Math magic tricks are an entertaining and effective way to develop mathematical skills. These tricks include multiplying by 6, using divisibility rules, and simple number prediction. To set up a trick, ask a friend to think of a number between 0 and 9, then tell them to double the number and add 5 to the new number. These tricks can be used to entertain and enhance logical thinking skills.
Some of the best math magic tricks include multiplying by 6, using the 11 rule, and approximating the square roots of two digit numbers. To perform the “9” multiplication table, place both hands in front of you with fingers and thumbs extended. To multiply 9 by a number, place both hands in front of you with fingers and thumbs extended.
These tricks can be used to impress friends and make them fall in love with the subject of numbers. By learning these tricks, you can enhance your logical thinking skills and make math more enjoyable for your friends. By incorporating these tricks into your routine, you can create a fun and engaging learning experience for your friends.
📹 Read Anyone’s Mind With This EASY Math Trick
In this video, I show you an easy Math trick that you can use to read anyone’s mind! All that you have to do is make them choose a …
📹 Math Magic
MUSIC in this episode is from: Jake Chudnow: https://www.youtube.com/user/jakechudnow zach mccoy: …
To this day, my favorite card trick is a math trick my uncle showed me. It involves dividing the deck in half, memorizing the 18th card in one half and then adding the value of cards (1-10) from the other deck to determine how many cards you deal off the top of a combined deck to get to the 18th card. It was wild to perform as an 8 year old when I couldn’t understand the math behind it.
Math kind of is magic. Millions of people watch you on (roughly) credit-card sized objects because humanity has discovered useful structures in the number line. Getting into pure math is a process in slowly realizing that what once felt like an entirely human construct is actually an exploration of an existing architecture
“Take one step” Ok “Wait one billion years” Well damn, ok “Repeat until you cycle the Earth” Wow “Collect a drop of water every time you pass the starting point until the Pacific is drained” Holy crap “Place a piece of paper down and refill the ocean. Continue until you reach the Sun” Well f*ck me “You haven’t even started” WHAT THE FU
18:42 why does the face he makes right before he says “possible person” and right after “most annoying” make me really happy and feel like he’s actually talking to a person and not talking to the lifeless camera? It almost looks like he’s remembering someone annoying in his life, whom he really likes.
Everything is math. The likes, the views of this article are math. Seconds,minutes, hours, days are math. The program or the machine that runs YouTube and The Internet is a math. Your House is math. Your smartphone is math. Your breakfast is math. Your wife/girlfriend is math. Your car is math. Your PC is math. This comment is math. The Cosmos is math. Your entire life will be/is MATH. 1+1 isn’t equal 2 but your LIFE.
Start a timer with 52! Seconds. Then you watch all 600 episodes of the simpsons without skipping the commercials. After doing that you play one minuet of the first episode of the simpsons. You watch all simpsons again and play another minuet of the episode. You repeat this until you have finished the first episode. ( you have been perusal simpsons for a year strait now. You watch every simpsons again, then watch a minuet of the second episode. Once you’ve finished it you move on to the third episode and eventually you do this through all 600 episodes. Do this a billion more times. Then you take out one electron’s worth of mass from the earth. You do the whole Simpson thing then remove another electron. Eventually there is no more earth. You reform earth, but an inch closer to the sun. You do the whole simpsons earth thing again and reform earth another inch closer to the sun. Once the earth touches the sun your counter is at ~ 0.
Okay, this is really weird. The first time he didn’t pick any of my cards so I became skeptical but, being of a scientific mind, I decided to double check my results. So I re-watch the trick, pick new cards and BOOM .. he gets all my cards. I’m thinking “whoa…” but unsure if it was just some strange coincidence so I try it again and he gets my cards! So, what is going on here, can anyone explain? How is he getting them right every single time? Ciao.
This is a great article. I use a version of the demonstrated “Will The Cards Match” trick shown at 9:55. I note that at 9:40, in his prelude to that trick, Vsauce’s statement “As long as the total number of swaps adds up to the pack total minus 1, we’ll have matching pairs…” could be generalized to “{For the number of cards, n, currently in a pack,} as long as the total number of swaps {mod n} adds up to the pack total minus 1, we’ll have matching pairs…” For example, in the first round where there are n=5 cards in each pack, the number of swaps, X, could be 4, as demonstrated with the word “Will”, because the requirement is X mod n = n – 1 = 4 and we have 4 mod 5 = 4, which is correct. Possible numbers of swaps for the first round are therefore X = 4, 4+5= 9, 9+5=14, 14+5=19, etc, as all of those numbers mod 5 are congruent to 4. This fact makes it possible to customize a message which is “shuffled” into the packets. The word “Cards” has 5 letters and is used in the round where there are n=3 cards left per pack. As required for this case where n = 3, X mod n = n – 1 = 2. We have 5 mod 3 = 2, which is correct, so the number of swaps could be X= 5, 5+4=9, 9+4=13, etc. The point is that “the pack total minus 1” sets a lower bound for the number of swaps in a given round, with larger numbers of swaps being constrained by X mod n = n -1 . See this great Numberphile Youtube website article for more explanation youtube.com/watch?v=l9dXo5f3zDc!
This is my goodbye. Clearly Michael believed that the Youtube media has gone off the rails(probably arguing with the 75% cut off view money) and so he became to add so much fillers, doing long articles once a month(as he realizes a month is the time where articles usually peak their views), while doing half the work he did before(when he used to post 4 articles per month). To make things worst he became recycling themes and, instead of producing inspiring new insights about mixed topics, he became to just copy and paste, gluing everything with the worst glue you can find. The articles quickly became boring over the last year, instead of inspiring and giving you a big sense of awe, of surprising facts that went unnoticed even you clearly thought you knew about those things. articles have become fillers within itself, counting cards, tasks, whatever. What a bad way to go uh Michael. Your website, just like minutephysics, were bright stars in this youtube realm, back in the day. But apparently you were just supernovas, as you dimmed and died quickly. I look at Derek and Veritasium and I see a man that has accomplished his goal with tremendous glory. He’s now, like most stars that start small. The sole shining star of a time that I knew youtube could make the difference for the world(and It eventually did, with Scishow and CrashCourse, and Veritasium). But you’ve choose to give up Michael, much like CGP Grey. I thought you two could be the new “internet Aristotles” but clearly your real life has a bigger meaning.
Please stop making articles on Math, your last few articles were all about Math, Math is stupid, make articles on Earth, or the Sun, or interesting topics like Human Psychology, Myths, Coincidences stop making every article on Math, Math is not something every one can understand no matter how well you explain. I only subscribed to this website because you used to cover a broad range of topics, now days, its all about Mathematics and Mathematics, its getting very old very fast Please Michael, listen to the viwer