August 23, 2006

“The reasons center around his feeling of isolation from the mathematical community..."

“...and in consequence his not wanting to be a figurehead for it or wanting to represent it.”

Why won't Grigory Perelman accept the prizes -- the Fields medal -- and money -- $1 million to publish his proof -- offered him?

What do you think of someone like this? Do you think he's just so smart that it's pointless to expect him to have ordinary human motivations and thus uninteresting to understand why he's doing this? Do you admire him for this, and if you do, why? It has to have meaning to be admirable, doesn't it? Or do you find it beautifully poignant, like weeding a desert?

UPDATE: The New Yorker has a long piece that concludes:
The prospect of being awarded a Fields Medal had forced him to make a complete break with his profession. “As long as I was not conspicuous, I had a choice,” Perelman explained. “Either to make some ugly thing” — a fuss about the math community’s lack of integrity—“ or, if I didn’t do this kind of thing, to be treated as a pet. Now, when I become a very conspicuous person, I cannot stay a pet and say nothing. That is why I had to quit.” We asked Perelman whether, by refusing the Fields and withdrawing from his profession, he was eliminating any possibility of influencing the discipline. “I am not a politician!” he replied, angrily. Perelman would not say whether his objection to awards extended to the Clay Institute’s million-dollar prize. “I’m not going to decide whether to accept the prize until it is offered,” he said.

Mikhail Gromov, the Russian geometer, said that he understood Perelman’s logic: “To do great work, you have to have a pure mind. You can think only about the mathematics. Everything else is human weakness. Accepting prizes is showing weakness.” Others might view Perelman’s refusal to accept a Fields as arrogant, Gromov said, but his principles are admirable. “The ideal scientist does science and cares about nothing else,” he said. “He wants to live this ideal. Now, I don’t think he really lives on this ideal plane. But he wants to.”

29 comments:

Richard Lawrence Cohen said...

"...he's just so smart that it's pointless to expect him to have ordinary human motivations..." I think that's what he thinks about himself. I wouldn't take him at face value, though.

altoids1306 said...

All of the above?

The reason I'm not a Math PhD student is because (a) not smart enough, (b) not crazy enough, (c) not compulsive enough. Oh, and I can't juggle to save my life.

Computational and applied math types are everyday normal people. To excel at theoretical math, I think you need to be at least slightly autistic. (Like Gauss, for example) At those levels, I think doing math is its own reward.

altoids1306 said...

A little OT:

It's really exciting that much of the Field-medal-winning math is being done at the boundary of math and physics. On the physics side, we have a series of problems which our current math cannot describe, or describes very clumsily, and we often use computer simulation rather than find analytical solutions. Like Newton or Dirac, we've had to resort to making up our own math as we go along. It's nice to see the much more rigorous mathematicians doing some of the heavy lifting for us.

Icepick said...

Perelman may be interested in fame, but if so he probably seeks a different kind of fame than what we would commonly recognize. And solving the Poincare Conjecture is a Big Deal. His fame is assured, even if no one besides family, friends and colleagues recognize him on the street. Long after Madonna and Michael Jackson and Prince are forgotten, someone will still be studying his results, trying to apply them to new and interesting problems.

What do I think of him? I wish I had his drive and ability! This article makes me wish I hadn't given up on my mathematics career to become a faceless financial number-cruncher, but I never had the talent to see the world as he does. Alas....

As for his decisions, I can only take him at his word that he is taking a principled stand. No background is given as to why he feels isolated from the mathematical community at large, but others in the community seem sympathetic. Pride can can overcome greed as a motivation, this I can understand.

Regardless, Perelman has pushed the boundaries of human accomplishment, and deserves the accolades even if he refuses them.

More from the NYT here.

Icepick said...

Altoids, whenever I hear about string theory or dark matter or dark energy or the standard model, I feel uneasy. It seems like too much is being added to the theoretical models in an ad hoc fashion. I can't help but feel that we're just waiting for another genius like a Newton or Einstein to come along and explain to the rest of us that we just are pictuing the Universe in the wrong way. We need another genius!

Freeman Hunt said...

Maybe he's just a loner. Maybe he doesn't like other academics. Maybe he thinks medals are silly.

I think even the smartest people have regular human motivations, and I don't admire him or dislike him. His response doesn't seem that strange to me.

Josef Novak said...

Interesting guy, silly debate. Is it really at all meaningful or useful to speculate about the guys motivations, or the place along the socialite spectrum a subjective evaluation of his 'wiring' would place him? Earlier articles and commentary from colleagues during his post-doctoral phase suggest Perelman has always been a bit of a recluse. Apparently he used to talk quite animatedly about walking for hours in the woods, hunting mushrooms; but otherwise was largely silent on matters not related to math. He probably doesn't see the point of the money. As for his being 'so smart that it's pointless' that sounds rather silly - doesnt it? He's just not firmly embedded in any mainstream social fabric, so his take on what it means to exist is probably a little bit different.

Samir Chopra said...

It is entirely possible that Perelman views prizes as part of a competetive system, and simply rules himself out of any such enterprise. It wouldn't be so surprising. The pursuit of mathematics, especially at the rarefied levels that Perelman inhabits, calls for a great deal of austerity in many aspects of his life. Part of cultivating that austerity is to shun everything that is not necessary to the pursuit of one's intellectual goals. Perelman might have discarded many social affectations along the way. I do not find his rejection bizarre or strange at all. We are used to grandiose, grandstanding academics. Perelman just happens to be different. Lets respect his choice, and welcome the diversity that he introduces into this picture.

Samir Chopra said...

It is entirely possible that Perelman views prizes as part of a competetive system, and simply rules himself out of any such enterprise. It wouldn't be so surprising. The pursuit of mathematics, especially at the rarefied levels that Perelman inhabits, calls for a great deal of austerity in many aspects of his life. Part of cultivating that austerity is to shun everything that is not necessary to the pursuit of one's intellectual goals. Perelman might have discarded many social affectations along the way. I do not find his rejection bizarre or strange at all. We are used to grandiose, grandstanding academics. Perelman just happens to be different. Lets respect his choice, and welcome the diversity that he introduces into this picture.

Ann Althouse said...

May I recommend the book "The Man Who Loved Only Numbers."

Ann Althouse said...

""...he's just so smart that it's pointless to expect him to have ordinary human motivations..." I think that's what he thinks about himself. I wouldn't take him at face value, though."

So the ordinary human motivation is to act like you're better than everyone else?

goesh said...

He lives in a world of pure mental energy and abstraction. He is probably not even aware half the time that he is eating or tying his shoes or going to the bathroom, or what time he goes to work or leaves work or maybe even what day it is. Such things are a waste of energy. We need to read Dune and consider the 'beings' who did the navigation and folded time in order to get a better appreciation of this fellow. His only mirth in life is his hobby, and we all have at least one. He may find a bit of pleasure on rare occasions picking up odd shaped, odd colored rocks when he happens to be outdoors. I suspect he collects string and rolls it into a ball and secretly chuckles knowing that the world does not know that such a genius would do such a thing.

altoids1306 said...

Altoids, whenever I hear about string theory or dark matter or dark energy or the standard model, I feel uneasy.

String theory is just a theory. Currently, we don't have powerful enough atom smashers to test any meaningful difference between string theory and established particle physics. Dark matter/dark energy - well, if you measure the stellar mass density and apply the relevant laws, it doesn't work. So we're definitely missing something. Might be dark matter/energy, might not.

OTH, the standard model is rock-solid science. Used and tested everyday, for at least three decades. Proven to at least 5-8 decimal points. It doesn't get anymore certain than this.

Richard Dolan said...

I started out as a math major, but by sophomore year knew that a career in math wasn't for me. At any good university, there will always be a few students each year who are truly gifted in pure math. Before I got to college, I thought I was a real math wiz. But merely getting a top score on the SAT (it was 800 back then, but that may have changed) meant nothing -- it was quite a shock to learn that, measured by their scale, I could never be better than mediocre at best. I met several such math geniuses, and as individuals they were very strange indeed, as were some of the professors.

Most of them were classic loners, like Perelman. They had their world, and it tended to be a private one -- populated by proofs and concepts, all expressed in a language closed to all but the cognoscenti. It wasn't so much that they were dysfunctional socially, although social awkwardness was a common trait, but instead that math was a very jealous mistress (every truly gifted math student I met was a male). Also like Perelman, they couldn't have cared less about their clothes, money wasn't a big motivator, and even personal hygiene would sometimes get lost in the shuffle. But when they talked about what attracted them to math, words like "beauty" and "simplicity" often came up. In a way, the pursuit of math at that level was an aesthetic exercise. They were artists consumed by the desire to understand, and maybe someday to create, an abstract construct that rendered simple, clear and concise what had previously been confusing and complex; that laid out the deep connections that united and made one what had previously been separate and disconnected. It was a Platonic idea of Beauty that outsiders were unlikely to relate to. It wasn't surprising that an intense interest in music was also a common denominator.

I suspect that anyone who ever pursued a career in pure math will recognize Perelman as a not-so- unusual personality type in that field. I don't think Perelman necessarily lacks "ordinary human motivations," but rather that he finds satisfaction and fulfillment of very common desires in an uncommon way. Given how he lives, he has no need for or any apparent interest in obtaining large amounts of money. And he is already famous -- he doesn't need a medal for that. I think he is interested in a more lasting fame, and regards his peers as the true giants of his chosen field across the ages -- David Riemann, Gauss, Poincare, Fermat, to name a few. If there were a pantheon were he could be installed as one of them, he might be interested. But that can only be achieved by the lasting value of his work -- no medal can do that (just scan a list of Nobel winners, to see how many are forgotten today). Instead only time will tell.

knox said...

Side question: is there a difference between Asperger's and idiot-savants?

Asperger's is basically a mild case of Autism, isn't it?

I met a kid who had Aspergers once and a conversation with him was basically like:

YesI'vereadalltheHarryPotterbooks
Icanreadonebookinlessthanthree
hourscan'tyouIdon'tseewhynotIve
readthefirstbookovertwentytimes
canIalsocanbeatanyvideogame
withinoneweekofstartingitandIdont
evenhavetousethecheatersmanuals
youdon'tlikevideogamesthat'sdumb
geezyoureweirdletsplaytwenty
questionsIbetIllbeatyouIcanbeatjust
abouteverybody...

Balfegor said...

When I was a teenager, my hero was Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac. But now that I have heard this:

To do great work, you have to have a pure mind. You can think only about the mathematics. Everything else is human weakness.

I have a new hero! Haha.

Balfegor said...

Oh, even better Dirac anecdote:

When asked to describe Richard Feynman, Eugene Wigner, Dirac's brother-in-law, described him as "another Dirac, only this time human".

From Dirac's wikipedia entry.

goesh said...

-his middle name is most likely Vector, not Victor (ha ha)

Palladian said...

Reading this reminds me of my favorite musician, Glenn Gould (also posthumously "diagnosed" with Asperger's Syndrome by some) who also believed in (and practiced) a life of isolation from the incidental activities of his profession. He gave up doing concerts at the height of his career, never performing before an audience again, and devoted the rest of his short life to recording; because of this, he made a much greater and more lasting contribution to music than other musicians who spent their life concertizing. Because he didn't waste his best years in that way, we now have his greatest work available to us in his recordings, his television programs and his wonderful documentaries on such far-afield subjects as Canadian Mennonites and Arnold Schoenberg.

My favorite film director, Stanley Kubrick, was also like this. It's the path of the greatest minds.

Icepick said...

String theory is just a theory. Currently, we don't have powerful enough atom smashers to test any meaningful difference between string theory and established particle physics.

Would the now defunct Super-conducting Super Collidor have been big enough to test these theories?

Dark matter/dark energy - well, if you measure the stellar mass density and apply the relevant laws, it doesn't work. So we're definitely missing something. Might be dark matter/energy, might not.

Yah, I'm aware of the mystery of the missing Universe. It's just that the dark matter/dark energy stuff just sounds so arbitrary. Personally I feel like we just don't understand the basic geometry of the Universe. (Of course, my personal feeling on the matter don't mean squat!) Perhaps Perelman's work can help in this regard....

OTH, the standard model is rock-solid science. Used and tested everyday, for at least three decades. Proven to at least 5-8 decimal points. It doesn't get anymore certain than this.

Whoops, I thik I mis-wrote earlier. I didn't mean the Standard Model of Partical Physics (SMPP). I meant the Standard Model of Cosmology. (See here.) But it's been so long since I followed this stuff even in a lay-man's fashion that I don't even know if the SMC is still accepted terminology or accepted theory.

Damn, I really miss this kind of stuff....

bearbee said...

Zen and math.....perhaps he merely delights in the doing.......

Nels said...

According to Wikipedia, he lives at home with his mom. It's a little easier to turn down $1 million when you don't have a wife and kids.

Smilin' Jack said...

It's interesting that according to the book "A Beautiful Mind" John Nash was very much motivated by competitiveness and a hunger for fame, and his frustration at being unable to solve a Fields Medal-quality problem contributed significantly to his mental illness.

altoids1306 said...

Icepick:

I hope I didn't come off as being snarky, that wasn't my intent, but anyways...

It's a real shame the SSC was cancelled. I wasn't old enough to realize it at the time it was canceled, but without the SSC or some replacement, the future of particle/high-energy physics will be in Europe. I'm have no idea if it would be powerful to test string theory, but it's generally true that every time we test a higher energy, we discover something new. But it's to hard to get the average politican to understand this. The SSC wasn't pork.

About the standard model - hmm, maybe things were different in your day, but as far as I know, the words "standard model" always refers to particle physics.

Icepick said...

Altoids, you didn't come off as snarky at all, and I'm sorry if I gave that impression. Thanks for the interesting comments.

It appears that the SMC is not widely accepted terminology. I'm not even sure where I heard/read about it first, but there do seem to be a few references to it out there. I had know about the SMPP, but had completely forgot about it! I really really miss the academic life. Business just sucks my mind dry....

Icepick said...

Not so incidentally, the New Yorker piece makes it clear why Perelman is refusing the Fields Medal. Basically, a sharp bureaucratic operator is trying to screw Perelman and steal credit for the solution. Sad but true: there are a lot of bastards in the mathematical community.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

I find all this speculation about motivation, autism, and hidden agendas bizarre.

The desire for money and public recognition are not universal. The question is not - why isn't Perleman
interested in these things?

The question is - why are you? And why is it such a big deal if someone else isn't?

Unknown said...

As a postscript, i suggest thinking of perleman's choices this way :

What if you read that Beethoven had accepted the Best Composer Alive award for his ninth symphony? Personally I'd find it somehow unworthy of such an immortal work, and his acceptance of it understandable - human, but altogether irrelevant and just a bit embarassing.

It is clear that Perelman did not decline the prize in response to any particular controversy or trauma. His original paper was simply posted to the internet and never submitted for peer review.

It is almost certain that Perelman knew immediately his solution was correct (for such things do not happen accidentally.) His proof is unconventional, hugely imaginative, and is of magnificent importance not just to mathematics but to physicists working on String Theory, potentially the Theory of Everything.

He joined the pantheon of intellectual immortals the moment he clicked Submit on his paper. The polite applause of envious colleagues, it is easy to imagine, is an all too mortal anticlimax.

There was a brief scuffle over priority as some of his peers allegedly tried to take credit for the work. Perleman ignored the controversy and was vindicated in absentia.

To glimpse, for the first time in human history, something beautiful, something important, something eternal - is a very rare experience and we cannot pretend to grasp how it feels. I imagine Perleman observed the fight for the prize with a sense of "What fools these mortals be."

His proof is the prize.

Rumor has it he is now working on String Theory. In secret, because all this attention is simply distracting.