podcast

Apr. 11th, 2019 08:57 pm
ursula: second-century Roman glass die (icosahedron)
[personal profile] ursula
My interview for the "My Favorite Theorem" podcast went live today! Here's Evelyn Lamb's blog post about the episode, mirror symmetry, and ramen, and here is the episode and a transcript.

(no subject)

Date: 2019-04-12 02:35 am (UTC)
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (d20 (credit: bag_fu on LJ))
From: [personal profile] yhlee
I'm about halfway through the transcript and will not pretend I understand more than one word in maybe a hundred since this is above my pay grade [1] and I was in high school the last time I read popular science on string theory, but it sounds very cool. Also, this is not a criticism of whoever produced the transcript because transcription is hard and it's much appreciated (I can't listen to the podcast right now because Joe is doing work at 9:30 p.m.), but "fifth route of unity" is the cutest math term typo ever. :)

[1] Probably not helping: I skipped complex analysis entirely, which was a big mistake, ditto the second semester of honors real analysis, because I hated real analysis so much. (I doubled up on abstract algebra instead.) Hilariously, years later, I have met another math major (except she got her bachelor's from MIT) who ALSO skipped complex analysis for the exact same reason.

*back to reading!~*

(no subject)

Date: 2019-04-12 10:07 pm (UTC)
yhlee: Alto clef and whole note (middle C). (Default)
From: [personal profile] yhlee
Everyone tells me that about complex analysis! I made a brief attempt to pick it up on my own with Tristan Needham's (non-rigorous) Visual Complex Analysis a few years back, but then my copy drowned and I gave up. :] I really wish I'd taken it in undergrad, but it's probably too late.

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