Quotes from Robert Kanigel
They must be true because, if they were not true, no one would have the imagination to invent them.
~ Robert Kanigel
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Sometimes in studying Ramanujan's work, [George Andrews] said at another time, I have wondered how much Ramanujan could have done if he had had MACSYMA or SCRATCHPAD or some other symbolic algebra package.
~ Robert Kanigel
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Plenty of mathematicians, Hardy knew, could follow a step-by-step discursus unflaggingly—yet counted for nothing beside Ramanujan. Years later, he would contrive an informal scale of natural mathematical ability on which he assigned himself a 25 and Littlewood a 30. To David Hilbert, the most eminent mathematician of the day, he assigned an 80. To Ramanujan he gave 100.
~ Robert Kanigel
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Don't be so easy on yourself, it said.
~ Robert Kanigel
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But what Ramanujan wanted more, more than anything, was simply the freedom to do as he wished, to be left alone to think, to dream, to create, to lose himself in a world of his own making.
~ Robert Kanigel
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His academic failure forced him to develop unconventionally, free of the social straightjacket that might have constrained his progress to well-worn paths.
~ Robert Kanigel
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The cards are stacked, against any original mind, and perhaps properly so.
~ Robert Kanigel
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Spy a striking new tack to take with a problem? Don't worry about elaborate scientific controls for now: Just get hysterical and do it
~ Robert Kanigel
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Ramanujan had lost all his scholarships. He had failed in school. Even as a tutor of the subject he loved most, he'd been found wanting. He had nothing. And yet, viewed a little differently, he had everything. For now there was nothing to distract him from his notebooks- notebooks, crammed with theorems, that each day, each week, bulged wider.
~ Robert Kanigel
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Viewed one way, then, for at least five years between 1904 and 1909, Ramanujan floundered- mostly out of school, without a degree, without contact with other mathematicians. And yet, was the cup half-empty or half-full?
~ Robert Kanigel
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A pure mathematician must leave to happier colleagues the great task of alleviating the sufferings of humanity.
~ Robert Kanigel
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He received no guidance, no stimulation, no money beyond the few rupees he made from tutoring. But for all the economic deadweight he represented, his family apparently discouraged him little- not enough, in any case, to stop him.
~ Robert Kanigel
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Then, too, it seems certain, in light of future events, simple racism was a factor; Ramanujan, after all, was a black man.
~ Robert Kanigel
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