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Masha Gessen

Perfect Rigour

In 2006, an eccentric Russian mathematician named Grigori Perelman solved one of the world's greatest intellectual puzzles. The Poincare conjecture is an extremely complex topological problem that had eluded the best minds for over a century. In 2000, the Clay Institute in Boston named it one of seven great unsolved mathematical problems, and promised a million dollars to anyone who could find a solution. Perelman was awarded the prize this year — and declined the money. Journalist Masha Gessen was determined to find out why. Drawing on interviews with Perelman's teachers, classmates, coaches, teammates, and colleagues in Russia and the US — and informed by her own background as a math whiz raised in Russia — she set out to uncover the nature of Perelman's astonishing abilities. In telling his story, Masha Gessen has constructed a gripping and tragic tale that sheds rare light on the unique burden of genius.
290 nyomtatott oldalak
A szerzői jog tulajdonosa
Bookwire
Első kiadás
2011
Kiadás éve
2011
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Idézetek

  • Julia Makarovaidézett8 évvel ezelőtt
    ” Kolmogorov believed that a mathematician who aspired to greatness had to be well versed in music, the visual arts, and poetry, and—no less important—he had to be sound of body
  • nayabooksidézett4 évvel ezelőtt
    Wrote Mikhail Berg: “Many of us would have wanted to take the school with us after graduation, like a turtle’s armor, because we could feel comfortable only within the confines of its precise and logically understandable rules.”
  • Margarita Minasyanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    Why, I pleaded, was the king of Spain undeserving of the honor of hanging a medal around Perelman’s neck?
    “Who the hell are kings?” Gromov was really cranked up now. “Kings are the same kind of crap as communists. Why should a king give a mathematician his prize? Who is he? He is nothing. From a mathematician’s point of view, he is nothing.

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