A DLDR Ode to Euler: Why I Think the Bridges Problem Is Self-Evident, Ties Into Clairaut's Theorem, Physics, and "Even" AI, Law, And Spirituality
Today's DRLR post is a lengthy ode to Euler, the Bridges problem, and women in math and physics. I am a fan of the science magazine Quanta Magazine , and recently I heard a podcast with an amazing woman mathematician named Maria Chudnovsky of Princeton (I mention her gender because women are really underrepresented in math and in STEM, and women are discouraged from doing math and pushed out) whose career is dedicated to the study of “graph theory.” Graph theory emerged from a Russian town located on an island where the townspeople would take weekend strolls to see if they could cross seven bridges and not cross any bridge twice. Now, when I first answered, I knew nothing about the layout of the town, or where the bridges are located, but apparently the math supergenius Euler thought (initially) this problem was silly. So did I. In fact, the solution came to me in about two seconds: the numbe...