Why Haven't You Heard Of One Of History's Greatest Geniuses?

2,168,263
0
Published 2022-04-11
Invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks: masterworks.art/thoughty2

Purchase shares in great masterpieces from artists like Pablo Picasso, Banksy, Andy Warhol, and more. How Masterworks works: -Create your account with crypto wallet or traditional bank account -Pick major works of art to invest in or our new blue-chip art fund -Identify investment amount, there is no minimum investment -Hold shares in works by Picasso or trade them in our secondary marketplace See important Masterworks disclosures: mw-art.co/37WwvbD.


Get my new book Bread and Circuses: bit.ly/breadandcircusesbook
Thoughty2 Audiobook: geni.us/t2audio
Thoughty2 Book: geni.us/t2book
Support Me & Get Early Access: bit.ly/t2club
Thoughty2 Merchandise: bit.ly/t2merch

Follow Thoughty2
Facebook: facebook.com/thoughty2
Instagram: instagram.com/thoughty2
Website: thoughty2.com/

About Thoughty2
Thoughty2 (Arran) is a British YouTuber and gatekeeper of useless facts. Thoughty2 creates mind-blowing factual videos about science, tech, history, opinion and just about everything else.
#Thoughty2

Writing: Steven Rix
Editing: Jack Stevens

All Comments (21)
  • @CamMackay96
    As a university level mathematician myself, I have to emphasise just how insanely genius you need to be in order to not only understand high level pure maths but be making breakthroughs in the fields, all without any formal education or access to mathematical textbooks. Its almost more impressive than anyone else because he did everything solely based on his own brainpower.
  • A point to note here is that there were many theorems that were already discovered by the mathematicians of that time. But Ramanujan didn't get them from anywhere rather he discovered them all on his own which many different mathematicians discovered over a period of time.
  • S. Ramanujan was a mad genius. We, in India, were taught about him through textbooks and what nots. You'll always find his face in museums and science fairs. Man revolutionised maths.
  • @AA-fn9xz
    Ramanujan was most likely the most incredibly gifted mathematician to have ever lived. To be able to accomplish what he did with the resources and education that he had is nigh unfathomable.
  • @Styxswimmer
    I studied this man in high school (I'm 40 now). I taught myself algebra, calculus, matrix analysis, quantum mechanics and elementary particle physics, but the moment I started studying this man's work, I was completely stumped. I had no idea what I was looking at. Ramanujan was centuries ahead of his time.
  • I think you described his fantastic genius the right way: missing formal education he studied the thousands of formulas until they talked to him. His brain created a language for him and only him!
  • It's almost as if the Universe didn't want him to uncover all it's secrets, so he was taken from us at such an early age. I only imagine what people like him can discover/invent if they had a longer lifespan.
  • I feel his lack of formal education is the reason he was able to develop so fast and go so far. The lack of preconceptions of how it should work let him explore to find his own way.
  • @medipeace307
    The Mock Theta Functions which is used to explain Black Holes was proved 92 years after his death . Just goes to show how far ahead of his time he was .
  • @devamjani8041
    There is a large misconception regarding Ramanujan that he was not able to prove his own theorems, which is very far from truth ofcourse, he proved most of his own results and latter in his life when he was sick , he noted down only the final results in his notebook and did the proof work in his slate, for those who don't know what a slate is, it's a mini chalk board, with a mini chalk and a peace of cloth that works as a duster. Slates were really popular in India at that time and you can find them still today in rural parts of India, the reason he didn't note down the proofs but only the final results was because papers were really expensive at that time and so as to note down the most of his work in as little space as possible, he only noted down the final results in his paper notebook and did the proofs in his slate.
  • honestly, i am actually crying right now, imagining the pain he would have gone through, not because of his sickness but because of his unfulfilled works. kudos to the great Man
  • If this great man would have lived into his 60's or 70's he would of by a long shot been the greatest mathematician this world has ever seen, it was truly a natural born gift.
  • Hardy was a genius himself. One of the greatest of his generation. He helped Ramanujan throughout the years with great success. Their joint works are incredible. But even he himself admitted that there is a high possibility that Ramanujan could have become the greatest mathematician of his generation, and that his achievements during his short life already qualified him as one of the greatest. He also said that when all his works will be finally analyzed, his true genius will seem even greater than they did that day. He was right.
  • @arpitmandhotra
    Ramanujan's story is hand down one of the greatest such a profound genius it's quite remarkable what he did with little to no formal education
  • @thiruvetti
    Being from the same Indian state as Shri. Ramanujam, its not suprising that he is ignored here. In Tamilnadu(India) where Shri. Ramanujam was born, he has least respect or mention. Rarely does he get mentioned in schools. Infact the movie made about him rarely got any attention due to political hatred spread against his religious background.
  • Not much into mathematics but as a biologist and someone who enjoys learning. I have a lot of respect for this man and all who improve the mathematical field.
  • @escalocity
    Ramanujan frequently said, "An equation for me has no meaning, unless it represents a thought of God."-and he wasn't kidding. Like ancient Indian mathematicians, Ramanujan only noted the results and summaries of his works; no proof was worked out for the formulae he came up with. He straightaway credited his work to the divine providence of Mahalakshmi of Namakkal, a family goddess whom he looked to for inspiration. The mathematician said that he dreamed of the Goddess' male consort Narasimha, who is denoted by droplets of blood, after which, scrolls of complex mathematical work unfolded in front of his eyes.
  • @alexcampbell679
    "he may not of started out on top of humanities wall of knowledge, but that didn't matter S R just built his own". Beautifully put Thoughty2 beautifully put.
  • Amazing! Thanks for making this video and spreading the word about this great mathematician! By the way, I have my own 'hypothesis of everything' in physics (it's about planck length), but I work as a waiter... I've published in on facebook and other places, so that no one can claim in the future, that they came with it first. I used to study physics for 2 years at uni before, but neither me or my parents had money to help me, neither loans were available in my country, so I had to do full time low skilled job... Anyway, Ramanujan seems on the scale of someone like Euler or Fermat. There is also right now a genius mathematician Indian boy, professor Bari. He has his youtube channel too. There are videos of him at 6 years old, solving math challenges given him by a MIT math professor and explicitly explaining all mental steps he goes to to solve the problems. And they're definitely not simple for most people of any age, let alone a 6 years old child...
  • Sneak a peak at the best thing you'll hear all week with the Bojo Bros Podcast! https://open.spotify.com/episode/4LldMwTEPUSGUXCp8YEPZz?si=k7H5zE8ASFi8S34k3AvUsw&utm_source=copy-link