1. Go-oo-oo-od evening, good evening, good evening, good evening,
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2. good evening, good evening, and welcome to QI,
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3. where tonight we're doing the maths and making the money.
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4. Let's meet our mathematical masterminds.
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5. The irrational Aisling Bea.
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6. The recurring Susan Calman.
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7. A prime example, Sandi Toksvig.
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8. And the square root of f-all, Alan Davies.
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9. So, let's get their numbers.
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10. Susan goes:
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11. Aisling goes:
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12. And Alan goes:
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13. - 'Two twos are six!
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14. 'Two threes are seven. Two fours are 24.'
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15. Well done.
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16. It's getting worse, you know.
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17. Now, what was this man very good at doing with his fingers?
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18. This man being the man sitting down with the crown.
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19. He kind of looks like he's doing the Macarena,
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20. but I don't think they used to do that.
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21. Is it a card trick? Is it a "nothing up my sleeves", is it one of those?
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22. It looks like that.
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23. - Is the man in the middle Jesus?
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24. I know that face from somewhere.
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25. - We're in the Old Testament.
- Oh, are we?
- Well...
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26. The man in the middle is Daniel.
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27. He was in a lion's den, if you remember.
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28. He was in prison and he was released from prison
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29. because he had the ability to interpret?
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30. - Dreams.
- Dreams.
- Dreams.
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31. And the King whose dreams he interpreted was?
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32. Happy.
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33. - Asleep.
- N, N, N...
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34. Nestafarius.
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35. - Nebuchadnezzar.
- Nebuchadnezzar.
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36. - Oh, I was close.
- Yes, yes.
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37. Nebuchadnezzar, who was king of?
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38. All things around him.
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39. - Babylon.
- He was.
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40. - Yes.
- And the Babylonians were very good
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41. at doing what with their fingers?
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42. Gardening. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon.
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43. - What's the theme, yes, no, you're right. What's...
- Green-fingered.
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44. - Babylon is...
- What's the theme of our show tonight?
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45. - Babylon is where...
- Adding up, adding up.
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46. - Maths.
- Yeah.
- Maths.
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47. Babylonians, I won't say they invented mathematics, exactly,
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48. but they had a counting system on their fingers which was
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49. different from ours.
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50. How's our counting system work? One, two, three, four, five...
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51. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten. Phew!
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52. And therefore, because of that...
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53. - Decimal, decimal.
- We have a decimal system, based on ten.
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54. But they have a different system,
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55. they counted on their fingers differently.
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56. - Oh, they did the... - One, two, three...
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57. - They went one, two, three, four...
- They went the JOINTS of the fingers.
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58. - Yeah, the joints.
- Yes. One, two, three. Four, five, six. Seven, eight, nine, Ten, 11, 12.
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59. And then they'd put their thumb up. 13, 14, 15.
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60. 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
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61. 22, 23, 24.
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62. Put their finger up.
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63. And so on, until they got to 60, which is five iterations of 12.
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64. After that you'd need another person.
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65. Yes, exactly. Just as we would need another person after ten.
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66. That's the point. And they had a very successful system.
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67. Why is that important and influential?
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68. Well, it's the hours of the day, is it?
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69. Hours of the day, 60 minutes in an hour.
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70. 60 seconds in a minute.
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71. But the 24 divides into more than any other number,
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72. divides by two, three, four, six, eight...
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73. - Oh, Alan, you're on fire!
- .. and 12.
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74. - Yeah! Absolutely right.
- Good boy!
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75. We also have 360...
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76. Degrees.
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77. Degrees in a full circle. 12 inches to a foot.
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78. - 12 is so much more pleasing, I think.
- It is.
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79. Well, it's factorisable,
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80. and therefore it's a much more natural way.
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81. I've got a question.
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82. Yeah?
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83. When you want to say to someone, just one, I just want one.
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84. - You know, across a room.
- Yeah.
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85. Get me two, get me two. How do you do that?
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86. Do you have to go like that?
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87. If you go like that it means three, you get three of everything.
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88. It's a very interesting question.
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89. I'm only going to tell you this three more times.
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90. If you were Roman, that would be five, wouldn't it.
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91. It's very confusing.
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92. - Yeah, the Romans, that's five. Yeah.
- There you are, that's it.
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93. Now, last night, I tossed two heads at the same time.
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94. What are the chances? What?
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95. - I don't understand, what are you doing? No, no, what?
- No, no.
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96. - Yeah, no, it's fine.
- No, no, I misunderstood, I misunderstood.
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97. It's completely fine.
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98. Two coins at the same time?
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99. Yeah, a coin here, a coin there.
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100. I just want to know what the odds are.
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101. Because I'm tempted to say one in three, but I bet it's not.
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102. Well, what...
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103. - It's seven in 94.
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104. - No, you've got two coins, right.
- Yeah.
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105. There are four possible outcomes.
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106. There's heads-heads.
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107. Heads-tails.
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108. Yeah.
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109. Tails-tails.
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110. - And tails-heads.
- Tails-heads.
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111. - Tails-heads. Yeah.
- Yeah. So it's one in four.
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112. - One in four.
- One in four.
- It's one in four.
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113. Does it have anything to do with whether you normally toss
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114. with your right hand, or toss with your left hand?
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115. That's assuming it's an equal toss.
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116. The thing is, it's not that difficult a thing to understand mathematically,
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117. but this was given to Members of Parliament as a question, in 2012.
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118. 60% of MPs got it wrong.
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119. Did that include the Chancellor of the Exchequer?
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120. Well, there was a split on party lines.
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121. 47% of the Tories got it wrong.
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122. And 77% of Labour MPs got it wrong.
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123. Now, listen, can I, I should have said this at the beginning,
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124. I have to be very honest, I am phobic about maths.
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125. No, I understand.
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126. I was like you, I was also... my father's a mathematician,
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127. a physicist, and I was phobic about maths.
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128. - Yeah.
- I always said, Oh, no, I'm allergic to maths, I don't, I can't do it.
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129. - But actually it's very beautiful, isn't it, it's really...
- Oh, now I love it.
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130. - I wish one could be turned on to it.
- Yeah.
- I'm going to get turned on tonight to maths.
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131. All right.
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132. My thinking, Stephen, is if it's a head and a tail, that's one outcome.
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133. - Yeah.
- And then a tail and a tail and a head and a head.
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134. I'm not counting which coin does a thing.
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135. I'm still sticking with three.
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136. Ah, then you think it's one in three.
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137. And you're still wrong.
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138. On the subject of probability, I've got this,
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139. it's really interesting, it's a probability issue.
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140. You want a pack of cards each.
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141. - I can't catch.
- Oh, well caught.
- Well held.
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142. We've got some for you. All right.
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143. I want you to take the cards out and give them a good shuffle,
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144. good shuffle. I'm going to do the same.
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145. I've just shuffled them.
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146. Beautifully done.
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147. Sandi's, Sandi's, Sandi's been doing it, look her, she's like a croupier.
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148. Jesus!
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149. Yeah. Very good.
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150. Oh, no.
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151. Very good.
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152. - Yes, I've shuffled, I've riffle shuffled.
- Yeah.
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153. - I'm not a gambler.
- OK. OK, so can you shove your cards in here?
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154. Oh, all right, then.
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155. All right. Thank you. I'll give it a good shake.
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156. Is this going to be one of those Derren Brown ones where we
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157. all can't eat for a week, or something like that?
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158. No, nothing like that. There you are. There you go.
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159. All right. It's just about probability, it's not a big deal.
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160. Is there anything you can't turn your hand to, Stephen? Now it's magic.
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161. You haven't seen me turn my hand to anything yet.
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162. OK. And I'll put my cards in as well.
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163. There we go. All right. And give it all a good shake.
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164. All right, so you take one card out.
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165. Don't look, and if you can put it close to your chest,
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166. but not, no, no, don't look.
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167. - I've looked, I know what it is.
- Well, it doesn't matter. All right.
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168. The point is to shove it close to your chest so that that's where you're going to...
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169. That's not your chest, darling.
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170. The reason to shove it close to your chest is so that
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171. when you reveal it, it's camera height.
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172. - Oh, right.
- That's all it is.
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173. All right. So take one out, feel it, yeah, random. All right.
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174. - Magic.
- Yeah, very good, very good. All right. I'll do the same. All right. All right.
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175. I'll do the same. OK, so the point is it's about probability.
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176. The first card you choose, it could be anything.
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177. And the second card, the probability it's going to be the same card is quite small.
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178. And it's even less likely that three cards will be the same,
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179. and so on and so on.
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180. The chances that you'd get all the cards the same
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181. is about one in two billion.
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182. Now there is a possibility,
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183. but a very unlikely possibility, that two of the cards will be the same.
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184. - OK.
- So Sandi, you'll reveal your card.
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185. - Yours is the six of clubs, all right.
- Me?
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186. OK, and you reveal yours. Oh, my God!
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187. Oh!
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188. Now Alan. Oh! You reveal yours.
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189. Oh, no, surely not.
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190. No, oh, my God! And mine as well!
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191. Oh, there you go!
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192. Funny, how can that happen?
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193. There it is.
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194. - Burn him!
- He's a witch.
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195. Yeah. There you are. OK.
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196. - He's a witch.
- That's a very good trick.
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197. - Thank you very much.
- That's very good.
- That's terribly good.
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198. - All right, there we are.
- Fantastic, honestly.
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199. - That was really good.
- Oh, you're sweet, thank you.
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200. It was like Paul Daniels was in the room.
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201. If only he was in the bag.
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202. So the chances were about one in two billion that you'd get all
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203. the cards the same and it just happened, this evening.
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204. I'm amazed. So, tell me now, do animals count?
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205. Do you mean in life, in a sort of sociological...?
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206. - They count very much, in that sense.
- They count.
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207. But do they count in the sense of actually...?
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208. Well, from what I know, there are some animals that can count.
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209. Yes, you're right.
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210. - They all lined up for Noah. I'm just saying.
- Yeah.
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211. Yeah, and that's a fact story, a true fact story.
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212. - That's a fact story, so...
- Yeah.
- You don't hear them fighting.
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213. Have you any thoughts on this side of the room?
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214. Well, I can imagine a monkey can count.
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215. Surely.
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216. There must be a rhesus monkey with an accountancy degree,
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217. - there must be.
- Yeah.
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218. But you're spot on. Not only monkeys, but monkeys certainly are.
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219. Apparently chicks when they hatch,
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220. can show some propensity towards being able to count.
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221. One, two, three, four, five, chicks.
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222. Because you can see their heads counting, can't you, they're like one, two, three, four.
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223. Well, let me give you a list of some of the animals that have been
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224. spotted counting.
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225. Pigeons, parrots, raccoons, ferrets, rats, salamanders, honeybees,
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226. monkeys and apes.
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227. Have all been seen to count, add and subtract.
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228. Rhesus monkeys - funny you should mention them,
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229. at Columbia University, have shown they can arrange up to nine objects in the correct numerical sequence.
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230. It's always rhesus monkeys. Do you not feel sorry for them?
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231. - They're always saying, oh, let's teach them to speak French, or...
- Yeah, you're right.
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232. Crows and parrots can count up to five or six.
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233. Cormorants can count up to seven. Now how do you know that?
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234. They take seven fish back to the nest.
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235. - Not quite that.
- Something like that.
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236. Actually, Chinese fishermen have trained them to catch fish for them.
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237. And what they do is they put a ring round their throat,
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238. so that they can't swallow fish themselves.
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239. So they catch the fish, but dump them on the deck of the boat.
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240. And how they've trained them is, that once they get past seven, on
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241. the eighth they get rid of the ring and the cormorant can catch its own.
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242. I love that, when they make up their own mind.
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243. There used to be a bear at Regent's Park Zoo in the 1920s that
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244. was fed biscuits by the general public.
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245. And on Mondays it was half price and so they got a lot more biscuits.
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246. And so on Tuesdays the bear used to take day the off.
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247. Yes, that's it.
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248. He counted days, or she, counted days - ursine calendar.
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249. It's brilliant.
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250. But I suppose it's when in need, like you wouldn't be needing
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251. to count up stuff if you're a bear, like, you're not...
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252. But sometimes you'll see, maybe they need to count how many kids they have.
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253. Yes, yeah.
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254. And they can tell if one of them has gone missing.
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255. Although ducks are rubbish at that, they are. I lived on a house boat for many, many years,
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256. and we were forever trying to get baby ducks to join back up
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257. with mother, who'd just gone off.
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258. She was off down to Battersea.
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259. Sandi, loads of your stories of what you do for entertainment are like,
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260. we used to try and convince ducks to hang out with each other...
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261. I suffer from a fatal condition, Aisling,
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262. which is posh voice, no money.
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263. That sounds absolutely awful, I would hate to have that.
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264. Anyway, now, what do moon-starers do,
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265. and why might they call themselves that?
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266. Well, the clue would appear to be in the question.
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267. Yeah.
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268. It's too obvious, I'd say they watch bare arses all the time.
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269. - Yeah.
- Well, moon-starers is an anagram of astronomers.
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270. Yay! Points to you.
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271. - Good work!
- That was damn fast.
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272. It's not an anagram, it's an aptagram. Sorry.
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273. - Oh!
- You're right, yeah.
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274. I'll never win, Sandi Toksvig, never!
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275. What's an aptagram, Sandi?
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276. An aptagram is an anagram that, where the word
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277. means roughly the same.
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278. Like Apple Macintosh and laptop machines.
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279. Yeah. Semolina - is no meal.
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280. Yeah.
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281. Yes, moon-starer is an anagram of astronomer.
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282. In what time in history was that a relevant thing?
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283. The idea of anagrams and astronomers?
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284. Well, it must have been around the time of Galileo, surely.
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285. It was indeed, the early 17th century.
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286. But he wouldn't have spoken English,
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287. so why would he have changed his name to moon-starer?
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288. Yeah, this is an example of an anagram. He...
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289. Oh!
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290. He didn't use English anagrams, he used..?
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291. Gree... Latin.
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292. Latin, very good. There he is.
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293. Why would they have used ars magna, great art, in that?
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294. - Oh, and that's moon is the ars.
- And ars magna is?
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295. - And then magna is...
- Is an anagram of anagrams.
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296. Oh.
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297. - So, yes. But anyway, why...
- Well, because the Church took a dim view of...
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298. Not because of the Church, although the Church did take a dim view of what he did.
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299. I like his very casual approach to the telescope.
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300. - He's just sort of...
- Yeah.
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301. Now I'm going to have a cigarette and now I'm going to look again.
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302. Was it just to make the whole thing more fun?
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303. If only it was that.
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304. In fact, even in his day, there was scientific rivalry.
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305. So if you discovered something
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306. and you wanted to tell a friend about it and you didn't want
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307. anyone else to intercept the news, you gave it in anagram form.
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308. Oh, it's like codes at school.
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309. Yes, it is. Exactly that, yeah.
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310. Do you think they ever used to like rub around the telescope with
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311. ink and then run away and then he'll go, "Oh, what's that?
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312. "Oh, no, my eye! Oh, that's trickery."
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313. Who was his great rival and friend?
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314. Is it an anagram?
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315. I'm going to say Copernicus.
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316. No, no, it wasn't Copernicus. It was Kepler.
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317. And he sent him an anagram
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318. because he had discovered the rings of Saturn in 1610.
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319. No, not Saturn, that's Uranus!
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320. Oh, yeah. Sorry, I'm laughing at the wrong one.
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321. - It's not the right planet, but it's still funny.
- I knew one of them was funny.
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322. And he sent Kepler this.
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323. - Oh, my!
- Ah, "smaismrm..."
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324. - Oh. Yeah.
- Yes.
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325. - "Nugttauriras..."
- Great.
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326. Stick that where the sun don't shine.
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327. - It's pretty obvious what he's putting there.
- Yeah.
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328. It's a Latin phrase, it actually is an anagram...
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329. I have discovered the rings of Saturn.
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330. Yes, it is that. Altissimum planetam tergeminum observavi.
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331. - OK.
- "I have observed the highest planet to be triplets."
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332. - Seen it.
- I know.
- Does he mean he's seen the moons of it, or something? What does he mean by triplets?
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333. He thought they were moons, but in fact we now know them to be rings.
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334. That must have been so exciting. Do you not think?
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335. It must have been so thrilling, just that one moment
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336. when that suddenly has happened and nobody else has seen it.
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337. I think it's quite clever, but they worked out they're planets
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338. because they were moving across the sky and the stars weren't.
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339. I think it was just the first thing that made them think something was afoot.
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340. - Oh, I know, and that's what...
- That one's moved. Why has that star moved?
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341. - It's not a star, it's Jupiter.
- Yeah.
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342. - And planet is from the Greek for wanderer, it means a wanderer.
- Oh.
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343. They do this thing, I don't know if they're still doing it,
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344. but they did it for a long time, once a month in Reykjavik,
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345. the government would turn out all the street lighting
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346. and there would be a lecture on the public radio about the stars.
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347. - And people would go outside.
- Oh, brilliant.
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348. And they got rid of all the ambient light and you could look up and listen to the lecture
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349. - about what you were looking at. Do you not think that would be a wonderful thing?
- That is brilliant.
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350. - Yeah.
- Yeah, I love that.
- But in terms of anagrams, this isn't an anagram, it's actually
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351. a limerick composed by someone, which I invite you to recite to me.
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352. See if you can.
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353. Uh?
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354. Yes. That's a shock, isn't it?
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355. - Yes.
- And you can do it.
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356. - OK. OK.
- Right.
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357. You have to ask yourself what these number are, in fact.
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358. - They have some other...
- A dozen and 12 dozen.
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359. Ah! Yeah, 12, but 144 is also called a..?
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360. A gross.
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361. So a dozen, a gross, a score,
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362. plus three times the square root of four... SUSAN LAUGHS HYSTERICALLY
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363. .. divided by seven. You're all right, you're doing well.
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364. Plus five.
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365. Well, calm down. I might have to slap you.
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366. Yes!
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367. Are you all right?
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368. The episode of QI where Stephen just slaps me.
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369. So say it again as a limerick.
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370. - You can do it now.
- OK. Yes, yes.
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371. - Go on.
- Go on, then Susan.
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372. A dozen, a gross and a score,
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373. plus three times the square root of four,
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374. divided by seven plus five times 11
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375. equals nine squared plus not a bit more.
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376. There you are. Well done.
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377. It was a guy called Leigh Mercer who came up with that.
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378. And it's rather good. 12 plus one equals, 11 plus two?
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379. Yes. It does.
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380. Yeah, but in what other ways does 12 plus one equals 11 plus two?
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381. Oh, is it an anagram, then?
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382. They're anagrams of each other.
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383. "Twelve plus one", written out, is an anagram of "eleven plus two".
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384. Eleven plus two.
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385. Wow, you really have had too much time on your hands.
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386. These were worked out by Nelson Mandela on Robben Island.
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387. I think they're rather fabulous, so there.
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388. - They are rather. They're marvellous.
- All right, OK.
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389. Now, what's the biggest mistake anyone's ever made with a pencil?
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390. Hmm.
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391. Oh, I say.
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392. Oh, now, it's got to be a miscalculation or something.
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393. Well, ah, you'd... "Ah, aah..."
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394. "Yeah. Aah..."
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395. "Aah, aah, now, now..."
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396. - Lead poisoning? Sucking on the lead?
- "Steady."
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397. It's not a, it's not a historical miscalculation?
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398. No, it's astonishing.
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399. It took place in New York... HE GRUNTS LOUDLY
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400. ..in the '90s, I think it was.
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401. - I'll tell you exactly...
- All right, Stephen?
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402. Is that the pencil there?
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403. Yeah. Just testing...
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404. Were you miscalculating with a pencil there, sir?
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405. I eased it in.
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406. I eased it in and it was all fine.
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407. Chapter four, I eased it in and it was all fine.
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408. In 1998, there was a problem with pencils. "Problem with pencils."
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409. "Problem with pencils."
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410. "A pencil problem," basically, yeah.
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411. There's no reason for you to guess what it was.
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412. It was pencils given to children.
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413. Ah, drugs. Was it the one...
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414. Time for drugs!
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415. I know what it was they printed, for children,
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416. pencils that said "do not use drugs" on them,
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417. and when they sharpened them, eventually it said "use drugs."
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418. - Oh, you've dropped one.
- Ah.
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419. - You're right.
- Very good, very good.
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420. - Here they are.
- That's "hil-ah-rious".
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421. On, they say here, "Too cool to do drugs."
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422. You shave it and it goes, "cool to do drugs."
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423. "Cool to do drugs."
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424. And then you shave it again and it goes, "do drugs."
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425. - Yes!
- Do drugs.
- There you are.
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426. It was a bit of a mistake,
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427. but well done, Sandi. So, other mistakes include, in 1945,
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428. the Arkansas legislature accidentally repealed all their laws at once.
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429. With a pencil?
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430. No, they had an act with the words - "All laws and parts of laws,
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431. "and particularly Act 33 of the Acts of 1941, are hereby repealed."
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432. They just meant the particular one, but it legally meant all their laws.
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433. And then in 2003, the German agency responsible for TV licences
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434. sent a series of reminders to St Walpurga, to pay her licence fee.
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435. She died in 777.
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436. Never having paid for her licence!
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437. No. It didn't stop them asking.
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438. And then in the Australian Morning Bulletin,
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439. which of course is called The Bully,
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440. they said there was an error
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441. printed in a story titled Pigs Float Down The Dawson, on page
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442. 11 of yesterday's Bully, the story, by reporter Daniel Burdon, said
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443. that "more than 30,000 pigs were floating down the Dawson River."
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444. Actually, what the owner of the piggery said was,
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445. that "30 sows and pigs".
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446. "We'd like to apologise for the error."
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447. So, now, why did a failure to sell mirrors
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448. massively improve modern media?
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449. Because you can't put a mirror on a selfie stick.
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450. Is that it?
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451. Well, selfies, oddly enough, are rather close to it.
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452. - A medieval version of selfies, at least.
- Medieval?
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453. We're going back to the mid-15th century.
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454. - People used to go on..?
- Pilgrimages.
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455. Pilgrimages.
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456. And a pilgrimage was a visit to a holy place, where there would be...
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457. Sandwiches.
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458. There would be sandwiches, but what were you going to see?
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459. - Some kind of shrine or something.
- Shrine, a shrine, relics.
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460. - Shrine. Oh, relics.
- Relics.
- I love a good relic.
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461. Bones, material, bits of beard, bits of body,
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462. bits of the true cross, bits of all kinds of stuff.
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463. - Porn.
- Yeah.
- And they were so popular that you might go there
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464. and you couldn't even get close to it.
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465. So you'd hold up a selfie stick, as it were.
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466. It wouldn't be a selfie stick.
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467. It would be a box with a lid and the lid was a mirror.
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468. And the mirror would see the relic.
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469. And the beams and the rays would hit the mirror
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470. and go down into the box and you'd close the box and you'd go home
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471. and it contained the images, in your head at least, of the holy relics.
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472. - Did it, really?
- Seriously, one of the best pieces
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473. - of medieval marketing I've ever heard.
- Yeah.
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474. Yes. And this particular man was making mirrors.
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475. And he made these mirrors for Aachen,
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476. and Aachen had Mary's robe from the night Jesus was born.
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477. It had Jesus's swaddling clothes.
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478. It had the cloth in which John the Baptist's head was wrapped,
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479. after he was decapitated.
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480. The loincloth Jesus wore on the cross.
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481. So this person we're talking about made mirrors for pilgrims to
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482. go to Aachen, but unfortunately he didn't sell any.
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483. So he went back to his home town of Mainz,
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484. and in 1450, he produced something that changed the world forever.
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485. A print, a stamp, a print version, Stephen, of what they'd see in...
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486. - Print...
- And it was stamped.
- Postcards.
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487. No, Sandi, that's kind of my idea. No.
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488. - Souvenir mugs. - No.
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489. He created printing. He created the printed word.
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490. - Johan Gutenberg.
- Thank you, audience.
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491. He's Johannes Gutenberg. In 1450, he created the Gutenberg Bible,
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492. and then other books he created.
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493. - Oh, yes.
- It changed the world totally.
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494. But unfortunately, the mistake was he went to basically
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495. a kind of Dragons' Den, who funded him.
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496. He took a wine press,
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497. he converted the wine press into a letter press, to create books.
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498. And then he had a Duncan Bannatyne character, "I'm out. Out."
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499. - But his investors...
- "Don't like it, never take off, I liked your mirrors better.
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500. - "No. I'm out."
- Well, they, unfortunately they took all the money, the investors,
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501. the dragons took all the money. He died destitute in 1468. Very sad.
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502. The most influential figure of his age, in those terms.
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503. One of the first printers in Britain was called Wynkyn de Worde.
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504. - Yes, he was.
- Don't you think that's so delightful?
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505. - There's a society, a Wynkyn society.
- Wynkyn society, yeah.
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506. And then, of course, Caxton was the other great one.
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507. But, yeah.
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508. Before he invented the printing press,
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509. Gutenberg was a failed mirror-maker.
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510. And so we enter the mad world of mangled misconceptions that we
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511. call General Ignorance.
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512. And, given the show's theme,
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513. we've even spent a bit of money on a mathematical machine.
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514. Ooh!
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515. Yeah, you'll be impressed with that.
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516. Ooh.
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517. It looks like a happy face that's taken a lot of drugs.
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518. - It does a bit, doesn't it?
- Yeah.
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519. - It's lovely.
- But what is it, Stephen?
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520. Well, I just want to know who first proved the theorem
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521. that this model demonstrates.
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522. - Pythagoras.
- Pythagoras.
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523. Oh!
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524. My grandfather, who was from Hungary,
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525. always pronounced it "Peeta-goras."
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526. "So that at school doing the mathematics,
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527. "are you studying Peeta-goras?"
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528. And I thought this man, Peter Goras, who was Peter?
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529. No, it wasn't Peter Goras who first proved it.
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530. - Oh.
- What is it? The theorem that needs to be discussed here?
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531. A squared equals B squared plus C squared.
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532. - Yeah, yeah, it's...
- The sum of the two, the squared of two smaller sides.
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533. The sum on the two squares is equal to the sum on the hypotenuse, exactly.
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534. Yeah, that big one should go into the other two.
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535. So you can see here, the yellow, that's the triangle.
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536. These are its two sides.
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537. And these are the squares of the two sides,
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538. they are literally geometrically expressed as squares,
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539. rather than just mathematically, as if that was, say, X,
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540. it's just not X squared, but it is literally the square, there.
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541. And there's Y squared.
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542. And it's supposedly equal to Z squared, which is
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543. the longest side, the hypotenuse.
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544. Because here's the right angle, here.
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545. These are not right angles, obviously.
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546. And there's that. How can we show they're equal?
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547. Well, there are all kinds of ways, but here's one way.
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548. Drumroll, please.
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549. Oh, yes.
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550. All right, let's go.
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551. Ooh.
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552. Oh, that's very clever.
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553. There it goes, pouring into the first square.
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554. - Wow!
- Expensive.
- Is it going to fill it up?
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555. - Wow.
- Shut the front door!
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556. - Oh, Well, it definitely equals X squared.
- Yes.
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557. Does it equal Y squared as well?
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558. I need to go to the toilet.
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559. There's Y squared, it's filling up, it's filling up,
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560. it's filling up, it's full. And there it is.
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561. Hurray!
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562. Isn't that satisfactory?
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563. Highly satisfactory.
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564. It's the first theorem most people learn at school.
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565. It's Pythagoras's theorem by name,
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566. but it wasn't, it was used many, many years before him - people used
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567. it to build buildings and Euclid demonstrated it before him.
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568. But we give it the name of Pythagoras.
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569. Who is Euclid, then? He was even before?
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570. - He's the father of mathematics.
- Euclid?
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571. Before him, nothing.
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572. The greatest. Yeah, well done to Euclid, we love Euclid.
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573. So, let's take this model away. Let's hear it for him.
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574. So, the time has come to tally-up the scores.
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575. Oh, my actual, oh, my actual.
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576. So, in first place, with a magnificent two points,
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577. it's Aisling Bee!
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578. Oh!
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579. And with an earth-shattering zero, it's Sandi Toksvig.
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580. A more than respectable minus six, Susan Calman.
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581. And on his terms, really quite handsome, minus 43,
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582. Alan Davies.
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583. So, it's goodnight from Susan, Sandi, Aisling, Alan and me.
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584. And I'll leave you with this dark observation from Joseph Stalin.
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585. My favourite dictator.
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586. "The people who cast the votes decide nothing.
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587. "The people who count the votes decide everything." Goodnight.
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