Recent Episodes
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Mathemalchemy: a mathematical and artistic adventure
Jul 19, 2021 – 44:39 -
I is a Strange Loop - written and performed by Marcus du Sautoy and Victoria Gould
Jul 19, 2021 – 02:04:27 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture. Jon Keating: From one extreme to another: the statistics of extreme events
Apr 28, 2021 – 59:02 -
Spacetime Singularities - Roger Penrose, Dennis Lehmkuhl and Melvyn Bragg
Apr 28, 2021 – 02:14:14 -
Ideas for a Complex World - Anna Seigal
Dec 7, 2020 – 48:16 -
Mathematics Public Lecture: How Learning Ten Equations Can Improve Your Life - David Sumpter
Nov 2, 2020 – 54:08 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: How to Make the World Add Up - Tim Harford
Nov 2, 2020 – 52:35 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Can maths tell us how to win at Fantasy Football? - Joshua Bull
Nov 2, 2020 – 59:04 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Squirrels, Turing and Excitability - Mathematical Modelling in Biology, Ecology and Medicine
Jun 8, 2020 – 01:05:51 -
Oxford Mathematics 2nd Year Student Lecture - Number Theory: Primitive Roots
May 27, 2020 – 19:54 -
Oxford Mathematics 2nd Year Student Lecture - Graph Theory: Shortest Paths
May 27, 2020 – 46:27 -
Smartphones v COVID 19
May 19, 2020 – 53:57 -
How do mathematicians model infectious disease outbreaks?
Apr 15, 2020 – 01:04:18 -
Oxford Mathematics 2nd Year Student Lecture - Differential Equations 2
Apr 9, 2020 – 47:52 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Alan Champneys - Why pedestrian bridges wobble: Synchronisation and the wisdom of the crowd
Mar 31, 2020 – 59:37 -
Oxford Mathematics 3rd Year Student Lecture - Mathematical Models of Financial Derivatives
Mar 2, 2020 – 49:13 -
Oxford Mathematics 1st Year Student Lecture - Linear Algebra II
Mar 2, 2020 – 53:54 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Ian Griffiths - Cheerios, iPhones and Dysons: going backwards in time with fluid mechanics
Feb 26, 2020 – 37:59 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Henry Segerman - Artistic Mathematics: truth and beauty
Nov 2, 2020 – 48:43 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Carlo Rovelli - Spin networks: the quantum structure of spacetime from Penrose's intuition to Loop Quantum Gravity
Jan 16, 2020 – 44:49 -
Oxford Mathematics Christmas Public Lecture: Chris Budd - Why does Rudolf have a shiny nose?
Dec 19, 2019 – 55:31 -
Jon Chapman - Waves and resonance: from musical instruments to vacuum cleaners, via metamaterials and invisibility cloaks
Dec 2, 2019 – 44:08 -
Oxford Mathematics 2nd Year Student Lecture - Quantum Theory
Dec 2, 2019 – 52:53 -
Oxford Mathematics London Public Lecture: Timothy Gowers - Productive generalization: one reason we will never run out of interesting mathematical questions
Nov 27, 2019 – 01:28:31 -
Oxford Mathematics Newcastle Public Lecture: Vicky Neale - in Maths
Nov 27, 2019 – 44:53 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: David Sumpter - Soccermatics: could a Premier League team one day be managed by a mathematician?
Nov 4, 2019 – 43:04 -
Oxford Mathematics 1st year Student Lecture - Introductory Calculus
Nov 4, 2019 – 58:02 -
Oxford Mathematics 2nd Year Student Lecture - Differential Equations 1
Nov 4, 2019 – 51:07 -
Oxford Mathematics Open Days Part 2. Pure Mathematics at Oxford
Jul 10, 2019 – 27:41 -
Oxford Mathematics Open Days Part 1. Introduction to Mathematics
Jul 10, 2019 – 27:51 -
Oxford Mathematics Open Days Part 3. Applied Mathematics at Oxford
Jul 10, 2019 – 28:42 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: John Bush - Walking on water: from biolocomotion to quantum foundations
Jun 28, 2019 – 53:08 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Marcus du Sautoy - The Creativity Code: how AI is learning to write, paint and think
Jun 3, 2019 – 01:02:11 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Graham Farmelo - The Universe Speaks in Numbers
May 21, 2019 – 01:03:30 -
Oxford Mathematics 1st Year Student Lecture: Analysis III - Integration
May 9, 2019 – 54:28 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Marc Lackenby - Knotty Problems
Mar 20, 2019 – 51:31 -
Oxford Mathematics First Year Student Tutorial on Dynamics
Feb 22, 2019 – 01:04:35 -
Oxford Mathematics 1st Year Undergraduate Lecture James Sparks - Dynamics
Feb 15, 2019 – 50:58 -
James Maynard - Prime Time: How simple questions about prime numbers affect us all
Feb 15, 2019 – 45:17 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Hooke Lecture - Michael Berry - Chasing the dragon: tidal bores in the UK and elsewhere
Jan 28, 2019 – 52:22 -
Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures: An Introduction to Complex Numbers - Vicky Neale
Jan 22, 2019 – 50:04 -
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures: Marcus du Sautoy - The Num8er My5teries
Jan 14, 2019 – 58:48 -
Can we build AI with Emotional Intelligence? The 2018 Annual Charles Simonyi Lecture
Nov 9, 2018 – 54:06 -
Closing the Gap: the quest to understand prime numbers - Vicky Neale
Oct 24, 2017 – 44:42 -
Roger Penrose in conversation with Hannah Fry - Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
Nov 6, 2018 – 01:21:07 -
The Law of the Few - Sanjeev Goyal
Jul 4, 2017 – 59:09 -
Oxford Mathematics and the Clay Mathematics Institute Public Lectures: Roger Penrose - Eschermatics
Oct 1, 2018 – 01:10:08 -
The Sound of Symmetry - Marcus du Sautoy
May 24, 2017 – 46:20 -
John Ball in conversation with Alain Goriely
Jul 27, 2018 – 01:08:56 -
The Butterfly Effect - What Does it Really Signify? - Tim Palmer
May 18, 2017 – 01:01:10
Recent Reviews
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Crowbar ManTerrible audioHere’s another podcast from Oxford with terrible audio. If a legendary university wants to show that they’re up with the times by joining the podcast game, they need to understand that a podcast must have the audio quality of a radio show. Listen to NPR, or even MIT or Yale lectures and you’ll know what I mean. You can’t just have a lecture, and a guy sitting in the back of the room with a cheap recording device and call it a podcast. What Oxford is doing is 25 year old technology. Mathematics is hard enough. I can’t strain to try to understand what the lecturer is saying while trying to drive.
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Sinai.CoonsThe Secrets of MathematicsThe courses are all quality lectures. As someone who has limited access to the internet, I’m glad that these courses are available via podcasts. Thank you for sharing. “Reductio ad absurdum, which Euclid loved so much, is one of a mathematician's finest weapons. It is a far finer gambit than any chess play: a chess player may offer the sacrifice of a pawn or even a piece, but a mathematician offers the game.” — Godfrey Harold Hardy. “But we should rather follow the wisdom of nature, which, as it takes very great care not to have produced anything superfluous or useless, often prefers to endow one thing with many effects. And though all these things are difficult, almost inconceivable, and quite contrary to the opinion of the multitude, nevertheless in what follows we will with God’s help make them clearer than day—at least for those who are not ignorant of the art of mathematics.” On the Shoulders of Giants 🌌🔭📚
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DangGangImperialAudio problemsAudio cutting in and out in various episodes..?
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