Difference between revisions of "Cedars Math: Miscellaneous"
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Click [[Cedars Math|here to go back]] to the Cedars Math front page. | Click [[Cedars Math|here to go back]] to the Cedars Math front page. | ||
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+ | ==Various== | ||
+ | * <span style="background:#00FF00"> [[Cedars Math:Handouts|List of Handouts]] </span> | ||
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+ | *[[Cedars Math:Words|List of Words]] | ||
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+ | *[[Cedars Math:Proverbs and Phrases|Proverbs and Phrases]] | ||
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===Videos=== | ===Videos=== | ||
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*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3x2SvqhfevE "I Am the Very Model of a Biblical Philologist"]. Add the Major General song. | *[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3x2SvqhfevE "I Am the Very Model of a Biblical Philologist"]. Add the Major General song. | ||
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+ | *Abbot and Costello, "Who's on First?" | ||
==Test-taking music== | ==Test-taking music== |
Revision as of 13:03, 30 August 2024
Click here to go back to the Cedars Math front page.
Various
Videos
- "How an Infinite Hotel Ran Out Of Room" (6 minutes)
- An Adventure in Color/Mathmagicland (1961) (also contains Mathemagicland) or just "Donald Duck in Mathemagicland, Disney. 27 minutes.
- "Who's on First?" (4 minutes)
- "New Math," Tom Lehrer. About 5 minutes. Also, "Lobachevsky," Tom Lehrer (1953). About 5 minutes.
- "I Am the Very Model of a Biblical Philologist". Add the Major General song.
- Abbot and Costello, "Who's on First?"
Test-taking music
- Johann Bach's Musical Offering in piano and harpsichord (with scrolling musical notation). A long essay on the Musical Offering with linkage to Leibniz, Newton, and Voltaire; and a short essay that talks about it in connection to Mozart and Beethoven.
- Beethoven's Ghost Trio (1809)
- Brahms's Symphony 1, Karajan conducting.
Mr. Rasmusen's notes to himself
- "The Triangle Rhyme," Mathematics Magazine vol. 56 (1983), no. 4, 235-238. (gated)
- "What happens when you add a new teller? John D. Cook at his blog (2008).
- Math puzzles can be found at Quora.
- A blog post on myriads.
- "A visual, immediate & intuitive proof that the sum of the first n interger numbers equals n(n+1)/2"
- Landsburg on Dollar-Cost-Averaging, which would be a good You-Tube subject, as would the mortgage interest deduction.
- "THE SECRET NUMBER," IGOR TEPER, Strange Horizons (20 NOVEMBER 2000). The Bleem story.