The Turing App

Beyond Proof: Stories in Mathematics

Science EN ↓ 17 episodes

Stories in Math is the podcast I wanted when I was younger and math felt like this sealed-off world I couldn’t get into. Math has always been a very human thing. It’s people arguing, guessing, getting stuck, getting lucky, and sometimes accidentally stepping into an idea so big it changes everything. This show is a collection of those stories, that bring out the journey and stories behind mathematical discoveries Stories in Math is for anyone who’s curious. If you love math, you’ll get the backstory you didn’t get in class. If you’ve always felt shut out by math, this is a way in.

Author

The Turing App

Category

Science

Podcast website

podcasters.spotify.com

Latest episode

Jul 10, 2026

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Episodes

What Really is the Fourier Transform? 10.07.2026

In this episode, we step back to 1807 into the grand hall of the Paris Institute, where Jean-Baptiste Joseph Fourier presented a controversial manuscript on the propagation of heat. He asserted an audacious claim that shocked the mathematical establishment: any complex or jagged distribution of reality could be perfectly decoded into a sum of simple, repeating sine and cosine waves. The legendary...

Which Country Has the World’s Best Mathematicians - Part 2 03.07.2026

In this second installment, we finalise our global data roadmap to definitively rank the top 5 mathematical empires on Earth. Moving past mid-sized diagnostic hubs, this countdown looks directly at the traditional heavyweights and structural superpowers that dominate human logic. We track the absolute bedrock of modern field theory, from the highly selective, proof-focused Grandes Écoles of France...

Which Country Has the World’s Best Mathematicians - Part 1 26.06.2026

In this episode, we take on a highly complex and deeply debated question: Which country has the world's best mathematicians? Rather than relying on simple national stereotypes or raw population sizes, we deploy a rigorous, five-part mathematical scoring framework. We evaluate nations across research excellence (30%), individual elite distinctions like the Fields Medal (15%), the teenage talent...

Story of Astronomy: 3000 Years of Discovery Part II 29.05.2026

The shift from ancient celestial mythology to modern astrophysics was driven by a relentless pursuit of mathematical precision and a willingness to dismantle long-held dogmas. While the Renaissance astronomers like Copernicus and Kepler successfully placed the sun at the center of the solar system, it was Isaac Newton who provided the universal laws of motion and gravitation that explained why the...

Story of Astronomy: 3000 Years of Discovery Part I 22.05.2026

The history of astronomy began not with complex telescopes, but with the fundamental human impulse to find order in the shifting patterns of the night sky. Ancient civilizations perceived the heavens as a divine clockwork, where the movements of the sun, moon, and stars served as essential guides for survival, agriculture, and navigation. From the megalithic structures of Stonehenge, which aligned...

A Math Legend and Prodigy Team Up to Develop an AI Mathematician 15.05.2026

Ken Ono, a titan of modern number theory, has spent his career at the pinnacle of academia, famously translating the work of the legendary self-taught genius Srinivasa Ramanujan into rigorous modern proofs. Ono’s research has uncovered the hidden, predictable structures governing integer partitions, a feat that earned him international acclaim and leadership roles within the American Mathematical...

Random Matrices that Govern Complex Connected Problems 08.05.2026

Science has long been obsessed with reductionism—the idea that we can understand any complex system by breaking it down into its smallest parts. However, a revolutionary concept called universality suggests that when enough individual parts interact, their specific microscopic rules "wash out," and the system enters a new regime governed by statistical laws. This phenomenon was famously observed b...

The Longitude War - Part II 01.05.2026

The Longitude Act of 1714 transformed a lethal maritime mystery into the world's most famous scientific contest, offering a life-changing £20,000 for a method that could determine a ship's position within thirty nautical miles. Parliament’s Board of Longitude, a panel of intellectual heavyweights including Isaac Newton and the Astronomer Royal, initially believed the solution lay in the "order of...

The Longitude War - Part I 24.04.2026

The ability to determine a ship's position at sea was the deadliest problem of the 18th century, a challenge that turned the simple question of "Where am I?" into a matter of national security. While sailors could easily find their latitude by measuring the height of the sun or the North Star, longitude remained a lethal mystery because it is inextricably bound to time. Since the Earth rotates 15...

How Randomness Rules our Lives 17.04.2026

The deep-seated human discomfort with randomness often leads us to "legislate" against it, much like the NFL did after a 2022 playoff game between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs was decided by a coin toss. This act of changing rules to reduce the power of chance reflects a fundamental need to believe that success is earned through skill rather than arbitrary forces. However, research int...

Evil Function That Broke Mathematics 10.04.2026

Calculus, the mathematics of change developed by Newton and Leibniz, has been the bedrock of modern science for centuries, powering everything from the Industrial Revolution to the development of semiconductors and AI. However, for two hundred years, it relied on the intuitive "smoothness" of functions—the belief that any continuous, unbroken curve would eventually resemble a straight line if you...

125-Year-Old Problem Unites Three Laws of Physics 03.04.2026

Physics has long grappled with a "split personality": the macroscopic world of smooth, continuous fluids and the microscopic reality of trillions of discrete, colliding particles. While the motion of a river can be described by elegant fluid equations, zooming in reveals a chaotic dance of molecules governed by the hard rules of mechanics. In 1900, the great mathematician David Hilbert challenged...

Gödel Incompleteness Theorems 27.03.2026

In the early 1900s, David Hilbert championed a "fortress of certainty," believing every mathematical truth could be derived from a perfect, finite set of axioms. This era of supreme optimism aimed to eliminate paradoxes—like Russell's Paradox—by reducing all mathematics to airtight, formal logic. The monumental Principia Mathematica even spent hundreds of pages using this rigorous approach just to...

Astonishing History of Math Symbols - Part 3 20.03.2026

In this installment, we witness the definitive birth of modern mathematical notation—a transformation that shifted algebra from a literal descriptive art into a sophisticated, symbolic language. The episode highlights the visionary work of François Viète , who first used letters to represent general quantities. You'll learn how this conceptual leap allowed mathematicians to study the structures of...

Astonishing History of Math Symbols - Part 2 13.03.2026

This episode explores the pivotal transition of algebra from a descriptive art bound by geometry to a powerful language of its own. We journey through the intellectual halls of Alexandria to examine Euclid’s Elements , seeing how early mathematical proofs were visual stories of physical space, and later follow Al-Khwarizmi as he standardized the "grammar" of calculation, effectively birt...

Astonishing History of Math Symbols - Part 1 06.03.2026

Uncover the fascinating history behind the mathematical symbols we use every day. From ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs to the revolutionary introduction of zero in India, this episode explores how a language of illustrations transformed the way we perceive and calculate the world around us. This episode traces the arduous journey of the Hindu-Arabic numeral system as it traveled from the House of Wis...

The Paradox of Infinity 02.03.2026

From ancient Greece to quantum physics, infinity has captivated the human mind. Why does this concept both fascinate and bewilder us? Join us on an odyssey through time as we unravel the paradoxes of Zeno, the mathematical revolutions of Newton and Leibniz, and the groundbreaking theories of Cantor and Mandelbrot. Marvel at how infinity manifests in nature, art, and even the cosmos. Is infinity a...

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