Friday 14 October 2011

maths without paper

A wonderful reminder that most things people think about - even differential equations - aren't really very complicated:


Interactive Exploration of a Dynamical System from Bret Victor on Vimeo.

For more stuff like this check out the video maker's "kill math" project, which begins with the following stirring manifesto:

The power to understand and predict the quantities of the world should not be restricted to those with a freakish knack for manipulating abstract symbols. 
When most people speak of Math, what they have in mind is more its mechanism than its essence. This "Math" consists of assigning meaning to a set of symbols, blindly shuffling around these symbols according to arcane rules, and then interpreting a meaning from the shuffled result. The process is not unlike casting lots. 
This mechanism of math evolved for a reason: it was the most efficient means of modeling quantitative systems given the constraints of pencil and paper. Unfortunately, most people are not comfortable with bundling up meaning into abstract symbols and making them dance. Thus, the power of math beyond arithmetic is generally reserved for a clergy of scientists and engineers (many of whom struggle with symbolic abstractions more than they'll actually admit). 
We are no longer constrained by pencil and paper. The symbolic shuffle should no longer be taken for granted as the fundamental mechanism for understanding quantity and change. Math needs a new interface.


I found it on the computational legal studies blog, which sounds dry but is actually an awesome collection of visualisations.

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