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posted by on Thursday June 08 2017, @04:27PM   Printer-friendly
from the bonus dept.

[...] Paul Erdős, became perhaps the most notorious mathematician of the 20th century. Erdős spent nearly his entire life crashing on other mathematicians' couches and subsisting on the small sums he received for giving talks at universities around the world. He also had a fondness for devising math problems and offering bounties to anyone who could solve them.

"Over the years it was kind of a habit he had to say, 'Here's a nice problem, I thought about it for a while, and I don't see how to solve it. Maybe it's a $25 problem or possibly a $100 problem,'" said Ronald Graham, a mathematician at the University of California, San Diego, and a longtime friend of Erdős's.

In offering small prizes, Erdős was continuing a tradition that flourished in Poland in the early 20th century in cafés where young mathematicians gathered to match wits and push against the frontiers of mathematics.

[...] In that culture, it was also common for mathematicians to back a newly posed problem with a prize — a bottle of wine or a nice meal to whoever could pull the sword from the stone.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by kaszz on Thursday June 08 2017, @05:52PM

    by kaszz (4211) on Thursday June 08 2017, @05:52PM (#522703) Journal

    Some interesting quotes:
      * His colleague Alfréd Rényi said, "a mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems"
      * Women were "bosses". Men were "slaves".
      * People who stopped doing mathematics had "died".
      * Alcoholic drinks were "poison".
      * Music (except classical music) was "noise".
      * People who had married were "captured".
      * People who had divorced were "liberated".
      * To give a mathematical lecture was "to preach".
      * To give an oral exam to a student was "to torture" him/her.

    It's possible to suspect that he didn't make any children could be traced to not wanting to be enslaved in a capturing circumstances. ;)

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