Added: 2 years ago
From: MEImaths
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  • great vid you have here

  • LOL "keeping them safe in dangerous environments."

    I guess that helps you sleep better than "we make systems that help our forces kill people."

  • brilliant video

  • some really good stuff here

  • you have some great stuff here

  • Very enjoyable thank you

  • Comment removed

  • applied math are %1 of math,%99 of math is pure math...

  • These people did not do math degrees. They merely did further maths at college and school. This is quite misleading as its unlikely you'd be in pure engineering/science roles with a maths degree.

  • @SoulOfCrystals that is correct, you cannot become a systems engineer with just a math degree. but, math plays a vital role in all of these scientific fields. it is a universal language of the sciences. math does open the doors to possible graduate opportunity in another field like engineering. this video never said that this is what a math major does, it just shows what big roles math plays in society and the doors that studying math COULD open

  • None of the people in that video would need anything past second year uni maths, some could have done it as an elective but they wouldn't have done TONS of maths at university.

  • @fcdog555

    ... one and only one correct answer and alot of it is about memorising ways of doing certain questions.

    The hardest thing in life is about making decisions , in design/engineering you make decisions everyday , there are multiple ways of doing something, which is the most effective , but in maths there is no decision making, its just memorising ( yes you understand them, but still 50% of it is memorisation ) methods and formulas.

  • @fcdog555

    Maths is best subject by atleast like 20%

  • ahaha I thought this was meant to be encouraging maths in general

    but instead it encourages people to take further maths A level

  • I am somewhat disappointed that this was mostly about applied math and not actually pure math.

  • @aznlalaland In order to do applied math you need to understand pure D. I have seen many mathematicians that do research on its applications such as physics, finance, ect. Look at hedge-banks they are now applying rigorous mathematical metaphors into their calculations. In some cases the applied mathematician can't solve a complex problem because no mathematics exist to compute it so they invent a way to. In other words Pure mathematics sometimes comes from complex applications.

  • @aznlalaland pure maths is pretty useless lolol

  • @aznlalaland Well lets think, where can studying pure math really take you? Besides teaching there aren't too many actual positions.

  • I'm studying math so I can pwn humanity based lawyers.

  • @anythingnew most people dont know what pwn means lol.

  • Intelligence is not found in specific form of education... For example. Pharmaceuticals produce hundreds of medicins that are actually the same, but are formed into a box that makes us believe it really works. It's all NEUROGOLOIC!!!

    @aBangProduction - good point!

  • hahaha airbus engine fail. That's hilarious.

  • @aBangProduction loool i was thinking the same thing xD

  • Engineering all the way

  • amazing

  • so cool. awesome video

  • Brilliant :-) I am about to do my further maths exams. Mathematics is a wonderful language that very few can understand, I love being one of the few who do :-)

  • @SophiaKevin I think you mean,math is a language that few are willing to learn because its boring.However,if you are one of the few who can do complex math in their heads in seconds like Rudiger Gamm or Art Benjamin,then that i'd respect.

  • @Evilpawn2 Math is only boring to the ignorant:p

    Once you become a mathematician, the world is much different to you.

  • @Evilpawn2 What Arthur Benjamin does in his head is hardly 'complex maths', lol. Addition and multiplication were invented thousands of years ago. True, it's amazing he can do it in his head, but its hardly complicated mathematics. 'Complex mathematics' is when you are solving symultaneous differential equations on a sphere in 8 dimensions. Hell, even vector calc. is complex!

  • The brain is beautiful.

  • Very good maths video and motivating for students

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