The stipend is 5k per month (it was 3k per month, idk when it increased, but it did) and there is also a 5k contingency grant per year (this adds up to 45k per year, since they only pay you for 8 months). You’re not meant live off of the stipend lmao. It’s a fucking stipend, not a salary. Also consider that the course is entirely fucking free. Considering all this, 45k per year (for doing nothing but studying) is EXTREMELY generous. As of now, ISI has produced most of the mathematicians from India (20th century onwards). Sure, the B. Stat alumni is better, but why on earth would that be a bad thing for the university lmao? If anything, it speaks to the excellence of the university. Also, the B. Math course is only 24 years olds so far, while the B. Stat course is way older. This explains why most of the notable alumni from ISI are from the B. Stat course. Wait a few more years and you’ll see excellent alumni from B. Math too. Also, B. Math is offered only at Bangalore. The campus isn’t great there either, but it doesn’t matter in the long run. Cope harder dawg, you can’t deny that there is no better place to study pure math at the undergraduate level in India other than ISI/CMI.
@@nagamanikomarla5376 in India, probably, but the bar is non existent, so. For a country of a billion the actual in country output is nothing. The point is for sake of B math, it's not worth the effort in any reasonable sense. But if you want to take pride in it, I'm not stopping you buddy
@@buraianmath sure, it may not be worth the effort. Is that reason enough to shit on it though? Why do you hate isi so much lmaooo? You called it worthless, which it surely isn’t. Also, SR Varadhan is a mathematician. He’s also the only Asian so far to have won the Abel prize.
@@nagamanikomarla5376 I met one master student here who did bachelor in cmi. One of the most studious guy I know. Was able to answer questions offhand at bachelors level which other master students can't
@@nagamanikomarla5376 I mean college itself okay, but putting getting in here as first option for any mathematics interested is a very bad idea. It's simply not worth the effort. But then again lack of many others alternatives make it the only being worth the effort trivially vacously
I can say that it is, at the very least, culturally inherited. In The caste system( social hierachy system of India), to be of the highest caste would mean that one is born into a family whose goals were of acquiring knowledge, i.e a brahmin. Maybe also there are more pragmatic reaaons. Education is archetypically seen as a way to escape poverty.
This video feels like a cope. Everyone knows the real reasons are to get more money, mooch off german taxpayers, get away from indians and gawk at wh1te w0mmenz
Well, I mean, wouldnt any person in The world want more money? And, the whole german economy is built with the presumption that all people should be taken care of.
If it leads to such a good thing like creating children, I don't really call it perverse. My problem is when the church uses as a tool to get you go to church. In the church (in USA) missionaries recruit men for boyfriends, so they attend the church, that dynamic is embedded within the church. I can't say it's not effective. I would just rather reflect on the the seminal principle which created the laws of physics, and everything in a personal communion with him, and church is supposed to be collective communion in a more passionate way, not leading or baiting with nutsack and temptation. Can't say it isn't effective.
I suppose my issue is that, in the circles of people who do stuff like this, they pretend they virtue signal to rest of the population like theyre better than them, but at the end of the day are driven by the same animalistic desires that any human being on this planet is led by.
People outhere are trippin and downright hating. Iam fully German born and raised and I have never heard that German people dislike Indians let alone that they are creepy. people like him who go to a different country learning a language to study here are more than welcome to all Germans because it’s mathematics and other sciences that push this country forward economically so all people sayin that there are racist attitudes towards hardworking Indian people people of any race at all are just wrong. Don’t let negative shit from people that have no clue drag you done do your thing and study mathematics
Indian people are seen as unattractive, undesirable and creepy in most countries, especially western countries. you will never bee happy in germany next to white and white-looking people. After your studies are done, just go back to your country. Its just a advice.
I find it rich being told this by someone who seems to be a Turk. Not that I have anything against people from Türkei, but rather that simple viewing of the german media would show that the stereotypes and sentiments exist mostly for those of middle eastern background. Especially those who identify with a religion which is all so popular in your country. Tell me, you've ever seen an Indian in anyone of those refugee documentary videos that come so often in DW? I've not.
@@buraianmath It is indeed true, I am a turk. And because I am a turk I know how hard it can be for people of southern european or middle eastern descent in germany. Even turks, balkanic people and middle eastern people struggle in germany, so you as a indian wont stand a chance. Its not about refugees. You will never seen as german.
@@tulparkultigintengrikut8440 maybe Germans of lower income groups are like that but the ones who are in academics, especially those I meet at uni are very nice.
Hello! New subscriber here. RU-vid seems to have recommended your channel after I was looking around for some math-related stuff. I just wanted to say, that as an English speaker with a middling knowledge of German AND and an interest in math, I'm really enjoying your videos. Greetings from the USA!
@@buraianmath Yes, but I had to learn most of my German in school. My German ancestors arrived in the US in the mid 1800's and no one in my family really speaks the language anymore, other than a few words and phrases which have somehow survived. I'd really be interested in hearing more about your background, too. I've only watched a handful of your videos, but if you've already talked about it and you have any specific video recommendations, I'd be happy to check them out!
The problem: prove that if a map from the circle to a topological space is homotopic to constant map, then there must exist a continuous extension of said function into the disc
Interestingly Chennai mathematical institute has a similar portion altho they do stone cech compactification instead of alexandroff. However, I really believe that the problems and expectation of depth of knowledge in topics here is much higher than in India
Meh, I reckon kids these days learn most of the stuff themselves, even learning grad level stuff in undergrad years. It is the same in Germany I suppose.
As a Student taking that course right now it’s by far the hardest course I’ve ever taken. Most students taking that course are in there 3-4 th semester some even in there second also about half of the people initially starting of the course dropped it after the first sheet. Since Iam not a Prodigy like the others attending that course is freakishly time consuming and very exhausting. The good thing is if you make it through it’s puts you on a completely different map like you then posses the ability to get into various areas of topology already being used to how hard it is.