February 13, 2011
              Sundays at 3 pm (doors open at 2:15)
              Royal Canadian Institute 
            Dror Bar-Natan, University of Toronto
              The Hardest Math I've Ever Really Used
            MacLeod Auditorium, Medical Sciences Building, University of Toronto
            1 Kings College Circle (Nearest Subway is Queens Park 
            Station)
            Co-sponsored by the Fields Institutue   
            
            
            What's the hardest math I've ever used in real life? Me, myself, 
              directly - not by using a cellphone or a GPS device that somebody 
              else designed? And in "real life" - not while studying 
              or teaching mathematics?
              I use addition and subtraction daily, adding up bills or calculating 
              change. I use percentages often, though mostly it is just "add 
              15 percents". I seldom use multiplication and division: when 
              I buy in bulk, or when I need to know how many tiles I need to replace 
              my kitchen floor. I've used powers twice in my life, doing calculations 
              related to mortgages. I've used a tiny bit of geometry and algebra 
              for a tiny bit of non-math-related computer graphics I've played 
              with. And for a long time, that was all. In my talk I will tell 
              you how recently a math topic discovered only in the 1800s made 
              a brief and modest appearance in my non-mathematical life. There 
              are many books devoted to that topic and a lot of active research. 
              Yet for all I know, nobody ever needed the actual formulas for such 
              a simple reason before.
              Hence we'll talk about the motion of movie cameras, and the fastest 
              way to go from A to B subject to driving speed limits that depend 
              on the locale, and the "happy segway principle" which 
              is a the heart of the least action principle which in itself is 
              at the heart of all of modern physics, and finally, about that funny 
              discovery of Janos Bolyai's and Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky's, 
              that the famed axiom of parallels of the ancient Greeks need not 
              actually be true.
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