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How high can you count on your fingers? (Spoiler: much higher than 10) - James Tanton

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    How high can you count on your fingers?
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    It seems like a question
    with an obvious answer.
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    After all, most of us have ten fingers,
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    or to be more precise,
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    eight fingers and two thumbs.
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    This gives us a total of ten digits
    on our two hands,
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    which we use to count to ten.
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    It's no coincidence that the ten symbols
    we use in our modern numbering system
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    are called digits as well.
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    But that's not the only way to count.
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    In some places, it's customary to
    go up to twelve on just one hand.
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    How?
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    Well, each finger is divided
    into three sections,
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    and we have a natural pointer
    to indicate each one, the thumb.
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    That gives us an easy to way to count
    to twelve on one hand.
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    And if we want to count higher,
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    we can use the digits on our other hand to
    keep track of each time we get to twelve,
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    up to five groups of twelve, or 60.
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    Better yet, let's use the sections
    on the second hand
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    to count twelve groups of twelve,
    up to 144.
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    That's a pretty big improvement,
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    but we can go higher by finding more
    countable parts on each hand.
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    For example, each finger
    has three sections and three creases
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    for a total of six things to count.
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    Now we're up to 24 on each hand,
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    and using our other hand to mark
    groups of 24
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    gets us all the way to 576.
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    Can we go any higher?
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    It looks like we've reached the limit
    of how many different finger parts
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    we can count with any precision.
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    So let's think of something different.
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    One of our greatest
    mathematical inventions
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    is the system of positional notation,
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    where the placement of symbols allows
    for different magnitudes of value,
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    as in the number 999.
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    Even though the same symbol is used
    three times,
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    each position indicates a different
    order of magnitude.
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    So we can use positional value on
    our fingers to beat our previous record.
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    Let's forget about finger sections
    for a moment
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    and look at the simplest case of having
    just two options per finger,
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    up and down.
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    This won't allow us to represent
    powers of ten,
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    but it's perfect for the counting system
    that uses powers of two,
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    otherwise known as binary.
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    In binary, each position has double
    the value of the previous one,
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    so we can assign
    our fingers values of one,
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    two,
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    four,
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    eight,
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    all the way up to 512.
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    And any positive integer,
    up to a certain limit,
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    can be expressed
    as a sum of these numbers.
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    For example, the number seven
    is 4+2+1.
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    so we can represent it by having
    just these three fingers raised.
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    Meanwhile, 250 is 128+64+32+16+8+2.
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    How high an we go now?
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    That would be the number with all ten
    fingers raised, or 1,023.
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    Is it possible to go even higher?
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    It depends on how dexterous you feel.
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    If you can bend each finger just halfway,
    that gives us three different states -
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    down,
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    half bent,
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    and raised.
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    Now, we can count using
    a base-three positional system,
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    up to 59,048.
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    And if you can bend your fingers
    into four different states or more,
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    you can get even higher.
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    That limit is up to you,
    and your own flexibility and ingenuity.
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    Even with our fingers in just two
    possible states,
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    we're already working pretty efficiently.
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    In fact, our computers are based
    on the same principle.
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    Each microchip consists of tiny
    electrical switches
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    that can be either on or off,
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    meaning that base-two is the default way
    they represent numbers.
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    And just as we can use this system to
    count passed 1,000 using only our fingers,
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    computers can perform billions
    of operations
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    just by counting off ones and zeroes.
Title:
How high can you count on your fingers? (Spoiler: much higher than 10) - James Tanton
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:30

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