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Mathematical joke

A mathematical joke is a form of humor which relies on aspects of mathematics or a stereotype of mathematicians. The humor may come from a pun, or from a double meaning of a mathematical term, or from a lay person's misunderstanding of a mathematical concept. Mathematician and author John Allen Paulos in his book Mathematics and Humor described several ways that mathematics, generally considered a dry, formal activity, overlaps with humor, a loose, irreverent activity: both are forms of "intellectual play"; both have "logic, pattern, rules, structure"; and both are "economical and explicit".[2]

Volume and mass of a cylindrical pizza of radius z, height a and density eir [1]

Some performers combine mathematics and jokes to entertain and/or teach math.[3][4][5]

Humorously inappropriate use of numbers on a sign in New Cuyama, California

Humor of mathematicians may be classified into the esoteric and exoteric categories. Esoteric jokes rely on the intrinsic knowledge of mathematics and its terminology. Exoteric jokes are intelligible to the outsiders, and most of them compare mathematicians with representatives of other disciplines or with common folk.[6]

Pun-based jokes edit

 
Rebus for "I ate some pie."

Some jokes use a mathematical term with a second non-technical meaning as the punchline of a joke.

Q. What's purple and commutes?
A. An abelian grape. (A pun on abelian group.)

Occasionally, multiple mathematical puns appear in the same jest:

When Noah sends his animals to go forth and multiply, a pair of snakes replies "We can't multiply, we're adders" – so Noah builds them a log table.[7]

This invokes four double meanings: adder (snake) vs. addition (algebraic operation); multiplication (biological reproduction) vs. multiplication (algebraic operation); log (a cut tree trunk) vs. log (logarithm); and table (set of facts) vs. table (piece of furniture).[8]

Other jokes create a double meaning from a direct calculation involving facetious variable names, such as this retold from Gravity's Rainbow:[9]

Person 1: What's the integral of 1/cabin with respect to cabin?
Person 2: A log cabin.
Person 1: No, a houseboat; you forgot to add the C![10]

The first part of this joke relies on the fact that the primitive (formed when finding the antiderivative) of the function 1/x is log(x). The second part is then based on the fact that the antiderivative is actually a class of functions, requiring the inclusion of a constant of integration, usually denoted as C—something which calculus students may forget. Thus, the indefinite integral of 1/cabin is "log(cabin) + C", or "A log cabin plus the sea", i.e., "A houseboat".

Jokes with numeral bases edit

Some jokes depend on ambiguity of numeral bases.

There are only 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.

This joke subverts the trope of phrases that begin with "there are two types of people in the world..." and relies on an ambiguous meaning of the expression 10, which in the binary numeral system is equal to the decimal number 2.[11] There are many alternative versions of the joke, such as "There are two types of people in this world. Those who can extrapolate from incomplete information."[12]

Another pun using different radices, asks:

Q. Why do mathematicians confuse Halloween and Christmas?
A. Because 31 Oct = 25 Dec.[13][14]

The play on words lies in the similarity of the abbreviation for October/Octal and December/Decimal, and the coincidence that both equal the same amount ( ).

Imaginary numbers edit

 
Mathematical joke playing on the Pythagorean theorem and imaginary numbers

Some jokes are based on imaginary number i, treating it as if it is a real number. A telephone intercept message of "you have dialed an imaginary number, please rotate your handset ninety degrees and try again" is a typical example.[15] Another popular example is: "What did π say to i? Get real. What did i say to π? Be rational."[16]

Stereotypes of mathematicians edit

Some jokes are based on stereotypes of mathematicians tending to think in complicated, abstract terms, causing them to lose touch with the "real world". These compare mathematicians to physicists, engineers, or the "soft" sciences in a form similar to an Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman, showing the other scientists doing something practical, while the mathematician proposes a theoretically valid but physically nonsensical solution.

A physicist, a biologist and a mathematician are sitting in a street café watching people entering and leaving a nearby house. First they see two people entering the house. Time passes. After a while they notice three people leaving the house. The physicist says, "The measurement wasn't accurate." The biologist says, "They must have reproduced." The mathematician says, "If one more person enters the house, then it will be empty."[17]

Mathematicians are also shown as averse to making hasty generalizations from a small amount of data, even if some form of generalization seems plausible:

An astronomer, a physicist and a mathematician are on a train in Scotland. The astronomer looks out of the window, sees a black sheep standing in a field, and remarks, "The sheep in Scotland are black!" "No, no, no!" says the physicist. "At least one sheep in Scotland is black!" The mathematician rolls his eyes at his companions' muddled thinking and says, "In Scotland, there is at least one sheep, at least one side of which appears to be black from here some of the time."[18][19]

A classic joke involving stereotypes is the "Dictionary of Definitions of Terms Commonly Used in Math Lectures".[20] Examples include "Trivial: If I have to show you how to do this, you're in the wrong class" and "Similarly: At least one line of the proof of this case is the same as before."

Non-mathematician's math edit

This category of jokes comprises those that exploit common misunderstandings of mathematics, or the expectation that most people have only a basic mathematical education, if any.

A museum visitor was admiring a Tyrannosaurus fossil, and asked a nearby museum employee how old it was. "That skeleton's sixty-five million and three years, two months and eighteen days old," the employee replied. "How can you be so precise?" she asked. "Well, when I started working here, I asked a scientist the exact same question, and he said it was sixty-five million years old—and that was three years, two months and eighteen days ago."[21]

The joke is that the employee fails to understand the scientist's implication of the uncertainty in the age of the fossil and uses false precision.

Mock mathematics edit

A form of mathematical humor comes from using mathematical tools (both abstract symbols and physical objects such as calculators) in various ways which transgress their intended scope. These constructions are generally devoid of any substantial mathematical content, besides some basic arithmetic.

Mock mathematical reasoning edit

A set of jokes applies mathematical reasoning to situations where it is not entirely valid. Many are based on a combination of well-known quotes and basic logical constructs such as syllogisms:

Premise I: Knowledge is power.
Premise II: Power corrupts.
Conclusion: Therefore, knowledge corrupts.[22]

Another set of jokes relates to the absence of mathematical reasoning, or misinterpretation of conventional notation:

 

That is, the limit as x goes to 8 from above is a sideways 8 or the infinity sign, in the same way that the limit as x goes to three from above is a sideways 3 or the Greek letter omega (conventionally used to notate the smallest infinite ordinal number).[23]

An anomalous cancellation is a kind of arithmetic procedural error that gives a numerically correct answer:

  •  
  •  
  •  

Mathematical fallacies edit

A number of mathematical fallacies are part of mathematical humorous folklore. For example:

 

This appears to prove that 1 = 2, but uses division by zero to produce the result.[24]

Some jokes attempt a seemingly plausible, but in fact impossible, mathematical operation. For example:

Pi goes on and on and on ...
And e is just as cursed.
I wonder: Which is larger
When their digits are reversed?[25]

To reverse the digits of a number's decimal expansion, we have to start at the last digit and work backwards. However, that is not possible if the expansion never ends, which is true in the case of   and  .

Humorous numbers edit

Many numbers have been given humorous names, either as pure numbers or as units of measurement. Some examples:

Sagan has been defined as "billions and billions", a metric of the number of stars in the observable universe.[26][27]

Jenny's constant has been defined as   (sequence A182369 in the OEIS), from the pop song 867-5309/Jenny, which concerns the telephone number 867-5309.[28]

The number 42 appears prominently in the Douglas Adams trilogy The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, where it is portrayed as "the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe and everything".[29] This number appears as a fixed value in the TIFF image file format and its derivatives (including for example the ISO standard TIFF/EP) where the content of bytes 2–3 is defined as 42: "An arbitrary but carefully chosen number that further identifies the file as a TIFF file".[30]

The number 69 is commonly used in reference to a group of sex positions in which two people align to perform oral sex, thus becoming mutually inverted like the numerals 6 and 9. Because of this association, "69" has become an internet meme and is known as "the sex number" in certain communities.[31]

In the context of numerical humor, one classic example is the joke, "Why was six afraid of seven? Because seven eight (ate) nine!" The humor in this statement originates from a linguistic play on numbers and fundamental arithmetic.[32]

Calculator spelling edit

Calculator spelling is the formation of words and phrases by displaying a number and turning the calculator upside down.[33] The jest may be formulated as a mathematical problem where the result, when read upside down, appears to be an identifiable phrase like "ShELL OIL" or "Esso" using seven-segment display character representations where the open-top "4" is an inverted 'h' and '5' looks like 'S'. Other letters can be used as numbers too with 8 and 9 representing B and G, respectively.

An attributed example of calculator spelling, which dates from the 1970s,[34] is 5318008, which when turned over spells "BOOBIES".

Limericks edit

A mathematical limerick is an expression which, when read aloud, matches the form of a limerick. The following numerically correct example is attributed to Leigh Mercer:[35]

 
This is read as follows:

A dozen, a gross, and a score
Plus three times the square root of four
Divided by seven
Plus five times eleven
Is nine squared and not a bit more.

Another example using calculus is[a]:

 
which may be read:

Integral z-squared dz
From one to the cube root of three
Times the cosine
of three pi over nine
Equals log of the cube root of e

The limerick is true if   is interpreted as the natural logarithm.

Doughnut and coffee mug topology joke edit

 
A continuous deformation (homeomorphism) of a coffee mug into a doughnut (torus) and back

An oft-repeated joke is that topologists cannot tell a coffee cup from a doughnut,[36] since they are topologically equivalent: a sufficiently pliable doughnut could be reshaped (by a homeomorphism) to the form of a cup by creating a dimple and progressively enlarging it, while shrinking the hole into a handle.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The variable's name 'z' should be pronounced as zee to make a proper rhyme to 'three' and 'e'.

References edit

  1. ^ "13 Jokes That Every Math Geek Will Find Hilarious". Business Insider.
  2. ^ John Allen Paulos (1980). Mathematics and Humor. ISBN 9780226650241.
  3. ^ "Matt Parker, math stand-up comedian". Mathscareers.org.uk. 2011-08-04. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  4. ^ "Dara O'Briain: School of hard sums". Comedy.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  5. ^ Schimmrich, Steven (2011-05-17). "Dave Gorman – stand-up math comedy". Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  6. ^ Paul Renteln, Alan Dundes, Foolproof: A Sampling of Mathematical Folk Humor, NOTICES OF THE AMS, VOLUME 52, NUMBER 1, 2005, pp. 24-34.
  7. ^ Simanek, Donald E.; Holden, John C. (2001-10-01). Science Askew : a light-hearted look at the scientific world. ISBN 9780750307147.
  8. ^ Ermida, Isabel (2008-12-10). The Language of Comic Narratives. ISBN 9783110208337.
  9. ^ polyb (April 6, 2005). "Quick and Witty!". Physics Forums. Retrieved February 28, 2013.
  10. ^ Bloom, Harold (2009-01-01). Thomas Pynchon. ISBN 9781438116112.
  11. ^ Ritchie, Graeme (2002-06-01). The Linguistic Analysis of Jokes. ISBN 9780203406953.
  12. ^ Olicity8. "Two Types Of People". Wattpad. Retrieved 29 April 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Larman, Craig (2002). Applying Uml and Patterns. ISBN 9780130925695.
  14. ^ Collins, Tim (2006-08-29). Are You a Geek?. ISBN 9780440336280.
  15. ^ Elizabeth Longmier (2007-05-01). In the Lab. ISBN 9781430322160. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
  16. ^ Joke number 11 on Page 9, 36 Teacher Jokes, 17 pages, October 17, 2013. Simple K12, InfoSource Inc
  17. ^ Krawcewicz, Wiesław; Rai, B. (2003-01-01). Calculus with Maple Labs : early transcendentals. ISBN 9781842650745.
  18. ^ Stewart, Ian (1995). Concepts of Modern Mathematics. ISBN 9780486134956.
  19. ^ "Jokebook for the Physical Sciences". math.bu.edu. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
  20. ^ "Dictionary of Definitions of Terms Commonly Used in Math lectures."
  21. ^ Seife, Charles (2010-09-23). Proofiness. ISBN 9781101443507.
  22. ^ Lawless, Andrew (2005). Plato's Sun. ISBN 9780802038098.
  23. ^ Xu, Chao (2008-02-21). . Archived from the original on 2008-02-24. Retrieved 2008-04-19.
  24. ^ Harro Heuser: Lehrbuch der Analysis – Teil 1, 6th edition, Teubner 1989, ISBN 978-3-8351-0131-9, page 51 (German).
  25. ^ "Pi goes on and on and on …". JUST FOR FUN. Math Majors Matter. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  26. ^ William Safire, ON LANGUAGE; Footprints on the Infobahn, New York Times, April 17, 1994
  27. ^ Sizing up the Universe – Stars, Sand and Nucleons – Numericana
  28. ^ "Jenny's Constant". Wolfram MathWorld. 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
  29. ^ Gill, Peter (2011-02-03). "42: Douglas Adams' Amazingly Accurate Answer to Life the Universe and Everything". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2011-04-03.
  30. ^ Aldus/Microsoft (1999-08-09). "1) Structure". . Revision 5.0. Aldus Corporation and Microsoft Corporation. Archived from the original on 2012-02-11. Retrieved 2009-06-29. The number 42 was chosen for its deep philosophical significance.
  31. ^ Feldman, Brian (2016-06-09). "Why 69 Is the Internet's Coolest Number (Sex)". Intelligencer. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  32. ^ "Adding Laughter to Numbers". Harvard.edu.
  33. ^ Bolt, Brian (1984-09-27). The Amazing Mathematical Amusement Arcade. Cambridge University Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780521269803.
  34. ^ Tom Dalzell; Terry Victor (27 November 2014). The Concise New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English. Taylor & Francis. p. 2060. ISBN 978-1-317-62511-7.
  35. ^ "Math Mayhem". Lhup.edu. Retrieved 2011-06-29.
  36. ^ West, Beverly H (1995-03-30). Differential Equations: A Dynamical Systems Approach : Higher-Dimensional Systems. ISBN 9780387943770. Retrieved 2011-06-29.

External links edit

  • Mathematical Humor – from Mathworld
  • Paul Renteln and Alan Dundes (2004-12-08). "Foolproof: A Sampling of Mathematical Folk Humor" (PDF). Notices of the AMS. 52 (1).
  • 13 Jokes That Every Math Geek Will Find Hilarious

mathematical, joke, mathematical, joke, form, humor, which, relies, aspects, mathematics, stereotype, mathematicians, humor, come, from, from, double, meaning, mathematical, term, from, person, misunderstanding, mathematical, concept, mathematician, author, jo. A mathematical joke is a form of humor which relies on aspects of mathematics or a stereotype of mathematicians The humor may come from a pun or from a double meaning of a mathematical term or from a lay person s misunderstanding of a mathematical concept Mathematician and author John Allen Paulos in his book Mathematics and Humor described several ways that mathematics generally considered a dry formal activity overlaps with humor a loose irreverent activity both are forms of intellectual play both have logic pattern rules structure and both are economical and explicit 2 Volume and mass of a cylindrical pizza of radius z height a and density eir 1 Some performers combine mathematics and jokes to entertain and or teach math 3 4 5 Humorously inappropriate use of numbers on a sign in New Cuyama CaliforniaHumor of mathematicians may be classified into the esoteric and exoteric categories Esoteric jokes rely on the intrinsic knowledge of mathematics and its terminology Exoteric jokes are intelligible to the outsiders and most of them compare mathematicians with representatives of other disciplines or with common folk 6 Contents 1 Pun based jokes 2 Jokes with numeral bases 3 Imaginary numbers 4 Stereotypes of mathematicians 5 Non mathematician s math 6 Mock mathematics 6 1 Mock mathematical reasoning 6 2 Mathematical fallacies 6 3 Humorous numbers 6 4 Calculator spelling 6 5 Limericks 7 Doughnut and coffee mug topology joke 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksPun based jokes edit 123Sp displaystyle sqrt 1 2 3 Sigma pi nbsp Rebus for I ate some pie Some jokes use a mathematical term with a second non technical meaning as the punchline of a joke Q What s purple and commutes A An abelian grape A pun on abelian group Occasionally multiple mathematical puns appear in the same jest When Noah sends his animals to go forth and multiply a pair of snakes replies We can t multiply we re adders so Noah builds them a log table 7 This invokes four double meanings adder snake vs addition algebraic operation multiplication biological reproduction vs multiplication algebraic operation log a cut tree trunk vs log logarithm and table set of facts vs table piece of furniture 8 Other jokes create a double meaning from a direct calculation involving facetious variable names such as this retold from Gravity s Rainbow 9 Person 1 What s the integral of 1 cabin with respect to cabin Person 2 A log cabin Person 1 No a houseboat you forgot to add the C 10 The first part of this joke relies on the fact that the primitive formed when finding the antiderivative of the function 1 x is log x The second part is then based on the fact that the antiderivative is actually a class of functions requiring the inclusion of a constant of integration usually denoted as C something which calculus students may forget Thus the indefinite integral of 1 cabin is log cabin C or A log cabin plus the sea i e A houseboat Jokes with numeral bases editSome jokes depend on ambiguity of numeral bases There are only 10 types of people in the world those who understand binary and those who don t This joke subverts the trope of phrases that begin with there are two types of people in the world and relies on an ambiguous meaning of the expression 10 which in the binary numeral system is equal to the decimal number 2 11 There are many alternative versions of the joke such as There are two types of people in this world Those who can extrapolate from incomplete information 12 Another pun using different radices asks Q Why do mathematicians confuse Halloween and Christmas A Because 31 Oct 25 Dec 13 14 The play on words lies in the similarity of the abbreviation for October Octal and December Decimal and the coincidence that both equal the same amount 318 2510 displaystyle 31 8 25 10 nbsp Imaginary numbers edit nbsp Mathematical joke playing on the Pythagorean theorem and imaginary numbersSome jokes are based on imaginary number i treating it as if it is a real number A telephone intercept message of you have dialed an imaginary number please rotate your handset ninety degrees and try again is a typical example 15 Another popular example is What did p say to i Get real What did i say to p Be rational 16 Stereotypes of mathematicians editSome jokes are based on stereotypes of mathematicians tending to think in complicated abstract terms causing them to lose touch with the real world These compare mathematicians to physicists engineers or the soft sciences in a form similar to an Englishman an Irishman and a Scotsman showing the other scientists doing something practical while the mathematician proposes a theoretically valid but physically nonsensical solution A physicist a biologist and a mathematician are sitting in a street cafe watching people entering and leaving a nearby house First they see two people entering the house Time passes After a while they notice three people leaving the house The physicist says The measurement wasn t accurate The biologist says They must have reproduced The mathematician says If one more person enters the house then it will be empty 17 Mathematicians are also shown as averse to making hasty generalizations from a small amount of data even if some form of generalization seems plausible An astronomer a physicist and a mathematician are on a train in Scotland The astronomer looks out of the window sees a black sheep standing in a field and remarks The sheep in Scotland are black No no no says the physicist At least one sheep in Scotland is black The mathematician rolls his eyes at his companions muddled thinking and says In Scotland there is at least one sheep at least one side of which appears to be black from here some of the time 18 19 A classic joke involving stereotypes is the Dictionary of Definitions of Terms Commonly Used in Math Lectures 20 Examples include Trivial If I have to show you how to do this you re in the wrong class and Similarly At least one line of the proof of this case is the same as before Non mathematician s math editThis category of jokes comprises those that exploit common misunderstandings of mathematics or the expectation that most people have only a basic mathematical education if any A museum visitor was admiring a Tyrannosaurus fossil and asked a nearby museum employee how old it was That skeleton s sixty five million and three years two months and eighteen days old the employee replied How can you be so precise she asked Well when I started working here I asked a scientist the exact same question and he said it was sixty five million years old and that was three years two months and eighteen days ago 21 The joke is that the employee fails to understand the scientist s implication of the uncertainty in the age of the fossil and uses false precision Mock mathematics editA form of mathematical humor comes from using mathematical tools both abstract symbols and physical objects such as calculators in various ways which transgress their intended scope These constructions are generally devoid of any substantial mathematical content besides some basic arithmetic Mock mathematical reasoning edit A set of jokes applies mathematical reasoning to situations where it is not entirely valid Many are based on a combination of well known quotes and basic logical constructs such as syllogisms Premise I Knowledge is power Premise II Power corrupts Conclusion Therefore knowledge corrupts 22 Another set of jokes relates to the absence of mathematical reasoning or misinterpretation of conventional notation limx 8 1x 8 limx 3 1x 3 w displaystyle left lim x to 8 frac 1 x 8 infty right Rightarrow left lim x to 3 frac 1 x 3 omega right nbsp That is the limit as x goes to 8 from above is a sideways 8 or the infinity sign in the same way that the limit as x goes to three from above is a sideways 3 or the Greek letter omega conventionally used to notate the smallest infinite ordinal number 23 An anomalous cancellation is a kind of arithmetic procedural error that gives a numerically correct answer 6416 6416 41 4 displaystyle frac 64 16 frac cancel 6 4 1 cancel 6 frac 4 1 4 nbsp 646 646 4 2 displaystyle sqrt 6 64 sqrt cancel 6 cancel 6 4 sqrt 4 2 nbsp ddx1x ddx1x x1x 1x2 displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d x frac 1 x frac cancel mathrm d cancel mathrm d x frac 1 x frac x frac 1 x frac 1 x 2 nbsp Mathematical fallacies edit A number of mathematical fallacies are part of mathematical humorous folklore For example b aab a2ab b2 a2 b2b a b a b a b b a bb b bb 2b1 2 displaystyle begin aligned b amp a ab amp a 2 ab b 2 amp a 2 b 2 b a b amp a b a b b amp a b b amp b b b amp 2b 1 amp 2 end aligned nbsp This appears to prove that 1 2 but uses division by zero to produce the result 24 Some jokes attempt a seemingly plausible but in fact impossible mathematical operation For example Pi goes on and on and on And e is just as cursed I wonder Which is larger When their digits are reversed 25 To reverse the digits of a number s decimal expansion we have to start at the last digit and work backwards However that is not possible if the expansion never ends which is true in the case of p displaystyle pi nbsp and e displaystyle e nbsp Humorous numbers edit Many numbers have been given humorous names either as pure numbers or as units of measurement Some examples Sagan has been defined as billions and billions a metric of the number of stars in the observable universe 26 27 Jenny s constant has been defined as J 7e 1 e 9 p2 867 5309 displaystyle J 7 e 1 e 9 cdot pi 2 867 5309 ldots nbsp sequence A182369 in the OEIS from the pop song 867 5309 Jenny which concerns the telephone number 867 5309 28 The number 42 appears prominently in the Douglas Adams trilogy The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy where it is portrayed as the answer to the ultimate question of life the universe and everything 29 This number appears as a fixed value in the TIFF image file format and its derivatives including for example the ISO standard TIFF EP where the content of bytes 2 3 is defined as 42 An arbitrary but carefully chosen number that further identifies the file as a TIFF file 30 The number 69 is commonly used in reference to a group of sex positions in which two people align to perform oral sex thus becoming mutually inverted like the numerals 6 and 9 Because of this association 69 has become an internet meme and is known as the sex number in certain communities 31 In the context of numerical humor one classic example is the joke Why was six afraid of seven Because seven eight ate nine The humor in this statement originates from a linguistic play on numbers and fundamental arithmetic 32 Calculator spelling edit Main article Calculator spelling Calculator spelling is the formation of words and phrases by displaying a number and turning the calculator upside down 33 The jest may be formulated as a mathematical problem where the result when read upside down appears to be an identifiable phrase like ShELL OIL or Esso using seven segment display character representations where the open top 4 is an inverted h and 5 looks like S Other letters can be used as numbers too with 8 and 9 representing B and G respectively An attributed example of calculator spelling which dates from the 1970s 34 is 5318008 which when turned over spells BOOBIES Limericks edit A mathematical limerick is an expression which when read aloud matches the form of a limerick The following numerically correct example is attributed to Leigh Mercer 35 12 144 20 347 5 11 92 0 displaystyle frac 12 144 20 3 sqrt 4 7 5 times 11 9 2 0 nbsp This is read as follows A dozen a gross and a score Plus three times the square root of four Divided by seven Plus five times eleven Is nine squared and not a bit more Another example using calculus is a 133z2dz cos 3p9 log e3 displaystyle int 1 sqrt 3 3 z 2 dz cdot cos left frac 3 pi 9 right log sqrt 3 e nbsp which may be read Integral z squared dz From one to the cube root of three Times the cosine of three pi over nine Equals log of the cube root of e The limerick is true if log displaystyle log nbsp is interpreted as the natural logarithm Doughnut and coffee mug topology joke edit nbsp A continuous deformation homeomorphism of a coffee mug into a doughnut torus and backAn oft repeated joke is that topologists cannot tell a coffee cup from a doughnut 36 since they are topologically equivalent a sufficiently pliable doughnut could be reshaped by a homeomorphism to the form of a cup by creating a dimple and progressively enlarging it while shrinking the hole into a handle See also editNew Math song Spherical cow All horses are the same color When a white horse is not a horseNotes edit The variable s name z should be pronounced as zee to make a proper rhyme to three and e References edit 13 Jokes That Every Math Geek Will Find Hilarious Business Insider John Allen Paulos 1980 Mathematics and Humor ISBN 9780226650241 Matt Parker math stand up comedian Mathscareers org uk 2011 08 04 Retrieved 2013 07 01 Dara O Briain School of hard sums Comedy co uk Retrieved 2013 07 01 Schimmrich Steven 2011 05 17 Dave Gorman stand up math comedy Retrieved 2013 07 01 Paul Renteln Alan Dundes Foolproof A Sampling of Mathematical Folk Humor NOTICES OF THE AMS VOLUME 52 NUMBER 1 2005 pp 24 34 Simanek Donald E Holden John C 2001 10 01 Science Askew a light hearted look at the scientific world ISBN 9780750307147 Ermida Isabel 2008 12 10 The Language of Comic Narratives ISBN 9783110208337 polyb April 6 2005 Quick and Witty Physics Forums Retrieved February 28 2013 Bloom Harold 2009 01 01 Thomas Pynchon ISBN 9781438116112 Ritchie Graeme 2002 06 01 The Linguistic Analysis of Jokes ISBN 9780203406953 Olicity8 Two Types Of People Wattpad Retrieved 29 April 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Larman Craig 2002 Applying Uml and Patterns ISBN 9780130925695 Collins Tim 2006 08 29 Are You a Geek ISBN 9780440336280 Elizabeth Longmier 2007 05 01 In the Lab ISBN 9781430322160 Retrieved 2013 06 19 Joke number 11 on Page 9 36 Teacher Jokes 17 pages October 17 2013 Simple K12 InfoSource Inc Krawcewicz Wieslaw Rai B 2003 01 01 Calculus with Maple Labs early transcendentals ISBN 9781842650745 Stewart Ian 1995 Concepts of Modern Mathematics ISBN 9780486134956 Jokebook for the Physical Sciences math bu edu Retrieved 13 October 2023 Dictionary of Definitions of Terms Commonly Used in Math lectures Seife Charles 2010 09 23 Proofiness ISBN 9781101443507 Lawless Andrew 2005 Plato s Sun ISBN 9780802038098 Xu Chao 2008 02 21 A mathematical look into the limit joke Archived from the original on 2008 02 24 Retrieved 2008 04 19 Harro Heuser Lehrbuch der Analysis Teil 1 6th edition Teubner 1989 ISBN 978 3 8351 0131 9 page 51 German Pi goes on and on and on JUST FOR FUN Math Majors Matter Retrieved 12 August 2018 William Safire ON LANGUAGE Footprints on the Infobahn New York Times April 17 1994 Sizing up the Universe Stars Sand and Nucleons Numericana Jenny s Constant Wolfram MathWorld 2012 04 26 Retrieved 2013 06 19 Gill Peter 2011 02 03 42 Douglas Adams Amazingly Accurate Answer to Life the Universe and Everything London Guardian Retrieved 2011 04 03 Aldus Microsoft 1999 08 09 1 Structure TIFF Revision 5 0 Aldus Corporation and Microsoft Corporation Archived from the original on 2012 02 11 Retrieved 2009 06 29 The number 42 was chosen for its deep philosophical significance Feldman Brian 2016 06 09 Why 69 Is the Internet s Coolest Number Sex Intelligencer Retrieved 2020 09 04 Adding Laughter to Numbers Harvard edu Bolt Brian 1984 09 27 The Amazing Mathematical Amusement Arcade Cambridge University Press p 48 ISBN 9780521269803 Tom Dalzell Terry Victor 27 November 2014 The Concise New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English Taylor amp Francis p 2060 ISBN 978 1 317 62511 7 Math Mayhem Lhup edu Retrieved 2011 06 29 West Beverly H 1995 03 30 Differential Equations A Dynamical Systems Approach Higher Dimensional Systems ISBN 9780387943770 Retrieved 2011 06 29 External links editMathematical Humor from Mathworld Paul Renteln and Alan Dundes 2004 12 08 Foolproof A Sampling of Mathematical Folk Humor PDF Notices of the AMS 52 1 13 Jokes That Every Math Geek Will Find Hilarious Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mathematical joke amp oldid 1188073586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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