Group theory, abstraction, and the 196,883-dimensional monster by 3Blue1Brown (2020)
Source. Too basic, starts motivating groups themselves, therefore does not give anything new or rare. Articles by others on the same topic
The Monster group, denoted as \( \mathbb{M} \) or sometimes \( \text{Mon} \), is the largest of the 26 sporadic simple groups in group theory, a branch of mathematics that studies algebraic structures known as groups. It was first discovered by Robert Griess in 1982 and has a rich structure that connects various areas of mathematics, including number theory, geometry, and mathematical physics.