The magical maze – The pattern of tiny feet (1997)

Ian Stewart

Ian Stewart asks: How do we walk? Why do we walk the way we do? And just what are kangaroos up to?

Watch time: 51:01
A shoal of blue fish on a screen
Credit: Royal Institution

Lecture 2 – The pattern of tiny feet

From the 1997 Lectures' DVD companion:

As man strives to create robots which – in terms of mobility – are increasingly sophisticated, several central questions need to be answered: How do we walk? Why do we walk the way we do? And just what are kangaroos up to? Professor Stewart addresses the notion of locomotion.

About the 1997 CHRISTMAS LECTURES

In our 1997 CHRISTMAS LECTURES, mathematician Ian Stewart shares his enthusiasm for mathematics and how it governs almost every aspect of our lives.

From the 1997 Lectures' DVD companion:

Okay. We all know that mathematics can be about as interesting as watching a silent movie wearing a blindfold. The trick is to make it relevant. Make it electric. Plug mathematics in and make it live! Professor Ian Stewart does just that. He's a best-selling author whose enthusiasm for his subject spreads like a forest fire through his audience. In the 1997 Royal Institution CHRISTMAS LECTURES, he shows how maths governs almost every aspect of our lives, ranging from our birthdays to American game shows, calling in at panthers, petals, and the logic of chaos.

If you're already interested in mathematics, these lectures will remind you of the magic. But if you've yet to see the beauty and fascination of the subject, why not let Professor Stewart remove the blindfold for you?