Beyond Proof: Stories in Mathematics

The Turing App

Stories in Math is the podcast I wanted when I was younger and math felt like this sealed-off world I couldn’t get into. Math has always been a very human thing. It’s people arguing, guessing, getting stuck, getting lucky, and sometimes accidentally stepping into an idea so big it changes everything. This show is a collection of those stories, that bring out the journey and stories behind mathematical discoveries Stories in Math is for anyone who’s curious. If you love math, you’ll get the backstory you didn’t get in class. If you’ve always felt shut out by math, this is a way in.

Episodes

  1. APR 24

    The Longitude War - Part I

    The ability to determine a ship's position at sea was the deadliest problem of the 18th century, a challenge that turned the simple question of "Where am I?" into a matter of national security. While sailors could easily find their latitude by measuring the height of the sun or the North Star, longitude remained a lethal mystery because it is inextricably bound to time. Since the Earth rotates 15 degrees every hour, a navigator only needs to know the time at their home port compared to the time aboard ship to calculate their east-west position. However, in the 1700s, this was impossible in practice; pendulum clocks relied on gravity and stable floors, making them useless on a ship that pitches, rolls, and experiences extreme changes in temperature and humidity. The cost of this ignorance was measured in thousands of lives and a fortune in sunken ships. The gravity of the crisis was punctuated by the 1707 Scilly naval disaster, where Admiral Sir Clowdisley Shovell’s fleet struck rocks due to navigation guesswork, claiming nearly 2,000 sailors. While astronomers like Galileo and Newton looked to the "clockwork universe" of the stars and Jupiter’s moons for a solution, mechanical inventors struggled to build a "chronometer" that could withstand the rigors of the Atlantic. The desperation of the era even led to bizarre proposals like the "Wounded Dog theory," involving a quack remedy called the Powder of Sympathy. Ultimately, the British Parliament's Longitude Act of 1714 offered a king’s ransom of £20,000 to anyone who could solve the problem, sparking an intense global rivalry to bridge the gap between time and space.

    15 min
  2. APR 17

    How Randomness Rules our Lives

    The deep-seated human discomfort with randomness often leads us to "legislate" against it, much like the NFL did after a 2022 playoff game between the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs was decided by a coin toss. This act of changing rules to reduce the power of chance reflects a fundamental need to believe that success is earned through skill rather than arbitrary forces. However, research into human psychology reveals that we are "pattern matching machines" that often find order where none exists. In experiments where subjects predict biased light flashes, humans consistently underperform compared to rats because our complex brains insist on finding a hidden order in a random system, a liability that plagues us in arenas ranging from sports to high finance. This "illusion of skill" is frequently reinforced by a phenomenon known as regression to the mean. In professional baseball, a "hot streak" or a "slump" is often just a temporary deviation from a player's long-term average, yet we mistake these random peaks for permanent plateaus of talent. A similar illusion exists on Wall Street, where "star" fund managers are often the beneficiaries of survivorship bias—we see the winners but ignore the "massive graveyard" of failed managers. As the SPIVA scorecards demonstrate, nearly 95% of active funds fail to beat the market over twenty years, suggesting that many "geniuses" are simply lucky coin-flippers in a massive tournament. Ultimately, as psychologist Daniel Kahneman observed with flight instructors, we often attribute the natural ebbing and flowing of performance to our own rewards or punishments, failing to see the unseen random forces that pull every outlier back toward the center.

    30 min
  3. APR 10

    Evil Function That Broke Mathematics

    Calculus, the mathematics of change developed by Newton and Leibniz, has been the bedrock of modern science for centuries, powering everything from the Industrial Revolution to the development of semiconductors and AI. However, for two hundred years, it relied on the intuitive "smoothness" of functions—the belief that any continuous, unbroken curve would eventually resemble a straight line if you zoomed in far enough. While mathematicians like André-Marie Ampère attempted to formally prove that continuity implied differentiability almost everywhere, they viewed "problem points" like sharp corners as mere isolated exceptions. This comfortable dogma was shattered in 1872 by Karl Weierstrass, a German mathematician whose unconventional career began in fencing and secondary school teaching before he revolutionized mathematical rigor at nearly age 40. Weierstrass unveiled a mathematical object that contemporaries decried as a "deplorable evil" and an "outrage against common sense": a function that is continuous everywhere but differentiable nowhere. By adding an infinite series of cosine waves with rapidly increasing frequencies, he constructed an infinitely jagged line that possesses no smooth parts and no tangent lines at any point. This creation horizontally defied geometric intuition and forced a radical choice upon the mathematical community: either abandon the field’s status as a steadfast discipline or rebuild its foundations from the ground up. This "jagged function" ultimately transitioned mathematics away from purely visual, physical intuition toward a new era of absolute logical rigor, forever remaking the architecture of the infinite.

    19 min
  4. APR 3

    125-Year-Old Problem Unites Three Laws of Physics

    Physics has long grappled with a "split personality": the macroscopic world of smooth, continuous fluids and the microscopic reality of trillions of discrete, colliding particles. While the motion of a river can be described by elegant fluid equations, zooming in reveals a chaotic dance of molecules governed by the hard rules of mechanics. In 1900, the great mathematician David Hilbert challenged his colleagues to find the "logical bridge" between these two worlds as part of his famous Sixth Problem. He sought to derive the laws of fluid motion—the macroscopic Navier-Stokes equations—directly from the microscopic laws of Isaac Newton and the statistical "middle rung" established by Ludwig Boltzmann. For over a century, this challenge remained unresolved due to the "Paradox of Time’s Arrow". At the microscopic level, Newton’s laws are perfectly reversible; however, at the macroscopic level, time is a one-way street where cream disperses into coffee but never spontaneously regathers. Boltzmann attempted to bridge this gap with his "molecular chaos" assumption, suggesting that colliding particles have no shared history, which introduced irreversibility into physics. While a 1975 proof by Oscar Lanford confirmed this link for a tiny fraction of a second, it failed to account for the long-term history of particle collisions that define actual fluid dynamics. It wasn't until March 2025 that a new proof finally claimed to unite these scales, rigorously connecting the microscopic dance to the macroscopic flow.

    21 min

About

Stories in Math is the podcast I wanted when I was younger and math felt like this sealed-off world I couldn’t get into. Math has always been a very human thing. It’s people arguing, guessing, getting stuck, getting lucky, and sometimes accidentally stepping into an idea so big it changes everything. This show is a collection of those stories, that bring out the journey and stories behind mathematical discoveries Stories in Math is for anyone who’s curious. If you love math, you’ll get the backstory you didn’t get in class. If you’ve always felt shut out by math, this is a way in.