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Four Dimensional Maths: Things to See and Hear in the Fourth Dimension – with Matt Parker



The Royal Institution

Matt Parker, comedian and mathematician, shows how four-dimensional shapes appear in a 3D world in this hands-on talk, featuring what is possibly the world’s nerdiest knitted hat!
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Discover how to make love hearts from Mobius strips, 4d frames from drinking straws and pipe-cleaners, and other maths tricks in this entertaining talk by Matt Parker. Matt explains how to know when someone’s throwing a 4d cubes at you and also what happens when your mum knits a three dimensional shadow of a four dimensional donut – to wear on your head, in this fun talk on the challenges of visualising the fourth dimension.

Matt Parker was an Australian school teacher before he moved to London where he works as a stand-up comedian and a maths communicator. He writes books, appears on radio programmes and TV shows, contributes to newspapers, makes school visits and gives live comedy shows.

This event took place at the Royal Institution on Tuesday 27 January.

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48 thoughts on “Four Dimensional Maths: Things to See and Hear in the Fourth Dimension – with Matt Parker
  1. When you said you got married last July I almost clapped out loud in my work cubicle where I was listening though headphones during lunch. (Clapping in my head is what I was doing the whole time.) Edit: Also 4D USB was super funny.

  2. An old video, but I just found it. I have watched many videos that try to explain the 4D concept. They always leave my brain feeling like it's been snapped in two. I just cannot grasp even the concept. This is the first time I've felt… just a tiny bit closer to understanding it. It's only like a millimeter that my understanding has moved, but that's more than it ever has before!

  3. Haha, why do Brits like to refer to Math in the plural, as if there's more than one? Literature, Biology, and Physical Education are all in the singular. I guess it may be because Mathematics is plural in form, but singular (Mathematics is, not Mathematics are) in quantity. We don't say that "Mathematics are fun."

  4. I've beaten Matt by nerdiness of my clothing.
    Step 1: Klein Bottle Hat, with the digits of Pi
    Step 2: Mobius Strip Scarf, with the digits of e (Euler's Number)
    Step 3: Pair of pants made into a double-holed Klein Bottle (the pockets come out and connect with the bottom of the pant legs), with the digits of the Golden Ratio
    Step 4: Two-Hole Torus Shirt, with the digits of the square root of 2

  5. The tube was ok for 4th dimension but how about a triangle twisted 180 degrees and then attached to itself and it then has 3 surfaces mobius and then cut it 3 times. I have no dexterity but I'm sure you'd have something amazing with the strips that are now all 3 bisected or just on the corners or down the center of each flat of the triangle.

  6. English humour is a lot of dribble…which rhymes with drizzle. So basically they imitate the rain which is a incessantly irritating noise on your tin roof. Which sounds a bit lie his voice. But I did like his presentation which could have been summarized in a 6 dimension world in 30 seconds.

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