Ramanujan: The Self-Taught Genius Who Wrote the Math of the Cosmos episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 28, 2026 · 22 MIN

Ramanujan: The Self-Taught Genius Who Wrote the Math of the Cosmos

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Imagine being at the pinnacle of your field when a nine-page letter arrives from an unknown clerk in a foreign country, filled with formulas so advanced they look like magic. That is exactly what happened to G.H. Hardy in 1913.This episode traces the life of Srinivasa Ramanujan, a poor accounting clerk who failed out of college yet became one of history's greatest mathematical minds. We explore the collision of pure intuition with Western rigor, and the tragic toll his genius took on his life.How a proofless 5,000-theorem book trained his mind to "see" answers intuitively, like a helicopter pilot over a landscapeWhy he failed college repeatedly, doing math on physiology exams, and nearly died from an untreatable, unaffordable conditionHardy's reaction to the letter: theorems that "defeated me completely," judged true because no one could imagine inventing themThe clash of his religious intuition, credited to the goddess Namagiri, with Hardy's atheist demand for proof, plus the 1729 taxicab storyHis tragic decline from likely-misdiagnosed illness, death at 32, and how his deathbed mock theta functions now help calculate black hole entropy

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jun 28, 2026

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Ramanujan: The Self-Taught Genius Who Wrote the Math of the Cosmos

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Imagine being at the pinnacle of your field when a nine-page letter arrives from an unknown clerk in a foreign country, filled with formulas so advanced they look like magic. That is exactly what happened to G.H. Hardy in 1913.This episode traces...

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