Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Showing episodes and shows of

Judith Grabiner

Shows

Ada Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryMathematics and culture: geometry and its ‘Figures in the Air’Judith Grabiner, Pitzer College describes how the 19th century saw radical change, producing new ideas of space, destroying the unchallenging authority of mathematics, revolutionising art, making relativity possible and helping create modernism. Includes an introduction by Michael Wooldridge, Head of the Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford.2015-12-1842 minAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryMathematics and culture: geometry and its ‘Figures in the Air’ (Slides)Judith Grabiner, Pitzer College describes how the 19th century saw radical change, producing new ideas of space, destroying the unchallenging authority of mathematics, revolutionising art, making relativity possible and helping create modernism. Includes an introduction by Michael Wooldridge, Head of the Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford.2015-12-1800 minAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryMathematics and culture: geometry and its ‘Figures in the Air’Judith Grabiner, Pitzer College describes how the 19th century saw radical change, producing new ideas of space, destroying the unchallenging authority of mathematics, revolutionising art, making relativity possible and helping create modernism. Includes an introduction by Michael Wooldridge, Head of the Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford.2015-12-1842 minAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryAda Lovelace Symposium - Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer VisionaryMathematics and culture: geometry and its ‘Figures in the Air’ (Slides)Judith Grabiner, Pitzer College describes how the 19th century saw radical change, producing new ideas of space, destroying the unchallenging authority of mathematics, revolutionising art, making relativity possible and helping create modernism. Includes an introduction by Michael Wooldridge, Head of the Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford.2015-12-1800 min