If so, don't despair. I've found that if there's something I don't like, don't understand, or a subject that scares me (it could be maths, but it could be anything) that children's books and television shows are a good way to start, an 'in' if you like, and it seems like Hannah Fry (who, back in 2018, took me on a wonderful and frightening journey through arithmetic with her series Magic Numbers:Hannah Fry's Mysterious World of Maths) thinks along similar lines.
BBC4's recent, over Xmas - as you'll gather by the title, coverage of her Royal Institution Christmas Lectures was just the tonic. Either for those who feel reasonably confident with their mathematical skills, those who struggle, those who are simply plain curious, or those who miss Saturday morning TV so much they'll happily tune in to watch somebody get gunged.
Especially ones where there's a chance of winning a brand new smartphone. Fair enough. We all like free things. It is VERY interactive. There are Christmas crackers, colourful hats, people commentating on YouTube videos of liquid nitrogen balloon dog challenges, games of noughts and crosses against a matchbox 'computer', BMX stunts, and former (much celebrated) University Challenge contestant Bobby Seagull relentlessly flipping coins.
But it's all done to make serious points about maths, about science, and, most of all, about how the mathematics that underpins science affects the world we live in, how we react to it, and how, in the none too distant future, the algorithms created by these mathematical formulae will come to dominate our lives even more. How will that affect us? How will we react to that? How should we react to that, in fact?
But not make it perfect. The algorithms we create can only ever be as good, or as unbiased, as the people who create them. The series is full of special guests and we're introduced, variously, to Professor Chris Jackson (who predicts when volcanoes will erupt and even goes inside them), Tim Waskett (one of several statisticians in the employ of Liverpool FC), and Anne-Maria Imafidon (a former child prodigy in mathematics and computing and, now, like Fry, an expert communicator on the subject). There's also a dude who can do a Rubik's Cube in super fast time (seconds) who talks about the quintillion (1,000,000,000,000,000,000) combinations that the seemingly simple toy can be mixed up into.
All of this shows what computer technology, maths, and science can do for us and how it can and will change the world. But Fry and Parker didn't shy away from showing us its shortcomings either. Or suggesting ways in which we navigate the future technological landscape awaiting us. One, in truth, we're already traversing. Algorithms already exist in our human brains and it's these we use for such seemingly simple tasks as, say, recognising a dog. But how would you go about writing an algorithm so that a computer could recognise a dog?
But it'll still make mistakes. There is, potentially, an infinite amount of data you could feed in to a computer and it increases exponentially all the time. So no computer could ever be able to, 100%, verify all dogs. It's not overly important on this canine issue, we don't need computers to identify dogs for us, but, elsewhere, should we be trusting these algorithms to make very important, life affecting, decisions on our behalf?
In court rooms for example. Probability of guilt doesn't equate to actuality of guilt. This was a child friendly show so we weren't treated to a mocked up murder trial but, instead, and warming to the festive theme, a carol singer appeared to sing a carol that had been written by a computer using algorithms after having the words of numerous well known carols fed into it.
Words are tricky. They're very human. But so, you would think, is music. However, a computer fed on a diet of classical music to produce an algorthmic take on a Vivaldi composition was a different matter entirely. A small chamber orchestra appeared and played two pieces of music and the audience was asked which piece they believed to be written by a human and which by a computer. Roughly 50% went either way, complete guesswork basically, and that wasn't because they were children either. Adults would have fared no better. The only reason I guessed correctly was, I believe, due to a close up of the cellist smirking while performing the computer generated piece.
Tips were given, that we'll all need soon, on how to spot deep fakes (if the background moves with the person, if they're saying things that don't sound very likely, and if no reputable news media service confirms these things have been said) but, of course, deep fakes will move fast and it'll get harder and harder to identify. Many won't even bother trying. Many will say you can't trust the mainstream media and prefer to believe 'alternative' news forms (it happens on the left and the right, from the Canary to Fox News, bullshit propaganda is paraded as impartial reporting) and those of us, an ever dwindling band it sadly seems, who prefer evidence and truth to faith and opinion will, more than likely, feel ever more impotent as lies become the new truth.
We shouldn't totally despair though. While the questions about veracity don't look likely to stop any time soon (and the vexed issues of data scraping, 'cookies', and the potential death of privacy will only get more and more complicated) it's not technology per se we need to be afraid. Technology is a tool and it can be harnessed for good as well as for bad.
With five hundred hours of footage uploaded to YouTube every single minute of the day there will never be enough time to check on everything that's put out there but if we trust in people like Hannah Fry to be our gatekeepers and use them as models to apply our own critical thinking to all things (not just maths, science, and computing) we can stay on the right path.
In this excellent series of lectures (and TV shows), Fry will have inspired all the youngsters in the audience and many more at home in front of their televisions to question things, and to think about things, while also proving that science and maths can be applied, with great caution, in ways that can actually improve our world. They are tools you can trust. Hannah Fry is an operator you can trust. We need more like her.
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