- 03.31.14 |
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“I had this skill with mathematical tools, and I played these tools as
well as I could just because it was beautiful,” said Freeman Dyson in a
wide-ranging interview.
At 90, a Brilliant Mathematician Ponders His Next Challenge
“There’s a class of problem that Freeman just lights up on,” said the physicist and computational biologist William Press, a longtime colleague and friend. “It has to be unsolved and well-posed and have something in it that admits to his particular kind of genius.” That genius, he said, represents a kind of “ingenuity and a spark” that most physicists lack: “The ability to see further in the mathematical world of concepts and instantly grasp a path to the distant horizon that’s the solution.”
Press said he’s posed a number of problems to Dyson that didn’t “measure up.” Months and years went by, with no response. But when Press asked a question about the “iterated prisoner’s dilemma,” a variation of the classic game theory scenario pitting cooperation against betrayal, Dyson replied the next day. “It probably only took him a minute to grasp the solution,” Press said, “and half an hour to write it out.”
Together, they published a much-cited 2012 paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Read More: http://www.wired.com/2014/03/quanta-freeman-dyson-qa/
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