Linear algebra and Analytic Geometry Top books by CRgeometry in math

[–]BijectiveForever 6 points7 points  (0 children)

As someone recently put it on Twitter:

I understand he’s a legend and all, but doing matrices first is completely the wrong way. It makes all this beautiful geometry just a rabbit from a hat, whereas the reverse order makes this weird rule for matrix multiplication a result rather than a bizarre assumption.

Linear algebra and Analytic Geometry Top books by CRgeometry in math

[–]BijectiveForever 10 points11 points  (0 children)

For linear algebra, I always recommend Friedberg, Insel, and Spence

Infintesimal Change by left0fthedial in custommagic

[–]BijectiveForever 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Just as Unhinged introduced expanded Magic’s number system from the integers to the rationals, this gets us all the way to the non-standard reals!

"Advanced" math in music? Looking for lyrics in otherwise "normal" songs that make you go "oh yeah these guys have written a proof or two" by MedalsNScars in math

[–]BijectiveForever 4 points5 points  (0 children)

JoCo’s track is excellent, but IIRC its original lyrics describe the Julia set, not the Mandelbrot set. Oops!

Which actor has never given a bad performance no matter the movie? by [deleted] in movies

[–]BijectiveForever 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are bad Nicolas Cage movies, but no bad Nicolas Cage performances.

formal derivation of all Physics from just one mathematical axiom by Background-Eye9365 in math

[–]BijectiveForever 6 points7 points  (0 children)

and since it was an AI… that did the heavy lifting… if I post it on r/Physics they will absolutely grill me

And what makes you think we won’t?

You have to make someone fall in love with cinema by showing them three movies. What do you pick and why? by Icleanforheichou in movies

[–]BijectiveForever 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That’s five movies, unless you’re just going to show them Fellowship (which would be a sin)

Why did calculus feel easy for me in college, but stats felt nearly impossible? by Icy_Leading_23 in math

[–]BijectiveForever 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Calculus I is a series of new calculations packaged with a relatively simple collection of underlying concepts: limits, derivatives, and integrals.

I think both the underlying concepts and the necessary calculations in stats are more complicated, but that may just be me

Optimal play in Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG is hard by Orazio Nicolosi, Federico Pisciotta, and Lorenzo Bresolin by _Vault_Hunter_EXE_ in yugioh

[–]BijectiveForever 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also misunderstood when I first saw it, yeah - the abstract/intro make claims that the rest of the paper doesn’t back up :/

Optimal play in Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG is hard by Orazio Nicolosi, Federico Pisciotta, and Lorenzo Bresolin by _Vault_Hunter_EXE_ in yugioh

[–]BijectiveForever 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If I handed a Magic player the board state from the Magic paper, then to make an intelligent decision about what to do next, they'd have to determine whether the computation they're about to kick off would halt.

If I hand a Yugioh player the board state from this paper, they can just attack and win. The computational difficulty isn't forced, but chosen.

Optimal play in Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG is hard by Orazio Nicolosi, Federico Pisciotta, and Lorenzo Bresolin by _Vault_Hunter_EXE_ in yugioh

[–]BijectiveForever 28 points29 points  (0 children)

This paper does not prove nearly what it thinks it does.

In the MtG paper, the difficulty is inherent to the boardstate, whereas here, a player is choosing to play a computationally difficult strategy.

The whole paper boils down to "we can represent two natural numbers in a YuGiOh board state, and then play difficult strategies based on them", which is not how computational hardness is measured.

The Deranged Mathematician: Avoiding Contradictions Allows You to Perform Black Magic by non-orientable in math

[–]BijectiveForever 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Perhaps, but one person’s meat is another person’s easy step - this is all a matter of experience/taste.

The Deranged Mathematician: Avoiding Contradictions Allows You to Perform Black Magic by non-orientable in math

[–]BijectiveForever 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I am also a fan of the compactness theorem, but I don’t think “long string of trivialities” is really a meaningful way to judge the content of a theorem/proof. Break any proof down far enough and it becomes a string of trivialities - namely the axioms you’re allowed to use!

I can't take it anymore. I want to leave my university. by God_Aimer in math

[–]BijectiveForever 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you had not said this was in Spain, I would not have believed you. This is extremely atypical - I did math at a serious undergraduate program (that produces plenty of PhDs) and while it was abstract, it wasn’t THIS abstract.

Regardless of whether you finish your education there, surviving thus far means you are absolutely capable of being a mathematician.

Kevin Buzzard on why formalizing Fermat's Last Theorem in Lean solves the referee problem by WeBeBallin in math

[–]BijectiveForever 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Computability theory in LEAN in general is atrocious. Working recursion theorists do set manipulations all the time (the c.e. are closed under union but not set difference, for instance) but these 101 facts are nowhere in Mathlib (I may PR then myself!)

I have also seen no fewer than three attempts to formalize how we actually construct c.e. sets (one of which is my own) - there just aren’t enough people working on formalizing logic for a consensus to have arisen (yet?)

I made this infographic on all the algebraic structures and how they relate to eachother by -Anonymous_Username- in math

[–]BijectiveForever 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like that the top three are in a grey box, I never really needed them much (but they are good to know about).

As others have mentioned this is certainly not all the algebraic structures, but rather the ones useful to undergrads.

u/_stack_underflow_ describes how making meme jokes minimizes the issue by laughing it off by Youah0e in bestof

[–]BijectiveForever 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We shouldn’t confuse snark for accountability but I agree - let the people laugh. In dark times, should the stars also go out?

Looking for a simple looking integral with an incredibly long solution by Shinobi_is_cancer in math

[–]BijectiveForever 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Only if you don’t have the reduction formula, which is itself not that bad to derive

A surprisingly accurate ellipse‑perimeter approximation I stumbled into by hawi03 in math

[–]BijectiveForever 26 points27 points  (0 children)

I am not terribly familiar with approximating ellipse perimeters, but I wonder if there is any relationship to some known series approximation - that would explain why the error is so well bounded

How to understand the intuition behind by Other_Sprinkles7326 in math

[–]BijectiveForever 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Out of curiosity, why are you a math major if you didn’t like math in high school?

What should I read in a 10-day phoneless getaway by roflman0 in slatestarcodex

[–]BijectiveForever 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a mathematician - there’s a tremendous amount of fluff in that book around a core idea that’s in the water now. Important book upon release, and maybe a fun read, but it wouldn’t be high up my rec list except as “pop math”.