there's nothing hard about remembering that pattern. I can't wait to show that to somebody at a party. I think that's... Well, this is how I would write pie. Well, okay, well, we're not... Okay, wait. Have a drink.
Starting point is 00:20:53 No, I'm 100% serious. Okay, wait. So, in the movie, Ramanujan says that a mathematical formula is like a painting, but with colors you cannot see. That's right. He does say that. Oh.
Starting point is 00:21:10 I was hoping for a reaction from you. But rather than affirming, he says it. I think you can see the colors. So here's the thing. Why does he say that? He was a two-time college dropout. He was writing formulas that nobody understood around him. He might as well have been living in a desert.
Starting point is 00:21:29 Did he ever finish college the third time? No. He never finished college? Why are we even listening to this guy? Because we've got this great film. Yeah, yeah. I understand why. You can be quite good without college.
Starting point is 00:21:45 Right, so imagine this was early in the film where he's trying to describe what he does to his wife, and he's frustrated. Nobody he's ever met understood anything he ever wrote down, and he's just desperate. I'm writing down these formulas, and I hope to one day in my life meet someone that understands me. Okay, so these are the colors that we cannot see.
Starting point is 00:22:06 That's right. That most people cannot see. Right, and that's how he chooses to describe his work. Yet there's nonetheless an underlying beauty to be revealed later. For him, and he hopes that he can find someone that shares that. More on math, the language of the universe, when StarTalk returns. Welcome back to StarTalk from the Hall of the Universe at the American Museum of Natural History right here in New York City.
Starting point is 00:22:37 We're featuring my interview with actor Jeremy Irons and director Matt Brown from the film The Man Who Knew Infinity. And this film is about a self-taught math genius from India and an English math professor. And so I had to ask Jeremy about that special relationship that he had to create in that film. Let's check it out. We tend to sort of rather generalize black and white in relationships. But there's a myriad
Starting point is 00:23:08 of types of relationship. And this was, I think, a very heartfelt, you could say, father-son. I don't know. It wasn't really that. But it was the relationship of two men who had the same dreams, who had the same passions for their subject. And that brings you really close to somebody. He describes it as being the greatest, well, the only romantic period of his life. But I think that was romance. Yeah, it was a different idea of romantic. Sexual romance.
Starting point is 00:23:37 Yeah, of course. It was romance for sharing a dream and a time of his life when there was color and brilliance that later on in life he looks back on as having been the great period of his life. So Ken, it's an intellectual romance. It is. And that's kind of what makes it a more interesting story to tell.
Starting point is 00:23:58 Otherwise- That's really what the film is about. That's what it's doing and why you have someone the likes of Jeremy Irons to portray. It's great, isn't it? It's great. Just hearing him talk. I mean, come on. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:07 He seems very charming. I would like to be his friend. So what else can you tell us about Ramonagin's relationship with G.H. Hardy? Well, it's actually a very complicated relationship. And do we know about this relationship? We know a lot about it. Ramonagin's writings or is it from G.H. Hardy's writings? From both.
Starting point is 00:24:25 Both. Did they share a diary? No, they did not share a diary, but many of the letters between them still survive. So it's actually very interesting. At first, Ramanujan needed help from his mentor, Hardy. And at first, Hardy viewed himself as the great Cambridge professor who could offer that help.
Starting point is 00:24:42 But over time, Hardy began to recognize more than just Ramanujan's creativity, his sheer volume and the work that he could produce. So that relationship went from mentor-student to almost being like equal partners, teammates. And it's beautifully told in this film that human element is something you can't deny, right? It's not about...
Starting point is 00:25:08 This is the great transition that someone makes and it's not always easy and not everyone survives that transition. They can't... That's right. They can't make that change from learning to the one who then becomes the teacher. That's right, that's right.
Starting point is 00:25:22 But you turn out okay. Thank you very much. From the limited information we have. Gene, do comedians mentor other comedians? Very much so, yeah. Really? Yeah, because you- Is there someone you can claim that we can look to and say, hey, that's a Eugene prodigy?
Starting point is 00:25:38 Jerry Seinfeld is someone I helped out a lot. That's good. No, but there's a lot of comics that, like, Patton Oswalt helped me a lot, David Cross, Michael Showalter, and David Wayne, Michael Ian Black, a lot of people. And then there's comics that you bring on the road with you. So, yeah, that's very much the world of comedy is a lot of people sort of helping each other.
Starting point is 00:26:02 Well, Jeremy Irons plays math mentor in The Man Who Knew Infinity. And I just, I had to ask him, how did he prepare for that role? Let's find out. As an actor, when you play someone who is learned or is a scientist in ways that you are not that, what do you reach for to make it happen? You, you, you. But you got to read all the books that he read. I mean, how does this work? Well, I, I, we had Ken Ono. Yeah. And I said to Ken, cause great mathematician, I said to Ken... Oh, as, as a advisor...
Starting point is 00:26:31 That's right. See, this is a trend line. Yeah. You know, that didn't, there was a day that didn't happen. Where you, people make movies and they just make stuff up. I know. Ken was incredible. He, he flew, I sent out an email to five different mathematicians. They all wrote back in five minutes.
Starting point is 00:26:46 And Ken was on an airplane three days later, came to England and made sure every single piece of writing in the movie was right and accurate. And I think it gave these guys the feel. Because they know I'm going to be tweeting about the movie and I'm going to be calling them out if they make any... That's right. They vouch for it.
Starting point is 00:27:01 Yeah, you've got to... When you have to pretend to be able to do things that you know nothing about, you've got to have somebody saying, that is right. Believe me, that is right. What you're doing is right. That makes sense. Because you don't know. You can't tell.
Starting point is 00:27:14 I mean, I know if it's something emotional. I know whether it's true or not. I can judge that. So it was great to have Ken on this. And it gave me the confidence to say what I was saying, knowing that it was true and it was great to have Ken on this. And it gave me the confidence to say what I was saying, knowing that it was true and it was right. So, Ken, you got a good shout-out in that segment. I like that very much.
Starting point is 00:27:33 We've got the man himself in studio. So did you enjoy that experience? Oh, I loved it. You know, I have no experience in film, so all of it was new to me, and I have a much greater appreciation now for how hard it is to make a film, produce a film, and then promote a film. It's been really interesting. And by the way, both Dev Patel and Jeremy Irons, they were great students, so they know
Starting point is 00:28:00 a lot more than they pretend in these interviews. They really elevate all of this. So how do you coach someone who knows no math to sound fluent in math? We spent a lot of time in rehearsals talking about math, talking about. How to pronounce all the equations. Oh, my God. Did you have to teach them math? Meaning, did they actually learn a fair amount of math?
Starting point is 00:28:21 None. They didn't learn any real mathematics from me. Well, in some movies, a person needs to learn like a drummer they learned a drum I get that it's a movie Yeah, okay. Yeah, because that would be better than a guy doing this but you're like why is it still sound like music? But I guess with math... No, no, no. But they've got their phrasings of math expressions. It has to come out right.
Starting point is 00:28:52 We spent hours reworking about a dozen scenes just to get the language right, get the intonation of the sentences right. We even practiced at a chalkboard how to write formulas so that you would emphasize the right right strokes in equations most people probably won't notice this in the film but mathematicians who've seen the film they adore and embrace this but more more likely if you see a film where a person was not coached and how to write the equation obvious oh it's completely
Starting point is 00:29:20 how about uh matt damon and Will Hunting? How are his equations? Ooh. Okay, so this is not the first time. We've got a list of movies that have featured mathematicians specifically or scientists in general. So we've got A Beautiful Mind, it was a mathematician, and The Theory of Everything with Stephen Hawking and The Imitation Game. They're all great films. Yeah, they're all great films.
Starting point is 00:29:46 These are not just obscure indie films with nobody starring in them. That's right. There's a demand for these films. I think there's a demand that people thought there never could be because people kept saying, I don't like math. Right. And so... There's a great story behind everybody.
Starting point is 00:30:01 Everybody that's successful, there's a great story behind them. Well, more on math in the movies when StarTalk returns. We're back on StarTalk. We're here in the Hall of the Universe beneath the Hayden Sphere of the American Museum of Natural History. And we're featuring my interview with actor Jeremy Irons. And I asked him about his own experience with math and science in his years in school. I was just curious. Let's check it out. As far as science was concerned, I was completely hopeless. I mean, I remember in my biology, I was put in the front row. I hated being in the front row because, you know, you're in direct contact with the person who's teaching you.
Starting point is 00:30:48 And I would have an earphone in my hand. I had one of these first transistors, because I'm very ill, so transistors sort of came out when I was young, radio. And it was smallish, and I had the earphone, and I was listening to the tennis. In other words, you're not paying attention in class. Not at all, but I was doing to the tennis. In other words, you're not paying attention in class. Not at all. But I was doing very badly. But at prep school, I discovered a meteorite
Starting point is 00:31:10 as I was walking back from the games. Sadly, I didn't put it in my pocket. It was quite large. I was an honest man. I gave it to the headmaster. And it was sort of, I don't know where it went. It went to a museum or something. But I wish I'd kept it.
Starting point is 00:31:24 Incredible. It is, isn't it? Just so you can relive the moment when you discovered a meteorite in the flower bed of your prep school many moons ago, I have a meteorite that you can touch, but I'm not going to hand it to you because I don't know what you're going to do with it. I'll be very careful of it.
Starting point is 00:31:42 I'll be very respectful. This is 4. half billion years old. What? Whoa. Whoa. Now, what, why I'm amazed by this, is this a part of a meteorite? Yes. It is part, he's a clever man here.
Starting point is 00:31:57 You hired the right guy for your movie. This is part of a meteorite that was the size of that sphere, of the Hayden sphere, most of which vaporized on impact with Earth. Fragments got strewn around, and the crater that was made by the parent of this is still around, and you can find it in Arizona, and it's called Meteor Crater. Have you analyzed this? It's mostly iron, about 90% iron, 10% nickel, a common in the kind of meteorite that this is. Now here's something to think about.
Starting point is 00:32:28 If you, I want you to feel that. Imagine that just falling from the ceiling and hitting you in the head. Then your head is a pile of goo, right? Now imagine something the size of that sphere, and it's going to make a crater a mile across. Now imagine something the size of Mount Everest, moving at 10 miles per second, and you can judge how devastating that can be to our ecosystem. Did it affect the tilt?
Starting point is 00:32:52 No. On that level, it's like a gnat flying into the buttocks of an elephant. Right. Right. Sorry about that. A gnat flying into the buttocks of an elephant. We had some elephants in our movie. One walked off set, actually. Oh, really? Okay.
Starting point is 00:33:09 Probably not in the bottom. That's pretty good. So Jeremy did find his path in acting, but in fact, he did have some scientific aspirations growing up. He did. He did. He did. I believe you. Let's check it out. I wanted to be a veterinarian when I was growing up.
Starting point is 00:33:36 Large animal or small animal? Both, actually. But you have to study the sciences for that. You have to be good at that. And I showed no aptitude at all. You've even played an animal. I have. I play Scar. If he can play an animal in a Disney movie, he can play anything.
Starting point is 00:33:53 Pretty much. Pretty much. Cast that guy as a mathematician, I think. Absolutely. So, what that means... That was actually very upsetting, I want to just mention, before we skate over it, Scar, because, you know, they come when you're recording. I always thought they drew the pictures and then you added the words, but they don't.
Starting point is 00:34:13 You do the words and then they draw right. They draw to your words. And as you're trying out these lines, they're there with the artists, they're sketching, and there are people with videos and all of that. And then I saw the film. And, I mean, James Earl Jones. Remember him? Well, James Earl Jones plays Mufasa. Mufasa.
Starting point is 00:34:32 And as he walks, his muscles ripple and his mane... He strides. He strides. Oh, it's wonderful. And then on comes Scar. Have you seen such a mangy beast? I mean, bald spots in his mane, ribs's wonderful. And then on comes Scar. Have you seen such a mangy beast? I mean, bald spots in his mane, ribs sticking out the most. And, in fact, a scar.
Starting point is 00:34:52 That's right. And that was what they'd been copying when I was recording. And I thought, this is, I felt very upset. So I like to skate over Scar. Okay. Thank you very much. upset. So I like to skate out of the scarf. Okay.
Starting point is 00:35:07 Well, up next, we're going to take your questions about the universal language of mathematics when StarTalk returns. Welcome back to Star Talk, the American Museum of Natural History on Central Park West in New York City. We're talking about the beauty of math, and now it's time for the fan-favorite Cosmic Queries segment.
Starting point is 00:35:45 Yeah. And this is where we solicit questions from our social media. I have not seen them. No. But I brought back up in case I can't answer them. Yeah. So if I can't, I'll just say, I can't answer it. Let's go to Ken.
Starting point is 00:35:56 Yeah. And I might go to Ken anyway, even if I can't answer it, because he'll be able to answer it better. Because these are about math, and he's the mathematician. Okay. We got that, Ken? We're good. We're good. We good?
Starting point is 00:36:05 We're good. Just make sure I don't have to answer any questions. Okay. We got that, Ken? We're good, we're good. We good? We're good. Just make sure I don't have to answer any questions. Okay. All right. Gene, go for it. Let's do it. Kim Hannigan from Ukiah, California says, is there any cosmic significance to the Fibonacci sequence?
Starting point is 00:36:17 Ooh, good, good. Lovely question. Because I love me some Fibonacci. Oh, yeah. Yeah, who doesn't love Fibonacci? Right. Fibonacci numbers, each number is the sum of the two previous numbers. So you have 0, 1, 0.
Starting point is 00:36:30 1, 1, 2, 3. 1, 1, 2, 3, 5. And it's related to the topic of the day, Ramanujan. The Fibonacci sequence, if you take their consecutive ratios, they converge to a beautiful number called the golden ratio. What's the golden ratio? Well, it's 1 plus a square root of five over two. Duh.
Starting point is 00:36:49 But it's the dimensions of the Mona Lisa and the Parthenon and even the cross-section of the chambered nautilus are said to embody this particular number. Why is this important? And you get that from the Fibonacci series. You get that from the Fibonacci series. And the beautiful thing about this, that number is one of the special numbers that Ramanujan generalized in the letter he wrote to Hardy.
Starting point is 00:37:09 And in fact, that's like the very last line of Ramanujan's first letter to Hardy that started all of this. Wonderful question. That's a cosmic question. Nice. Yeah, I'll give you that. Gene, next question. Ricardo from Southwick, Massachusetts asks, Neil, is math invented or discovered? Ooh, Ken.
Starting point is 00:37:27 Are you going to answer any questions? Oh, that's an awesome question. As long as you're here, I'm handing it over to you. I can take it. This is my little baseball bat. Great question. So the formulas are there, right? Pure mathematics, things that you can prove already exist.
Starting point is 00:37:41 It's the job of the mathematicians to find it. Yeah, I agree. I will supplement that, if I may. Yeah. I would say that in the same way in quantum physics, we can have a particle that is simultaneously a wave, but we don't happen to have a word to describe them both at the same time, because we cannot wrap our head around that fact. I would say that to argue whether math is invented or discovered is simply a limitation of our language to find the actual word for what math actually is when we extract it from the universe.
Starting point is 00:38:17 So why force it to go into one of those words or the other? Why not invent a new word that applies to math and get on with it? Yes. Okay. Eugene, okay. into one of those words or the other. Why not invent a new word that applies to math and get on with it? Okay. Eugene, okay. Mark Esparza from Grand Prairie, Texas asks, would math be the first universal language that we could actually use to communicate with aliens before anything else?
Starting point is 00:38:39 I'm taking this. I'm taking it. Okay. Yes. Yeah. I would say yes. The problem is the symbols we use will not match their symbols, so we'd have to figure out what the configuration of the representations are.
Starting point is 00:38:54 Maybe we can map. It's a cryptographic problem that is not impossible. We've done it for things that are pretty hard. I would say it would be mathematics as well as certain fundamental truths about science. The structure of the periodic table of elements, the equations of motion and of gravity. We should see things that look something like that with the
Starting point is 00:39:14 aliens. And then they slaughter us. Ken, you with me on this? Actually, I'm totally with you on that. Okay, well, yeah. What I was going to say was just like the premise of the film Contact. Remember when they sent the message out? Yeah, in the movie it was...
Starting point is 00:39:30 The movie Contact was a sequence of prime numbers. Prime numbers. It was the universal language. Exactly. Before they beamed back the blueprints for the special machine. Except the sequence of numbers, the prime numbers were in base 10. That's right. Which is an interesting problem.
Starting point is 00:39:43 Yeah, yeah. Right, right. Yeah, would they have 10 fingers and then invent counting in base 10? Yeah. Okay, next. Go. Okay. Christopher from Miami, Florida asks, we typically assume that math is universal and unchanging. However, is there any conceivable time or place where
Starting point is 00:39:57 2 plus 2 equals 5, say within an alien psychology or logic? Can. No. Yeah. But what if the alien's super psychology or logic? Ken. No. Yeah. But what if the aliens super sad or crazy? So, Eugene, I agree with Ken. No.
Starting point is 00:40:13 Yeah. Next question. No, I do too. Okay. Corey from Mentor, Ohio. Why do you think the U.S. is falling behind other countries in math scores? Are we adding wrong? Ooh.
Starting point is 00:40:29 That last part is mine. Neil. Why do I think we're falling behind? In math scores. I have some ideas, but we're talking about test scores and statistics on this and where we fit relative to the rest of the world. And any time I need data such as that, I need Mona. Mona, can I get some data, please? Hi, Neil.
Starting point is 00:40:55 Everyone, this is Mona Chalabi, and she's a data journalist with The Guardian. Tonight, we want to hear some insights on the United States students' performance in mathematics relative to the world. Let's hear it. So Neil, we know that whether you grew up in England or India, culture can affect your performance in maths. And it looks like you're right, the US is falling behind. Chinese students top the list by a long ways. But there might be a reason why Chinese students just find this stuff easier. And it comes down to our number systems. So in the Chinese language, the words for numbers are super short. Seven is key, 100 is buy. And research shows that that can make it easier for Chinese students to memorize a string of numbers. And if you can learn to count at a younger age, that can make the
Starting point is 00:41:39 complex math once you get older a little bit easier too. math once you get older a little bit easier too. Whoa. Whoa. So does that, okay, so that explains why the Chinese do so well above average. Why does it explain why Americans do so badly below average? Well, so below the average, they're not that far below the average, but there are a couple of different possible reasons for that. One criticism of that massive international test is that the philosophies of learning really vary by country right so it's normally a multiple choice test and if u.s students are raised to have a different approach to multiple choice tests for example maybe it's part of american culture to just try and have a shot at every question instead of kind of working very slowly
Starting point is 00:42:19 and methodically as say german or dutch students. And that can affect the comparability of these different results in different countries, too. Whoa. So what you're saying is that this international test, because Americans aren't doing well on it, it's biased against Americans. I wouldn't go that far. I'll go that far. I said it. I said it.
Starting point is 00:42:48 So I'm fascinated by this. So this might tell us that in our school system, we might encourage counting as a very, we already do, but try to find another way to make it a fundamental part of what it is to go through childhood and toddlerhood. Yeah, absolutely. Obviously, emotion comes into it as well. You mentioned earlier on in the show that a lot of people say they hate math, they're just not good at it. And that can create a real mental block to learning as well. Well, thank you, Mona,
Starting point is 00:43:14 for bringing some data to the question. Well, coming up, Bill Nye the Science Guy explains how and why math is all around us when StarTalk returns. Welcome back to StarTalk. We're featuring my interview with actor Jeremy Irons and film director Matt Brown of the film The Man Who Knew Infinity. And in this last clip, I asked about just the reflections on the life story of the self-taught Indian genius, Ramanujan.
Starting point is 00:44:00 Do you have any reflections on the notion of being self-taught? Yeah, my instinct is that we get our education completely wrong in that regard. I mean, the more I see about education, I see people answering tick boxes, which to me is... Multiple choice. Multiple choice, which has nothing to do with it. to do with it. That what we should be trying to do with our kids, with everybody, is saying, what do you think? Okay, follow that. Where does that go to? Follow that. Just go off on your, just think it. Explore. We should encourage people to find their own thoughts. We have to, if we're to survive and really expand as a globe, we have to think with original thought.
Starting point is 00:44:49 And original thought, I think, must be encouraged. His character, actually, in the film, G.H. Hardy, he tried to eradicate the tripos exam system at Trinity. I think he was successful to a degree, which was, at that time, sort of a standardized test that they would do for about two years. And then they would decide who was the best mathematician. And it took a man like that to bring Ramanujan and recognize this outlier. And I think that's a really big point.
Starting point is 00:45:15 So these are correlated facts that he sees that this test is not serving the growth of human curiosity. Yeah, he was like, what a waste of time. And he can see somebody. He was a very forward-thinking person to be able to do that. And one of the, I mean, if I have a message of the movie, it's that, you know, the fact that these two could open up their hearts and be able to be open to be able to recognize outliers. Ken, how do we do that today?
Starting point is 00:45:40 Great question. How do we find the outlier? Well, science usually proceeds by the work of thousands, but every once in a while there's a fireball like Ramana Jhun who propels human thought forward. We are searching the world. Just like SETI is scanning the skies for extraterrestrial life, we're going to scan our cities, our villages for mathematical talent. Science is becoming increasingly important to our future, so we just always need to be searching.
Starting point is 00:46:08 Well, before we wrap this up, we must get an update from our man Bill Nye, the science guy, in a segment I like to call Nye Times in the City. Let's check him out. Mathematics is how we know nature. Just look around. Look at all the right angles. When you see a tree growing straight out of the ground or a
Starting point is 00:46:31 building built up from the street, you're looking at right angles. They're orthogonal to a plane tangential to the Earth's surface if the Earth were a perfect sphere. That's simple enough. Now here in Manhattan, the streets are laid out at first following bunny trails. But as human influence grew, we set up a street grid roughly parallel to the shores of the island. Where you live, the grid's probably north and south, east and west. It's a whole pack of right angles.
Starting point is 00:47:00 And now when I look at the famous Flatiron Building here in New York City, not only do I see the right angle of the building being built up from the street, but the length of each of the sides is described perfectly by the Pythagorean theorem. The sum of the squares of the two short sides equals the square of the long side. The hypotenuse. It's beautiful. It's the result of centuries of mathematical investigation by countless geniuses. Wait, countless? Does that mean that there's a finite number of geniuses that we just haven't counted yet?
Starting point is 00:47:35 Or is the number countless? Is there an infinite number of geniuses just waiting to emerge? Whoa. Ha. Oh. Either way, it all adds up. It's not magic, it's mathematic. So when I think of this show and all that we've discussed, what I reflect upon is every time I walk by a homeless person, a poor child who can only worry about where the next meal is coming from?
Starting point is 00:48:07 Could there be an Isaac Newton sitting there in front of me? Could there be a Marie Curie that lays undiscovered before us? And so my sadness is when I ask myself, how many people among the 7 billion on this earth are not participants in the moving frontier of scientific and mathematical discovery. What great riches of mind, body, and soul remain unrevealed to us because the entire population of the world is not a participant in this grand adventure? This has been StarTalk. I've been your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Starting point is 00:48:50 As always, I bid you to keep looking up.

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