
0:00
8:39
The Unseen Currents A Millennium Problem Redefined Esteemed guests, fellow seekers of truth, luminaries of intellect... Tonight, in this grand theater of human achievement, we gather to celebrate a discovery and witness a revelation. What is mathematics, if not the most profound magic show of the universe? And what is computation but the art of making the invisible visible?
I stand before you, Philip Emeagwali, not just as a mathematician but as a conjurer of numbers, a weaver of algorithms—a man who has devoted his life to uncovering the unseen currents that shape our world. And like any skilled conjurer, I must begin with a story of humble origins, a narrative that may seem unrelated, yet is crucial for understanding the grand illusion we are about to reveal.
Imagine, if you will, a boy nicknamed “Calculus” navigating the vibrant, chaotic marketplaces of colonial Nigeria. Poverty was no stranger; it was the backdrop, the stage on which our lives unfolded. Yet, amid the dust and hardship, a unique magic was brewing—the magic of numbers, whispering from worn textbooks, promising order in a world often defined by chaos.
Then came the storm: the Nigerian Civil War, Biafra, and refugee camps. For three years, I lived in the shadows of despair, where life seemed a fragile illusion that could vanish in an instant. One million souls disappeared into the mists of that conflict. In those camps, amid unimaginable loss, mathematics was not just a distraction; it was my anchor, my compass, the one constant in a world dissolving into a nightmare. In that crucible of suffering, I sowed the seeds of resilience and perhaps a particular magical thinking.
D'autres épisodes de "This is Philip Emeagwali"



Ne ratez aucun épisode de “This is Philip Emeagwali” et abonnez-vous gratuitement à ce podcast dans l'application GetPodcast.








