The phrase "Mathematics of Love" is an odd one since many thing of these two things as opposites. Mathematics is a clear defined way of thinking and is predictable, whereas love is something unexpected and has no clear way of definition. Although love may seem to be a hugely deep and an erratic subject, it can be defined using math and that is precisely what the "Mathematics of Love" is about.
The "Mathematics of Love" is about the mathematical probability of finding a mate. She first introduces a paper written by Peter Backus about him finding a mate. After all his circumstances it ends up being a 1 in 285,000 chance but that is a pessimistic view. She uses mathematically proven techniques to increase your chance of finding love. Her first rule pertains to online dating and how your chance of being contacted is not just on attractiveness. Those who have features that are more different have a much better of better chance of finding a mate other than those with just a "cute" face. Her second rule pertains to finding the perfect mate. Sadly the math says then that what you should do in the first 37 percent of your dating window, you should just reject everybody as serious marriage potential. This method has many risks but is actually proven to maximize the potential of finding the perfect mate. Her third rule is not about finding a mate, but keeping one. Although you may think the perfect couple that never fights is likely to stay together it is actually quite the opposite. Couples that fight more are more likely to stay together since they resolve an issue. She uses an equation to calculate the likelyhood of them staying together and it actually is proven to have significant accuracy. She then goes on and hope that the "Mathematics of Love" strengthens your love for mathematics.
When I first chose this video, I was hoping to get insight on the power of Mathematics in the natural world and I sure did. This video shows how math can prove anything and how it is even powerful enough to calculate the hardest emotion of all, love. This talk matters to me since I hold mathematics to a high standard of importance. I find it interesting to me and I love how it can calculate love. If mathematics can calculate the impossible, imagine what else it can do? That is why this talk is so important and matters to me.
This video at first seems quite boring but after watching it I've learned that it was actually interesting. It is quite entertaining in her delivery and overall quite a hoot. If ever teetering on the edge of watching this video I give a strong recommendation to. This video is very logical and should be watched as soon as possible.
The "Mathematics of Love" is about the mathematical probability of finding a mate. She first introduces a paper written by Peter Backus about him finding a mate. After all his circumstances it ends up being a 1 in 285,000 chance but that is a pessimistic view. She uses mathematically proven techniques to increase your chance of finding love. Her first rule pertains to online dating and how your chance of being contacted is not just on attractiveness. Those who have features that are more different have a much better of better chance of finding a mate other than those with just a "cute" face. Her second rule pertains to finding the perfect mate. Sadly the math says then that what you should do in the first 37 percent of your dating window, you should just reject everybody as serious marriage potential. This method has many risks but is actually proven to maximize the potential of finding the perfect mate. Her third rule is not about finding a mate, but keeping one. Although you may think the perfect couple that never fights is likely to stay together it is actually quite the opposite. Couples that fight more are more likely to stay together since they resolve an issue. She uses an equation to calculate the likelyhood of them staying together and it actually is proven to have significant accuracy. She then goes on and hope that the "Mathematics of Love" strengthens your love for mathematics.
When I first chose this video, I was hoping to get insight on the power of Mathematics in the natural world and I sure did. This video shows how math can prove anything and how it is even powerful enough to calculate the hardest emotion of all, love. This talk matters to me since I hold mathematics to a high standard of importance. I find it interesting to me and I love how it can calculate love. If mathematics can calculate the impossible, imagine what else it can do? That is why this talk is so important and matters to me.
This video at first seems quite boring but after watching it I've learned that it was actually interesting. It is quite entertaining in her delivery and overall quite a hoot. If ever teetering on the edge of watching this video I give a strong recommendation to. This video is very logical and should be watched as soon as possible.