Is math something humans invent—or something we discover? And why does it describe the universe so uncannily well?
In this episode of Uncommon Knowledge, Peter Robinson sits down with mathematicians David Berlinski, Sergiu Klainerman, and Stephen Meyer to explore one of the deepest mysteries in science and philosophy: the reality of mathematics.





Throughout college (and seminary, as well), my summer job was ushering in the movie theater. Sometimes it was my second job, sometimes it was my only job. Sure, it was only minimum wage, but when I calculated the free movies for myself, family, and friends, I was making a decent wage. And when you threw in the free sodas — and especially the free popcorn — I was definitely in the upper brackets. 




I’m sure many of you remember the story, from November 2025, of the football (when I say “football” in this post, I mean “soccer”) match between Aston Villa and Maccabi Tel Aviv, held at Villa Park in the city of my birth, Birmingham, West Midlands, UK. The city where the “bin men” have been on strike since January 2025, and where the garbage has been piling up in the streets, and the rats have been running free, ever since. Birmingham. Home of the Lunar Society (which comprised, among others, eminent Victorians such as Matthew Boulton, James Watt, Josiah Wedgwood, Joseph Priestley and Erasmus Darwin) and the Arts and Crafts movement led by city native Edward Burne-Jones and his Oxford friend William Morris. A beautiful and once resurgent city (Britain’s second-largest) with more canals than Venice, whose city council declared itself bankrupt in September of 2023, and which is currently selling off assets hand-over-fist, among ongoing debate as to whether or not the cry of bankruptcy was justified, or simply politically expedient in the face of insurmountable DEI “pay equality” demands and spiraling out-of-control costs for its new city-wide IT system.
