The Secrets of Mathematics
A podcast by Oxford University
Categories:
93 Episodes
-
Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures: An Introduction to Complex Numbers - Vicky Neale
Published: 1/22/2019 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Marcus du Sautoy - The Num8er My5teries
Published: 1/14/2019 -
Can we build AI with Emotional Intelligence? The 2018 Annual Charles Simonyi Lecture
Published: 11/9/2018 -
Roger Penrose in conversation with Hannah Fry - Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
Published: 11/6/2018 -
Oxford Mathematics and the Clay Mathematics Institute Public Lectures: Roger Penrose - Eschermatics
Published: 10/1/2018 -
John Ball in conversation with Alain Goriely
Published: 7/27/2018 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Richard James - Atomistically inspired origami
Published: 7/6/2018 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Numbers are Serious but they are also Fun - Michael Atiyah
Published: 5/23/2018 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Can Mathematics Understand the Brain?' - Alain Goriely
Published: 3/16/2018 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Euler’s pioneering equation: "the most beautiful theorem in mathematics" - Robin Wilson
Published: 3/7/2018 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Scaling the Maths of Life - Michael Bonsall
Published: 2/12/2018 -
Can Yule Solve My Problems? - Alex Bellos
Published: 12/13/2017 -
Oxford Mathematics London Public Lecture - Andrew Wiles
Published: 12/6/2017 -
The Seduction of Curves: The Lines of Beauty That Connect Mathematics, Art and The Nude - Allan McRobie
Published: 11/16/2017 -
Maths v Disease - Julia Gog
Published: 11/13/2017 -
Closing the Gap: the quest to understand prime numbers - Vicky Neale
Published: 10/24/2017 -
The Law of the Few - Sanjeev Goyal
Published: 7/4/2017 -
The Sound of Symmetry - Marcus du Sautoy
Published: 5/24/2017 -
The Butterfly Effect - What Does it Really Signify? - Tim Palmer
Published: 5/18/2017 -
Statistics: Why the Truth Matters - Tim Harford
Published: 2/14/2017
A series of talks and lectures from Oxford Mathematicians exploring the power and beauty of their subject. These talks would appeal to anyone interested in mathematics and its ever-growing range of applications from medicine to economics and beyond.