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Want facts and want them fast? Our Maths in a minute series explores key mathematical concepts in just a few words.
What do chocolate and mayonnaise have in common? It's maths! Find out how in this podcast featuring engineer Valerie Pinfield.
Is it possible to write unique music with the limited quantity of notes and chords available? We ask musician Oli Freke!
How can maths help to understand the Southern Ocean, a vital component of the Earth's climate system?
Was the mathematical modelling projecting the course of the pandemic too pessimistic, or were the projections justified? Matt Keeling tells our colleagues from SBIDER about the COVID models that fed into public policy.
PhD student Daniel Kreuter tells us about his work on the BloodCounts! project, which uses maths to make optimal use of the billions of blood tests performed every year around the globe.
The one thing that no proponent of the KCA has ever provided is the cause of the first event. Now you might reply - this was the First Causer (aka the Personal Creator or whatever name you want to use). But this refers to the causer not the cause. So you need to identify what the First Causer did first. The problem that you face is that the First Causer exists unchanging. And to do something requires change. But this is impossible for something that is unchanging. But then you can re-define some words to provide a way out of this, just as other proponents have done...