Math! Science! History!

Gabrielle Birchak

Why do some scientific breakthroughs look different up close than they do in our textbooks? How did math quietly shape the modern world? Math! Science! History! explores the human side of discovery, including the rivalries, the failed attempts, the bold ideas, and the marginalized voices behind the equations and experiments that changed science, technology, and everyday life. Hosted by Gabrielle Birchak, who holds degrees in mathematics and journalism, the show connects codebreaking, astronomy, probability, physics, and innovation to the world we live in today. If you enjoy science stories, historical investigations, and clear math grounded in context, clarity, and research, this show is for you. New episodes twice weekly. Visit www.MathScienceHistory.com for more information.

  1. Maria Agnesi: Calculus Pioneer and Charity Leader

    6 HR AGO

    Maria Agnesi: Calculus Pioneer and Charity Leader

    This episode of Math! Science! History! uncovers the true story of Maria Gaetana Agnesi, the 18th-century mathematician mislabeled the "Witch of Agnesi." In this episode I explore her groundbreaking textbook, the social pressures she faced, and her later life of charity. Episode Overview Visit Milan's intellectual salons where young Agnesi dazzled as a polyglot prodigy, only to channel her brilliance into Instituzioni analitiche, a pioneering calculus textbook for Italian youth. Discover how she rejected fame for charity, leading a hospital for the poor and dying among those she served, showing that her legacy was teaching and compassion, not witchcraft. Three Things Listeners Will Learn Agnesi's "Witch" curve was a mistranslation of versiera; her real impact was systematizing calculus for students. Despite family ambitions and societal constraints, she authored the first advanced math text by a woman, aided by mentors like Rampinelli. In her later years, she ran a Milan hospital and chose to be close to the women she cared after. 🔗 Explore more on our website: https://www.MathScienceHistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h 🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers Little Prelude for the Luth - by Laurent Buczek from Pixabay The Venture by aidanpinsent from Pixabay Unconditional by aidanpinsent from Pixabay Until next time, carpe diem!

    24 min
  2. You Might Also Like: On Purpose with Jay Shetty

    6 HR AGO ·  BONUS

    You Might Also Like: On Purpose with Jay Shetty

    Introducing Logan Ury: #1 Dating Mistake That Leads to the Wrong Relationship (Use THIS Compatibility Test Before You Get Attached) from On Purpose with Jay Shetty. Follow the show: On Purpose with Jay Shetty Many of us have been on countless dead-end dates, excited by the wrong people, overlooking the right ones, and left wondering why finding a healthy relationship still feels so complicated. Jay sits down with behavioral scientist and dating coach Logan Ury to explore why modern dating feels harder than ever and what we can actually do to build meaningful relationships in a world full of options. Together, they unpack the hidden psychology behind attraction, the myths we believe about “the spark,” and how dating apps have changed the way we evaluate potential partners. Logan shares how many people unknowingly sabotage their chances at love by chasing instant chemistry instead of long-term compatibility, reminding us that the strongest relationships are often built through curiosity, emotional safety, and shared values rather than immediate intensity. Jay and Logan also dive into the patterns that keep people stuck in cycles of disappointing relationships. From the pressure to find the “perfect” partner to the fear of vulnerability, they discuss how modern dating culture can create unrealistic expectations. Logan explains the difference between people who date intentionally and those who drift through relationships without clarity, and why small mindset shifts, like asking better questions, focusing on growth potential, and recognizing emotional availability, can dramatically change our outcomes. The conversation highlights how understanding our own habits, attachment styles, and communication patterns can help us show up more authentically in love. In this episode you'll learn: How to Stop Chasing the Wrong People How to Look Beyond the First Date Spark How to Choose Compatibility Over Chemistry How to Date with Clear Intentions How to Avoid the “Maximizer” Dating Trap How to Ask Better Questions on Dates How to Build Attraction That Grows Over Time How to Date in a World of Endless Options If dating has ever made you feel discouraged, confused, or like you’re falling behind, you’re not alone. Building a meaningful relationship in today’s world can feel overwhelming, but the truth is that love isn’t about finding someone perfect, it’s about finding someone willing to grow with you. What are your dating blind spots? Take the quiz to find out! www.loganury.com/quiz   If you’re ready to understand your patterns in love and build healthier relationships, check out How to Not Die Alone. Click here to order: https://www.amazon.com/How-Not-Die-Alone-Surprising/dp/1982120622  With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty JAY’S DAILY WISDOM DELIVERED STRAIGHT TO YOUR INBOX Join 900,000+ readers discovering how small daily shifts create big life change with my free newsletter. Subscribe here.  Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast  What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:11 The Problem with Modern Dating Expectations 04:16 The Three Types of Daters 06:30 Do You Believe In a Soulmate? 08:20 Why Dating Burnout Is So Common 10:23 Why Does Dating Feel So Difficult Today? 14:04 Why Hustle Culture Fails in Dating 15:46 Two Ways to Approach Dating Intentionally 18:52 What Is “Chalant” Dating? 21:35 When Rejection Becomes Content 24:12 The Rise of a Hesitant Generation 26:01 Why We’re Afraid to Make a Move 27:14 The Challenge of Male Vulnerability 29:23 Why Rejection Feels So Personal 32:21 The Fear of Choosing the Wrong Person 38:01 What Actually Predicts Long-Term Relationship Success? 44:36 The Biggest Lie We’re Told About Love 47:13 The Myth of the Movie-Moment First Meeting 49:22 Are Dating Apps Making Us Replaceable? 50:19 Start by Fixing Your Dating Profile 53:58 How to Optimize Your Dating Profile 01:08:07 Make It Easy for People to Engage with You 01:10:01 What Is Friction-Maxing? 01:12:11 “Rose Jail” on Hinge  01:15:58 Choosing a Partner Takes Real Effort 01:17:13 Do You Believe in  “Right Person, Wrong Time?” 01:18:22 Are People Giving Up Too Quickly on Love? 01:19:57 Post Date Eight  01:23:35 How Do You Define Love? 01:25:15 Is Love Alone Enough? 01:26:24 Falling in Love vs. Being in Love 01:27:50 What Truly Makes a Great Partner? 01:29:18 Are Your Standards Too High? 01:31:19 Understanding the “Ick” 01:35:23 This or That: Love Edition 01:40:36 Logan on Final Five Episode Resources: Website | https://www.loganury.com/  Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/loganury  LinkedIn | linkedin.com/in/loganury/  The Later Daters: https://www.netflix.com/ph-en/title/81665880 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. DISCLAIMER: Please note, this is an independent podcast episode not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in conjunction with the host podcast feed or any of its media entities. The views and opinions expressed in this episode are solely those of the creators and guests. For any concerns, please reach out to team@podroll.fm.

  3. FLASHCARDS! How Diversity Drives Scientific Breakthroughs

    4 DAYS AGO

    FLASHCARDS! How Diversity Drives Scientific Breakthroughs

    In this Flashcard Friday episode of Math! Science! History!, we spotlight three groundbreaking scientists whose outsider perspectives didn't just add diversity to their fields, they fundamentally changed what science could discover. From Flossie Wong-Staal's molecular work that cracked the mystery of HIV and transformed AIDS treatment, to Omar Yaghi's Nobel Prize-winning invention of metal-organic frameworks that opened a new era of chemistry by design, to Mario Molina's courageous atmospheric research that led to the Montreal Protocol and the slow recovery of Earth's ozone layer, this episode reveals the powerful and undeniable connection between diverse scientific participation and world-changing progress. These aren't just inspiring stories, they're a blueprint for why inclusion isn't optional in science; it's essential. 5 Things Listeners Will Learn How Flossie Wong-Staal helped clone and sequence the HIV genome, making blood screening, transmission prevention, and antiretroviral drug development possible, saving millions of lives. What reticular chemistry is and why Omar Yaghi's metal-organic frameworks represent a revolutionary shift from discovering materials to deliberately designing them, with applications in carbon capture, clean energy, and water purification. How Mario Molina proved that CFCs were destroying the ozone layer, and how his politically unwelcome findings directly led to the Montreal Protocol, one of the most successful environmental treaties in history. Why diverse scientific perspectives accelerate discovery, including how different training, cultural backgrounds, and intellectual traditions help science identify errors faster and reach more robust solutions. The real cost of discrimination in science, not just to individuals, but to the pace of discovery, the accuracy of evidence, and the problems humanity can solve. Resources & Further Reading ·         🔬 Flossie Wong-Staal ·         ⚗️ Omar Yaghi & the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize Official Announcement | Yaghi Research Group, UC Berkeley ·         🌍 Mario Molina & the Montreal Protocol, UNEP: Montreal Protocol Overview ·         📚 Reticular Chemistry, Yaghi Lab Introduction to MOFs 💬 Enjoyed this episode? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, it helps more curious minds find the show! And share this episode with a student, teacher, or science lover in your life.  🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers Until next time, carpe diem!

    12 min
  4. 24 MAR

    The Math of Matilda

    This episode reframes the Matilda Effect not as a simple story of stolen credit, but as a mathematical and institutional process in which small biases compound over time. Drawing on sociology of science, network theory, and citation dynamics, the script explains how cumulative advantage systems, like preferential attachment and the Matthew Effect, amplify early visibility into lasting historical recognition, even without overt wrongdoing. It shows how peer review, authorship norms, invisible labor, and archival practices inherit and reinforce these dynamics, making later corrections ineffective. Ultimately, the episode argues that the Matilda Effect persists because recognition itself behaves mathematically, and that changing history requires deliberate intervention at the points where credit is first assigned, cited, preserved, and taught. What you'll learn: The Matilda Effect isn't about stolen ideas, it's about systems that compound bias. Small disadvantages early in a career can snowball into permanent historical erasure. Recognition follows mathematical rules like cumulative advantage and preferential attachment. Peer review doesn't reset inequality, it inherits it. Essential scientific labor often disappears because it doesn't generate "credit." Archives and citations decide what history remembers, and what it forgets. Delayed recognition isn't neutral; in cumulative systems, timing is everything. Where we cite, credit, and preserve work today shapes tomorrow's history. Even small acts of recognition matter, because they compound. 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Music: Shopping with Mom by Gabrielle Birchak. All other music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Until next time, carpe diem!

    22 min
  5. FLASHCARDS! Dr. Yvonne Sylvain: Haiti's First Female Doctor

    20 MAR

    FLASHCARDS! Dr. Yvonne Sylvain: Haiti's First Female Doctor

    In this Flashcard Friday episode of Math! Science! History!®, host Gabrielle Birchak celebrates Women's History Month and Podcasthon by spotlighting Dr. Yvonne Sylvain, Haiti's first female physician. Born in 1907 into a family of intellectuals and resistance fighters, Dr. Sylvain shattered barriers to become a pioneer in obstetrics, gynecology, and cancer screening. Her story reveals a Haiti rarely seen in today's headlines: a nation rich in brilliance, where educated professionals built real systems of care, and where political instability repeatedly threatened to dismantle them. This episode is paired with a companion interview with Angie Maldonado, founder of Espwa Means Hope, a U.S.-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit working in rural Haiti to empower families through maternal health care, education, and job creation. 'What the Doctor Ordered': 3 Things You'll Learn 1. Haiti Has Always Had Brilliant Builders, Not Just Crises Dr. Sylvain's life dismantles the narrative that Haiti has always been defined by instability. She attended medical school, trained at Columbia University, became a medical professor, and introduced cervical cancer screening via the Pap smear to Haiti, all in an era when women were rarely admitted to medical schools anywhere in the world. 2. Maternal Health Is the Foundation of a Functioning Society Sylvain specialized in obstetrics and gynecology because she understood that healthy pregnancies and preventive women's health care are not extras, they are the biological and social foundation of generational continuity. Her advocacy for deep X-ray, radium treatment, and cancer screening in Haiti was ahead of her time. 3. Political Disruption Doesn't Destroy Expertise, It Just Keeps Interrupting It From the U.S. occupation of Haiti to the Duvalier dictatorship, Dr. Sylvain's career was repeatedly shaped by forces outside medicine. She worked with the WHO, consulted across Africa and Central America, and still returned to lay the groundwork for Haiti's Frères Community Hospital. Her story is a masterclass in professional persistence under adverse conditions. Related Episodes 🎙️ Listen to Gabrielle's companion interview with Angie Maldonado, founder of Espwa Means Hope, available in your podcast feed. To donate to Espwa Means Hope, please visit https://www.EspwaMeansHopeHaiti.org  🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h  🌍 Let's Connect! Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mathsciencehistory.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/math.science.history Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mathsciencehistory  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/math-science-history/  Threads: https://www.threads.com/@math.science.history  Mastodon: https://mathsciencehistory@mathstodon.xyz YouTube: Math! Science! History! - YouTube Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/mathsciencehistory  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. On Matters of Consequence by Lloyd Rodgers Sacred Garden by Guilherme Bernardes from Pixabay Unworthy by Guilherme Bernardes from Pixabay Until next time, carpe diem!

    12 min
  6. 19 MAR

    Annie Jump Cannon: The Census Taker of the Sky

    She looked at starlight and said, I can organize that, and then she did! For Women's History Month, host Gabrielle Birchak profiles Annie Jump Cannon (1863–1941), the American astronomer who took a chaotic universe and filed it into something the world could actually study. Cannon was one of the Harvard Computers, a group of women hired at Harvard College Observatory to analyze photographic glass plates of the night sky, and she became the fastest, most prolific stellar classifier in history. Over her lifetime, she manually classified over 350,000 stars, more than any person before or since. In this episode, Gabrielle breaks down the Harvard Spectral Classification System, OBAFGKM, the sequence Cannon refined and that astronomers worldwide still use today. You'll learn what each letter means, what colors and temperatures they represent, where our own sun sits in the sequence (spoiler: it's a G2 star), and why Cannon's seemingly quiet classification work was actually one of the most powerful scientific acts of the early twentieth century. Classification, Gabrielle argues, isn't boring, it's the infrastructure that turned starlight into data and beautiful objects into the science of astrophysics. This episode also reflects on the human side of Cannon's story: the fact that she was nearly deaf for most of her career, that she was a suffragist, that she produced one of the most monumental data catalogs in scientific history, the nine-volume Henry Draper Catalogue, and that despite her extraordinary achievements, her system was named the Harvard Classification System, not the Cannon System. Her work endured. Her system stayed. That's the real legacy. Key Topics Covered: Who Annie Jump Cannon was and why she matters for Women's History Month The Harvard Computers and their role at Harvard College Observatory The OBAFGKM stellar spectral classification sequence, explained color by color and temperature by temperature The Henry Draper Catalogue: 225,300 stars classified across nine volumes, 1918–1924 Why classification isn't clerical work, it's the foundation of science Cannon's recognition, awards, and the Annie Jump Cannon Award, still given annually by the American Astronomical Society FEMINIST MNEMONIC (GABRIELLE'S VERSION) Obviously Bold, A Feminist Generation Keeps Marching. O – B – A – F – G – K – M RESOURCES & LINKS About Annie Jump Cannon Annie Jump Cannon Biography, National Women's History Museum Annie Jump Cannon: Star Classifier, Sky & Telescope Annie Jump Cannon, Space.com The Harvard Computers Project PHaEDRA: Transcribing the Work of the Harvard Computers, Smithsonian Digital Volunteers The Henry Draper Catalogue The Henry Draper Catalogue, Internet Archive (original volumes, free) Stellar Classification Harvard Spectral Classification, Annie Jump Cannon and the Creation of Stellar Classification (Princeton Astronomy) The Annie Jump Cannon Award Annie Jump Cannon Award in Astronomy, American Astronomical Society 2025 Recipient: Maya Fishbach (University of Toronto), gravitational-wave astrophysics & cosmology 2024 Recipient: Jennifer Bergner (UC Berkeley), astrochemistry and planetary formation Recommended Reading The Glass Universe: How the Ladies of the Harvard Observatory Took the Measure of the Stars by Dava Sobel, Penguin Random House | Amazon 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h 🌍 Let's Connect! Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mathsciencehistory.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/math.science.history Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mathsciencehistory  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/math-science-history/  Threads: https://www.threads.com/@math.science.history  Mastodon: https://mathsciencehistory@mathstodon.xyz YouTube: Math! Science! History! - YouTube Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/mathsciencehistory  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers. Calm Piano - by Breakz Studios from Pixabay   Until next time, carpe diem!

    14 min
  7. 17 MAR

    SPECIAL: Podcasthon and Espwa Means Hope

    It's Podcasthon Week! In this special Women's History Month and Podcasthon episode of Math! Science! History!, I Gabrielle Birchak interviews Angie Maldonado, founder of Espwa Means Hope, a U.S.-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit working in rural, mountainous Haiti. Angie shares the story that sparked Espwa's mission, the stark realities behind maternal and infant mortality, and what "progress" looks like when the goal is as fundamental as keeping mothers and babies alive. You will hear how Espwa built programs around what the community needed, from mobile prenatal education and nutrition support to job creation through a women-led sewing program, and why their "First 1,000 Days" model focuses on nutrition and learning from pregnancy through age two. Angie also explains the current barriers to sustaining healthcare and education in Haiti, especially the impact of gang violence and instability, and how people outside Haiti can make tangible differences through monthly giving. Support Espwa Means Hope: EspwaMeansHopeHaiti.org For more info on Podcasthon, please visit: Podcasthon.org 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com   🌍 Let's Connect! Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mathsciencehistory.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/math.science.history Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mathsciencehistory  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/math-science-history/  Threads: https://www.threads.com/@math.science.history  Mastodon: https://mathsciencehistory@mathstodon.xyz YouTube: Math! Science! History! - YouTube Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/mathsciencehistory  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers All music from Pixabay is public domain Music by Harmony of Heaven from Pixabay Music by Yurii Suprunenko from Pixabay Music by Clavier Clavier from Pixabay Music by Yurii Suprunenko from Pixabay Music by Universfield from Pixabay Until next time, carpe diem!

    47 min
  8. FLASHCARDS! What Sci-Fi can Teach Science

    13 MAR

    FLASHCARDS! What Sci-Fi can Teach Science

    Science fiction does not need to predict the future to matter. It matters because it trains the mind. In this Flashcards Friday episode, Gabrielle Birchak uses four unforgettable Star Trek moments to show how stories can pressure-test ideas, preview consequences, and build shared language that helps real science move faster and more responsibly. From the chaos of "Spock's Brain" to the furry avalanche of "The Trouble with Tribbles," and a hopeful landing in "Darmok," this episode treats science fiction as a practical tool for scientific thinking, not a guilty pleasure. Three things you will learn 1) Stress testing without the damage You will learn how science fiction creates extreme scenarios that expose weak points in systems before those weak points show up in real life, using "Spock's Brain" as the ridiculous and memorable example. 2) Consequences that compound You will learn why consequences often begin as "harmless" variables, and how "The Trouble with Tribbles" and "Genesis" demonstrate cascading failures in two different emotional registers. 3) Why language is scientific infrastructure You will learn how shared metaphors and shared reference points help teams coordinate and innovate, and why "Darmok" is one of the best stories ever told about meaning, not just words. 🔗 Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com 📚 To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h   🌍 Let's Connect! Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mathsciencehistory.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/math.science.history Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mathsciencehistory  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/math-science-history/  Threads: https://www.threads.com/@math.science.history  Mastodon: https://mathsciencehistory@mathstodon.xyz YouTube: Math! Science! History! - YouTube Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/mathsciencehistory  🎧 Enjoying the Podcast? ☕ Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers Until next time, carpe diem!

    12 min

About

Why do some scientific breakthroughs look different up close than they do in our textbooks? How did math quietly shape the modern world? Math! Science! History! explores the human side of discovery, including the rivalries, the failed attempts, the bold ideas, and the marginalized voices behind the equations and experiments that changed science, technology, and everyday life. Hosted by Gabrielle Birchak, who holds degrees in mathematics and journalism, the show connects codebreaking, astronomy, probability, physics, and innovation to the world we live in today. If you enjoy science stories, historical investigations, and clear math grounded in context, clarity, and research, this show is for you. New episodes twice weekly. Visit www.MathScienceHistory.com for more information.

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