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In Our Time: Science

Mathematics' Unintended Consequences

In Our Time: Science

BBC

History

4.51.4K Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2010

⏱️ 42 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Melvyn Bragg and guests John Barrow, Colva Roney-Dougal and Marcus du Sautoy explore the unintended consequences of mathematical discoveries, from the computer to online encryption, to alternating current and predicting the path of asteroids.In his book The Mathematician's Apology (1941), the Cambridge mathematician GH Hardy expressed his reverence for pure maths, and celebrated its uselessness in the real world. Yet one of the branches of pure mathematics in which Hardy excelled was number theory, and it was this field which played a major role in the work of his younger colleague, Alan Turing, as he worked first to crack Nazi codes at Bletchley Park and then on one of the first computers.Melvyn Bragg and guests explore the many surprising and completely unintended uses to which mathematical discoveries have been put. These include:The cubic equations which led, after 400 years, to the development of alternating current - and the electric chair.The centuries-old work on games of chance which eventually contributed to the birth of population statistics.The discovery of non-Euclidean geometry, which crucially provided an 'off-the-shelf' solution which helped Albert Einstein forge his theory of relativity.The 17th-century theorem which became the basis for credit card encryption.In the light of these stories, Melvyn and his guests discuss how and why pure mathematics has had such a range of unintended consequences.John Barrow is Professor of Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge and Professor of Geometry at Gresham College, London; Colva Roney-Dougal is Lecturer in Pure Mathematics at the University of St Andrews; Marcus du Sautoy is Charles Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Thanks for downloading the In Our Time podcast. For more details about In Our Time and for our terms of use, please go to BBC.co.uk.

0:09.0

I hope you enjoy the program.

0:11.0

Hello, I'm interested in mathematics, wrote the Cambridge mathematician G.H. Hardy only

0:16.2

as a creative art. Hardy revered pure maths and scorned his application to the real

0:21.0

world. In great mathematics he wrote in the same book published

0:24.0

in 1941 there is a very high degree of unexpectedness. Yet what hardly

0:29.1

himself never expected was that in a decade since he wrote those words, pure mathematics would yield such an array of unintended consequences.

0:37.0

Not least through the wartime work of his Cambridge colleague unenturing, whose experiments with prime numbers led first to his crucial role in beating

0:44.0

Hitler's codes and then to the birth of the computer. Yet Hardy shouldn't have

0:48.2

been surprised. Pure maths was making itself useful long before the struggle

0:51.9

against the Nazis. In 1801

0:53.8

centuries-old work on probability helped predict the path of an asteroid then led

0:58.2

on to the birth of population statistics and the discovery of non-Nucidian geometry meanwhile was vital to

1:04.4

Einstein's theory of relativity.

1:06.7

To explore mathematics how it generates all these unintended consequences, I'm joined

1:12.0

by Colba Rone Dougal, lecturer in

1:14.1

pure mathematics at the University of St Andrews, John Barrow, Professor of

1:18.4

Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge and Professor of Geometry

1:21.6

at Gresham College London, and Marcus Josotoy,

1:24.0

Charles Simoney Professor for the Public Understanding

1:26.8

of Science and Professor of Mathematics

1:28.6

at the University of Oxford.

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