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  • I want to talk about slide rules, this is a slide rule, but to explain what it is

  • So what we have is a classic old school Faber-Castell slide rule. Anyone who is over 50 or

  • maybe over 60 would have had to learn to use one of these at school and actually the

  • use of mathematics for the previous three hundred odd years required the use of

  • this and you could say that every single scientific invention oh you know through

  • the age of enlightenment through the nineteenth century and the 20th century

  • would have relied at some level

  • on ease of calculation through use of the slide rule

  • and these are only a few out of the wide

  • variety of problems that can be worked with the standard slide rule

  • this is what scientists had

  • so it was shorthand for being a scientist and it's so wonderfully nerdy and I think that

  • the nerds were like yeah this is this is our this is our sword you know it's a light saber

  • its actually rather lovely

  • the way this moves in and out it's so beautifully done this instrument is actually really

  • pleasurable just going like this here with a slide rule it's not like a calculator

  • it's not digital you don't get the exact answer you get an approximate answer but

  • normally within two to three significant figures which

  • should usually be enough for the job that you're trying to do

  • we have one of these scales on the top line here "A" which is the top line

  • we have another identical scale underneath it on "B" so

  • there are lots of different types of scales here but I'm just going to be using "A" and "B"

  • "A" is this one here "B" is underneath it

  • let's say we want to multiply three times four

  • we look at "A" and we go to where three is

  • and we put the bottom one at one where three is

  • then we go up four and then we read where four is on the original one and you can see four is at twelve

  • because it's ten eleven twelve

  • just say we do something else as let's say this is something more complicated

  • seven is a complication number let's multiply seven by seven

  • seven squared

  • so we put the number one at seven here

  • and we go up to seven at the bottom one

  • and it exactly comes up to forty-nine so that's cool

  • so what logarithms do and what this is a physical interpretation of

  • is that they change multiplication into addition

  • so we're multiplying two things but actually we're just adding two lengths

  • the reason why this is useful obviously seven times seven we know that in our heads

  • just say we wanted to multiply 2345 times 6457

  • ok what we do

  • we turn that into 2.345 times 6.457 and let's do the sums

  • so we go to 2.345

  • 2.345

  • it's probably about there

  • and we got here at 6.457

  • 6.457

  • and that is

  • that's almost exactly 15

  • ok so get rid of our things

  • that would tell me within a few seconds that 2345 times 6457 is 15 million

  • and why don't we just check that

  • ...457 equals wow

  • the real answer 15,141,665

  • this gives us a handy idea of what the answer's going to be

  • multiplication is addition so division is subtraction

  • so let's say we want to divide 20 by 3

  • we go to 20 and we basically just need to take away 3

  • so we put 3 where the 20 is there

  • and go down to 1

  • and where is 1 we use our hairline here

  • oh look it's 6

  • between 6.6 and 6.7

  • this is something which is quite cool and fun and a bit of a historical relic

  • but it's not a particularly beautiful thing

  • unlike my other slide rule my prized possession

  • and this is the Halden Calculex

  • ok I'm going to open it is from 1906 and it comes almost like you know

  • like I'm proposing marriage to you

  • that I'm getting down on my bended knee and giving you a Halden Calculex

  • will you be my mathematical bride

  • so what this is is it is a circular slide rule

  • here we have the logarithmic scale along a line

  • in a circular slide rule it's in a circle

  • now let's put that down for a second

  • this comes with this fantastic sort of set of instructions

  • the thing is not that many people collect mathematical instruments and so you get probably get loads of

  • you know this might have been found by someone just clearing out their attic didn't know what it was

  • like it can't have been more than a few dozen dollars

  • so revised rules tables and formulae for the Halden Calculex

  • which is a circular slide rule

  • this is just wonderful absolutely wonderful

  • price one over six that's a penny isn't it I don't know I'm too young even though I'm old to understand old English

  • I'm going to read you a story

  • although the ordinary slide rule is usually acknowledged to be a most useful and reliable instrument

  • it has one or two great disadvantages

  • for instance it is a most inconvenient article to carry about in one's pocket

  • also in the hands of the average user it is rendered almost useless for any unusual calculation

  • so in other words you couldn't put this in a pocket and it's not very elegant

  • on the other hand the Halden Calculex is beautiful it's like a pocket watch

  • and it's something that if you ever needed to do fast approximate analogue calculations on the fly

  • and it was 1906 you could whisk this out

  • here there are two moving parts there is

  • you're moving this logarithmic scale against the top one so two sides

  • and you've got the hairline

  • here you can move the middle one

  • and you've got the hairline

  • so again there are lots of different scales for doing lots of different things

  • I'm just going to concentrate on multiplication and division

  • so just say again we wanted to say

  • do 4 times 5

  • and we can see if you can see close up

  • we know it's 20 and it's on 20

  • this is lovely this thing what do you do with this

  • what do you do you do calculations

  • but what do you do with it

  • I sort of take it out and stroke it and polish it and put it up there and talk to it

  • quite a lot of times things are just made for being functional

  • and this is something which is not only functional it is a rather beautiful object

  • and it's you could say it's a kind of iPhone of the early English 20th century

  • because this is the height of technology packaged with beauty

  • thanks to audible.com for supporting this video

  • Audible has more than a hundred and eighty thousand downloadable titles

  • across all types of literature including fiction non-fiction and periodicals

  • I'm an Audible user and particularly enjoy listening to books when I'm walking the

  • dogs are driving the car or slugging along on the treadmill they really make

  • the time pass so much more quickly now among audibles huge collection is a book

  • by Alex Bellos the person you just watched talking about slide rules

  • here is Alex's Adventures in Numberland super easy to find and download onto your Audible app

  • why not check that one out to find out more about how to do it

  • go to audible.com/numberphile there you can sign on for a 30 day free trial

  • including your first book and see what you think that's 30 days free trial

  • it's great service easy to use and a thanks to audible for supporting the channel

I want to talk about slide rules, this is a slide rule, but to explain what it is

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スライドルールのiPhone - Numberphile (The iPhone of Slide Rules - Numberphile)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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