Kind: captions Language: en if you want to understand what Infinity can do we're going to need pizza yes there's a science to making pizza we don't typically with infinity so how can New York City's most famous food help solve one of the most elusive mysteries of early mathematics [Music] so Steve how is this pizza gonna help us understand Infinity huh I would say it the other way infinity and the pizza are going to help us understand one of the oldest problems in math what's the area of a circle which is not intuitive no you know what's hard about it you might think a circle is a beautiful simple shape but actually it's got this nasty property that it doesn't have any straight lines in it right ancient civilizations didn't know how to find the area of a shape like that [Music] how to find the exact area of a circle isn't obvious for a square or rectangle you just multiply the sides but what do you do with a circle so what do they do well they came up with an argument that you can convert a round shape into a rectangle if you use Infinity so we're basically going to kind of deconstruct this pizza make it into a rectangle beautiful and then we're going to know the area that's it so I'm going to start with four pieces okay to do that I'm going to go one point up and one point down and then one point up and one point down and yeah like that how'd you do in Geometry you don't think that looks like a rectangle it's not close to you no it's not it's not but come on I'm only using four pieces if I use more I can get closer okay so we got to cut these babies in half let's cut them let's rearrange them same trick alternating point up and point down one up and one down [Music] one up and one down that is looking a lot better what do you think is that a rectangle um it's it's not quite a rectangle but it's getting closer it is right yeah in both the four piece and eight piece versions half the crust sits at the top and half at the bottom but with eight pieces The Edge becomes less scalloped closer to a straight line so we need to go at least a step further let's go more we gotta do sixteen so we have to just change every other one am I going to mess this up I mean that's that's a parallelogram that's aspiring to be a rectangle that's got aspirations from four slices to eight slices [Music] to 16 slices and even 32 slices there's a clear progression towards a rectangle with one piece out of 32 cut in half to create vertical sides the rectangle is almost complete except for the wavy top and bottom but as the number of slices increases the straighter and straighter those edges would become and the argument here is that if we could keep doing this all the way out to Infinity so that this would be infinitely many slices infinitesimally thin this really would become a rectangle yeah and we can read off the area it's this radius that's the distance from the center out to the crust times half the circumference which is half the crust half the curvy stuff and that's a famous formula a half the crust times the radius one half CR that's what this is usually see for circumference but you could see it's crust so at the limit once we got all the way out there it's gonna look like it would be a rectangle and that is actually the first calculus argument in history like 250 BC to find the area of a circle who knew you could learn so much from Pizza