-
You can imagine: You're in a bar,
or, you know, a disco,
-
like that, and you start talking
to a girl, and after a while
-
this comes up in the conversation:
"and what do you do?"
-
And as you think your job is interesting
you say: "I'm a mathematician." (Laughter)
-
33.51 % of girls (Laughter)
-
in that moment pretend to get
an urgent call and leave. (Laughter)
-
And 64.69 % of girls desperately try
to change the topic and leave. (Laughter)
-
There's a 0.8 % made up by your cousin,
your girlfriend and your mother (Laughter)
-
that knows you work in something weird but
don't remember what (Laughter)
-
and there's a 1 % that
follows the conversation.
-
When that conversation
follows, invariably
-
in some moment, one of these
two phrases shows up:
-
A) "I was terrible at math,
but it wasn't my fault,
-
it's that the teacher
was horrendous." (Laughter)
-
And B) "But that math thing,
what is it for?" (Laughter)
-
I'll deal with case B.
(Laughter)
-
When someone asks you what
math is for,
-
they're not asking you about the
applications of mathematical sciences.
-
They're asking you:
"And why did I have to study
-
that bullshit I never used
again in my life?" (Laughter)
-
That's what they're asking you really.
-
Given this, when they ask
a mathematician
-
what math is for, us
mathematicians split in two groups.
-
A 54.51 % of mathematicians
assumes an attacking posture,
-
and a 44.77 % of mathematicians
assumes a defensive posture.
-
There's a strange 0.8 %,
among which I include myself.
-
Who are the ones who attack?
-
The attacking ones are mathematicians
that tell you the question
-
makes no sense, because mathematics
have their own sense by themselves,
-
they're a beautiful edification with
its own logic built by itself
-
and that there's no use in one always
looking after the possible applications.
-
What's the use of poetry?
What's the use of love?
-
What's the use of life itself?
What kind of question is that? (Laughter)
-
Hardy, for example, is an
exponent of this attack.
-
And those who stand in
defense tell you that
-
even if you can't notice, dear,
math is behind everything. (Laughter)
-
They always name bridges
and computers, always.
-
If you don't know math,
your bridge falls off. (Laughter)
-
In reality computers
are all about math.
-
Now these guys always happen
to tell you that behind
-
information security and credit
cards are prime numbers.
-
These are the answers your math teacher
will give you if you ask him.
-
Those are the defensive ones.
-
Okay, but, who's right then?
-
Those who say math doesn't need
to be useful at all,
-
or those who say that it's really
behind everything?
-
In reality both are right.
-
But I told you I'm of that strange 0.8 %
that says something else, right?
-
So, go on, ask me
what math is for.
-
(Audience asks the question)
-
Okay! A 76.34 % of people
have asked, there's a 23.41 %
-
that shut up, and a 0.8 % that
I don't know what those guys are doing.
-
Well, dear 76.31 %, it's true
that math can be
-
useless, it's true that it's
a beautiful edification,
-
a logical one, one probably one of
the greatest collective efforts
-
the human being has ever made
along history.
-
But it's also true that there where
scientists, where technicians,
-
are looking for mathematical theories,
models that allow them to advance,
-
there they are, in the edification
of math, which permeate everything.
-
It's true that we have to go
somewhat deeper,
-
we're going to see what's
behind science.
-
Science works by intuition,
by creativity, and math
-
dominate intuition
and tame creativity.
-
Almost everyone who hasn't heard it before
is surprised by the fact that if one took
-
a sheet of paper 0.1 mm thick,
one of those we use normally,
-
big enough, and that I
could fold 50 times,
-
The thickness of that pile would take up
the distance from the Earth to the Sun.
-
Your intuition tells you: "Impossible."
Do the math and you'll see it's right.
-
That's what math is for.
-
It true that science, all science,
not only has a purpose
-
because it makes us understand better
the beautiful would we're in.
-
And because it does, it helps us
avoid the traps
-
of this painful world
we're in.
-
There are sciences that grasp
this very application.
-
Oncological science, for example.
-
And there are others we look
from afar, with some jealousy sometimes,
-
but knowing we are what supports them.
-
All the basic sciences
are the support of them,
-
and among these is math.
-
All that makes science be science
is the rigor of math.
-
And that rigor belongs to it
because its results are eternal.
-
Probably you said before,
or you were told sometime,
-
that diamonds are
forever, right?
-
It depends on what one
understands by forever!
-
A theorem, that really
is forever! (Laughter)
-
The Pythagorean theorem,
that is still true
-
even if Pythagoras is dead,
I'm telling you. (Laughter)
-
Even if the world collapsed the
Pythagorean theorem would still be true.
-
Wherever any two sides and a
good hypotenuse get together (Laughter)
-
the Pythagorean theorem works
to the max. (Applause)
-
Well, us mathematicians
devote ourselves to making theorems.
-
Eternal truths. But it isn't always
easy to know what is an
-
eternal truth, a theorem, and
what is a mere conjecture.
-
You need a demonstration.
-
For example: imagine you have
a big, enormous, infinite field.
-
I want to cover it with equal pieces,
without leaving any gaps.
-
I could use squares, right?
-
I could use triangles.
Not circles, those leave little gaps.
-
Which is the best piece I can use?
-
The one that to cover the same surface
has the smallest border.
-
Pappus of Alexandria, in the year 300
said the best was to use hexagons,
-
like bees do.
But he didn't demonstrate it!
-
The guy said "hexagons, great,
come on, hexagons, let's go with it!"
-
He didn't demonstrate it, he stayed
in a conjecture, he said "Hexagons!"
-
And the world, as you know, split into
pappists and anti-pappists,
-
until 1700 years later,
1700 years later,
-
in 1999 Thomas Hales
demonstrated that Pappus
-
and the bees were right,
the best was to use hexagons.
-
And that became a theorem,
the honeycomb theory,
-
that will be true forever
forever and ever,
-
for longer than any diamond
you may have. (Laughter)
-
But what happens if we go to 3 dimensions?
-
If I want to fill the space, with equal
pieces, without leaving any gaps,
-
I can use cubes, right?
-
Not spheres, those leave little gaps.
(Laughter)
-
What is the best piece
I can use?
-
Lord Kelvin, the one of the Kelvin degrees
and all said, he said
-
that the best was to use a
truncated octahedron (Laughter)
-
that as you all know (Laughter)
is this thing over here! (Applause)
-
Come on! Who doesn't have a truncated
octahedron at home? (Laughter)
-
Even if it's plastic. Kid, bring
the truncated octahedron, we have guests.
-
Everybody has one! (Laughter)
But Kelvin didn't demonstrate it.
-
He stayed in a conjecture,
Kelvin's conjecture.
-
The world, as you know, split between
kelvinists and anti-kelvinists (Laughter)
-
until a hundred-and-something years later,
a hundred-and-something years later,
-
someone found a better structure.
-
Weaire and Phelan, Weaire and Phelan
found this little thing over here,
-
(Laughter) this structure they put the
imaginative name of
-
the Weaire-Phelan structure. (Laughter)
-
It seems like a strange thing
but it isn't that strange,
-
it's also present in nature.
-
It's very curious that this structure,
because of its geometric properties,
-
was used to build
the swimming building
-
in the Beijing Olympic Games.
-
There Michael Phelps won
8 gold medals, and became
-
the best swimmer of all times.
-
Well, of all times
until someone better comes along, no?
-
As it happens to the
Weaire-Phelan structure,
-
it's the best until something better
shows up.
-
But be careful, because this one
really has the opportunity,
-
that if a hundred-and-something years
pass, even if it's in 1700 years,
-
someone demonstrates that this
is the best piece possible.
-
And then it will be a theorem,
a truth forever, forever and ever.
-
For longer than any diamond.
-
So, well, if you want to tell someone
you'll love them forever (Laughter)
-
you can give them a diamond,
but if you want to tell them
-
that you'll love them forever and ever,
give them a theorem! (Laughter)
-
However, you'll have to demonstrate,
-
that your love doesn't stay a conjecture.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you.