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The Man Who Loved Only Numbers - The Story of Paul Erdos [mathematician PDF

335 Pages·1998·13.15 MB·English
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THE MAN VVHO LOVED ONLY NUMBERS THE STORY " OF PAUL ERDOS AND THE SEARCH FOR MATHEMATICAL TRUTH BY PAUL HOFFMAN FOURTH ESTATE. LONDON This paperback edition published in 1999 First published in Great Britain in 1998 by Fourth Estate Limited 6 Salem Road London W2 40BU Copyright © Paul Hoffman 1998 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 The right of Paul Hoffman to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 1-86702-829-5 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in a retrieval system, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from Fourth Estate Limited. Text design by Dorothy S. Baker Printed in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives pIc The author is grateful for permission from: THE CANADIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION to excerpt outtakes from the radio program "Math and Aftermath: A Tribute to Donald Coxeter," broadcast on the series Ideas on May 13, 1997. The program featured Ideas host Lister Sinclair and was produced by SaraWolch; RONALD GRAHAM, EDGAR PALMER, AND GORDON RAISBECK to excerpt e-mail and snail mail to Ronald Graham; TOM TROTTER AND RICHARD GUY to excerpt recollections of Paul Erd~s that were posted on the Web; WILLIAM WEBB to excerpt Paul Erdos's "Child Prodigies" (March 1971) in James Jordan and William A. Webb, editors, Proceedings if the Washington State University Conference on Number Theory (DepartmentofMathematics and Pi Mu Epsilon, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington); PARADE MAGAZINE and MARILYN VOS SAVANT to excerpt from "Ask Marilyn" columns of September 9, 1990, December 2, 1990, and February 17, 1991; THE CARTOON BANK to quote from a © 1998 cartoon by Robert Mankoff; FABER AND FABER LTD to excerpt fromArcadia by Tom Stoppard. Author's failure to obtain a necessarypermission for the use of any other copyrighted material included in this work is inadvertent and will be corrected in future printings of the work. To Pali bacsi, der Zauberer von Budapest, who got by with a little help from his friends and achieved immortality with his proofs and conjectures To Ron, who made the last 39.76 percent of Paul's life easier and gave generously of his time in helping me understand Paul's world To Ann, who loves frogs, poetry, and me CONTENTS o THE TWO-AND-A-HALF-BILLION-YEAR-OLD MAN 3 1 STRAIGHT FROM THE BOOK 25 2 EPSZI'S ENIGMA 59 e PROBLEMS WITH SAM AND JOE 95 3 EINSTEIN VS. DOSTOYEVSKY 131 1t DR. WORST CASE 145 4 MARGINAL REVENGE 179 5 ,,GOD MADE THE INTE G E RS ' , 203 CONTENTS 6 GETTING THE GOAT 233 7 SURV I V0 RS' PART Y 247 00 "WE MATHEMATICIANS ARE ALL A LITTLE BIT CRAZY" 263 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND SOURCE NOTES 269 BIBLIOGRAPHY 279 INDEX 289 Mathematical truth is immutable; it lies outside physical reality.... This is our belief; this is our core motivating force. Yet our attempts to describe this belief to our nonmathematical friends are akin to describing the Almighty to an atheist. Paul embodied this belief in math ematical truth. His enormous talents and ener gies were given entirely to the Temple of Mathematics. He harbored no doubts about the importance, the absoluteness, of his quest. To see his faith was to be given faith. The religious world might better have understood Paul's special personal qualities. We knew him as Uncle Paul. -Joel Spencer To find another life this century as intensely devoted to abstraction, one must reach back to Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951), who stripped his life bare for philosophy. But whereas Wittgenstein discarded his family for tune as a form of self-torture, Mr. Erdos gave away most of the money he earned because he simply did not need it.... And where Wittgen stein was driven by near suicidal compulsions, Mr. Erdos simply constructed his life to extract the maximum amount of happiness. -The Economist THE MAN WHO LOVED ONLY NUMBERS

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Paul Erd+¦s was an amazing and prolific mathematician whose life as a world-wandering numerical nomad was legendary. He published almost 1500 scholarly papers before his death in 1996, and he probably thought more about math problems than anyone in history. Like a traveling salesman offering his th
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