Better beware of notions like genius and inspiration; they are a sort of magic wand and should be used sparingly by anybody who wants to see things clearly. (José Ortega y Gasset, “Notes on the novel”)
Does one have to be a genius to do mathematics?
The answer is an emphatic NO. In order to make good and useful contributions to mathematics, one does need to work hard, learn one’s field well, learn other fields and tools, ask questions, talk to other mathematicians, and think about the “big picture”. And yes, a reasonable amount of intelligence, patience, and maturity is also required. But one does not need some sort of magic “genius gene” that spontaneously generates ex nihilo deep insights, unexpected solutions to problems, or other supernatural abilities.
The popular image of the lone (and possibly slightly mad) genius – who ignores the literature and other conventional wisdom and manages by some inexplicable inspiration (enhanced, perhaps, with a liberal dash of suffering) to come up with a breathtakingly original solution to a problem that confounded all the experts – is a charming and romantic image, but also a wildly inaccurate one, at least in the world of modern mathematics. We do have spectacular, deep and remarkable results and insights in this subject, of course, but they are the hard-won and cumulative achievement of years, decades, or even centuries of steady work and progress of many good and great mathematicians; the advance from one stage of understanding to the next can be highly non-trivial, and sometimes rather unexpected, but still builds upon the foundation of earlier work rather than starting totally anew. (This is for instance the case with Wiles‘ work on Fermat’s last theorem, or Perelman‘s work on the Poincaré conjecture.)
Actually, I find the reality of mathematical research today – in which progress is obtained naturally and cumulatively as a consequence of hard work, directed by intuition, literature, and a bit of luck – to be far more satisfying than the romantic image that I had as a student of mathematics being advanced primarily by the mystic inspirations of some rare breed of “geniuses”. This “cult of genius” in fact causes a number of problems, since nobody is able to produce these (very rare) inspirations on anything approaching a regular basis, and with reliably consistent correctness. (If someone affects to do so, I advise you to be very sceptical of their claims.) The pressure to try to behave in this impossible manner can cause some to become overly obsessed with “big problems” or “big theories”, others to lose any healthy scepticism in their own work or in their tools, and yet others still to become too discouraged to continue working in mathematics. Also, attributing success to innate talent (which is beyond one’s control) rather than effort, planning, and education (which are within one’s control) can lead to some other problems as well.
Of course, even if one dismisses the notion of genius, it is still the case that at any given point in time, some mathematicians are faster, more experienced, more knowledgeable, more efficient, more careful, or more creative than others. This does not imply, though, that only the “best” mathematicians should do mathematics; this is the common error of mistaking absolute advantage for comparative advantage. The number of interesting mathematical research areas and problems to work on is vast – far more than can be covered in detail just by the “best” mathematicians, and sometimes the set of tools or ideas that you have will find something that other good mathematicians have overlooked, especially given that even the greatest mathematicians still have weaknesses in some aspects of mathematical research. As long as you have education, interest, and a reasonable amount of talent, there will be some part of mathematics where you can make a solid and useful contribution. It might not be the most glamorous part of mathematics, but actually this tends to be a healthy thing; in many cases the mundane nuts-and-bolts of a subject turn out to actually be more important than any fancy applications. Also, it is necessary to “cut one’s teeth” on the non-glamorous parts of a field before one really has any chance at all to tackle the famous problems in the area; take a look at the early publications of any of today’s great mathematicians to see what I mean by this.
In some cases, an abundance of raw talent may end up (somewhat perversely) to actually be harmful for one’s long-term mathematical development; if solutions to problems come too easily, for instance, one may not put as much energy into working hard, asking dumb questions, or increasing one’s range, and thus may eventually cause one’s skills to stagnate. Also, if one is accustomed to easy success, one may not develop the patience necessary to deal with truly difficult problems (see also this talk by Peter Norvig for an analogous phenomenon in software engineering, though see this clarification). Talent is important, of course; but how one develops and nurtures it is even more so.
It’s also good to remember that professional mathematics is not a sport (in sharp contrast to mathematics competitions). The objective in mathematics is not to obtain the highest ranking, the highest “score”, or the highest number of prizes and awards; instead, it is to increase understanding of mathematics (both for yourself, and for your colleagues and students), and to contribute to its development and applications. For these tasks, mathematics needs all the good people it can get.
Further reading:
- “How to be a genius“, David Dobbs, New Scientist, 15 September 2006. [Thanks to Samir Chomsky for this link.]
- “The mundanity of excellence“, Daniel Chambliss, Sociological Theory, Vol. 7, No. 1, (Spring, 1989), 70-86. [Thanks to John Baez for this link.]
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10 July, 2016 at 10:24 am
Not “too silly”, not “too girlish” for maths – paularowinska
[…] https://terrytao.wordpress.com/career-advice/does-one-have-to-be-a-genius-to-do-maths/ and https://terrytao.wordpress.com/career-advice/work-hard/ by Terrence Tao; […]
26 July, 2016 at 10:10 pm
priyans
i m understand the ramanujns theorom
28 July, 2016 at 5:04 pm
Anonymous
Oh for F*** sakes,
I just read this post. A sort of genius who is a famous mathematician is saying that you do not have to be a genius to do maths. Dude, when will you maths people simply acknowledge how hypocrite you are? If this was written by a very very (sort of) modest mathematician then it would maybe mean something. But coming from one dude who wins almost all the maths awards?? It is like Roger Federer writes: dont need to be a genius to be a tennis star. Then a guy with modest tennis talent puts all his life for tennis, becomes maybe the world number 100000000000000 in tennis, gain maybe a dollar a year from his “tennis talent” and send some hate notes to (poor) Federer.
Dude, do your maths, win your awards (until here good for you) but PLEASE kindly do NOT annoy “normal” people by giving them some false hope.
Cheers mate though!
2 August, 2016 at 6:31 am
Andy
Dr. Tao,
Are you familiar with the Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth? It’s one of various pieces of evidence that seems to suggest that intelligence measured by standardized tests does predict mathematical performance, and that this doesn’t hit diminishing returns. I was wondering if you had data to back up the argument that there’s a certain ability threshold beyond which talent stops being important.
3 August, 2016 at 8:24 am
Terence Tao
I actually was part of the SMPY cohort. But it is not quite an “ability threshold” so much as an “achievement threshold” beyond which raw talent decorrelates with further accomplishment; see my previous comment. As noted there, this decorrelation is not incompatible with a continued positive correlation between talent and achievement at these levels in the absence of an achievement threshold, thanks to Berkson’s paradox. However, I am not aware of any scientific studies of this particular question.
17 August, 2016 at 4:50 pm
The Mundanity of Excellence | James McCammon
[…] is the title of a 1989 article in Sociological Theory by Daniel Chambliss (which I found through this blog post titled “Does one have to be a genius to do maths?” written by the famous mathematician […]
30 August, 2016 at 3:22 am
disha
who are your favourite mathematicians prof tao?
12 September, 2016 at 12:31 am
gpy
Hi, Dr.Terence Tao.
People want to go with the easy way. Nobody wants to work hard. Then they say “our intelligence is not enough to be a mathematician”. in fact they are deceiving themselves. No need to be a genius to be a mathematician. Even genius, crazy mathematicians table already wrong from the beginning. The biography of a mathematician is overrated. to become a mathematician; it is necessary to ask question, hard work and research. society has the wrong idea about mathematics. for example, some people think that even the great mathematician born genius. but this is bullshit. Thank you. *and sorry for my bad english*
16 September, 2016 at 7:26 am
Yuval Levental
I was just thinking of this post again. I got lucky and discovered a simple way to mitigate the symptoms of my autism so I can think more clearly. But now I can see that math’s greatest mysteries can take years to solve by geniuses, i.e. Andrew Wiles spent at least seven years trying to solve Fermat’s Last Theorem.
6 October, 2016 at 5:49 pm
Anonymous
The link for “The mundanity of excellence” is broken now.
[Corrected, thanks – T.]
7 October, 2016 at 11:27 pm
Essential Career Lessons
[…] If one is accustomed to easy success, one may not develop the patience necessary to deal with truly difficult problems. (source) […]
17 October, 2016 at 5:35 am
Yuval Levental
https://corticalchauvinism.com/2016/10/17/yuval-levental-autism-and-the-pursuit-of-knowledge/
Basically, a blog post about my experience showing while intelligence is important, it pales in the face of infinite knowledge.
27 October, 2016 at 11:55 am
Chris Smith
Please develop a method to make us biologically smarter. Thank you.
29 October, 2016 at 9:16 am
None
Terry Tao is such a nice person. Seriously. I would like to see someone like John Nash talking about this topic with all his cockiness, of course before he went nuts around 30.
People like Tao roughly say “Genius (or talent or whatever) is neither necessary nor sufficient”. This is nothing but “obvious”. I would like to hear more subtle points here. And, everyone knows that all successful mathematicians already have some great talent PLUS they work like hell.
I have a rock-solid IQ of around 150 and I cannot see anyway my friends of IQ around 120 can accomplish what I have done through dogged work of 10 years with quite a bit of creativity. And, believe me what I have done is infinitely smaller than that of Tao. Period.
4 November, 2016 at 4:56 am
Feynman
Dear professor Tao.
I think people have different capability of understanding abstract concepts,I find some people grasp those abstract mathematical objects more easily than others,I have always wonder how these guys think or what has happened in their brain when they deal with the abstract concept like high dimensional manifold,is there any tricks? For me I have always try to visualize those objects to help me understand it, however for some more abstract objects, it is harder or impossible to visualize,which makes me very hard to grasp it, I wish professor Tao could share with us how he understand those abstracts. It will be very useful for us,looking forward your reply!!!😊😜
13 January, 2017 at 12:13 am
Sidayai Moirangthem
I am very weak in mathematic but l like it very much. In my exam also l pass in very low . Because of this my parent,teacher evrybody who teach me in good way , they are to abuse me for my life . So , l request to you to teach me how to become a good mathematician.
15 January, 2017 at 5:46 pm
Understand advanced mathematics? | Since 1989
[…] process, a sudden insight comes, but it would not be possible without the painstaking groundwork [https://terrytao.wordpress.com/ca… […]
1 February, 2017 at 2:33 pm
Romain Viguier
What is mathematics? Can we explain it?
If I say that a number is “what designates” am I in nature or in mind?
But is there only a difference between being in nature or in the mind?
I mean that I have the impression that mathematics is a colossal modeling of nature and of something else.
What is interesting is mathematics sometimes surpasses nature and yet remains coherent: what is it then?
Is making the mathematics by being human is to be a robot that has its moments of lucidity?
I saw him like that.
I mean that we come out of its nothingness, we see a reality but it gives us nothing then either we make experiments
(or we observe and find a problem to solve), or we can not support this void of reality then we begin to imagine.
But maybe we do both. Is this the way mathematics is born? Posing a problem by extracting it from reality and then
solving it by using the logic which avoids our imagination to deviate when one uses it (because one is obliged to use it) to finally advance?
Maybe.
At every moment, attempts are made that do not succeed. This is where method/tactics, patience, open-mindedness/interaction and chance intervene.
An event can be seen only if one arrives at it. He does not flee before us nor comes to us. I think we can see it in a demonstration.
That’s because we’re all a bit blind, maybe.
It is not the adventure of geniuses but of humans. Agree. Nevertheless, you need greatness to discover the greatness.
2 February, 2017 at 2:48 am
Teo Preedee
I think the fundamental reason to why the human race has made it this far, especially technological advances, is because of the continuous effort of many. Maybe to some, the word is ‘evolution’.
“Mathematics is the language of nature.” If nature is ‘truth’, then surely mathematics is the key to unlocking the truth. As such, people may have the false assumption that mathematics is exclusively for “geniuses” who can constantly think out of the box and produce seemingly unfathomable solutions to the mysterious of the world. I believe the pursuit of truth is no different than learning to walk – both require continuous effort and guidance. Hence, we should look at mathematics as a human endeavour that contributes to the human race, no matter how small, because every contribution counts as it could amount to some important applications in the future.
If everyone were a genius, I don’t think life would be worth living.
2 February, 2017 at 3:30 am
Ngoc Nguyen
I think that the answer would be an emphatic YES if the question were more specifically expressed in the following manner: “Does one have to be a genius to do brilliant mathematics?” As for what I mean by “brilliant” mathematics, I suggest to anyone so inclined to check out E.T. Bell’s “Men of Mathematics,” which showcases mathematicians from antiquity to Georg Cantor in synoptic form.
2 February, 2017 at 3:52 am
Ngoc Nguyen
https://g.co/kgs/pGzhLw
3 February, 2017 at 9:52 am
What Makes a Mathematician – Math in the Meanwhile
[…] https://terrytao.wordpress.com/career-advice/does-one-have-to-be-a-genius-to-do-maths/ […]
9 February, 2017 at 1:30 pm
Romain Viguier
If I was alone on earth in 2017, what will I do?
I would certainly plunge into scientific abstraction, so my mind would float in this world and may explain it. Why choose abstraction rather than technique?
It’s just that each person has its way of working.
No one tells us what the world of scientific abstraction looks like.
In first, I would say that it is a world. Then I would say that it is necessary to locate’oneself in this world, to try to be able to move in
not as a blind man but as someone who acts consciously. And moving forward is inevitably gained by experience.
I would say that there are doors that give into established knowledge rooms concerning scientific fields. But that in these rooms there are still things to look for. I would also say that these rooms can be connected.
I would say that this world has no fixed and well defined border, but that its border corresponds to an absence of us.
I would say that to enter this world, one must have an open mind.
I would say we have to be wary of what is seemingly simple. By dissecting what appears to be simple, one can quickly find oneself
overwhelm by complex interrelated relationships. Similarly, the complex can sometimes be summarized in a simple notion but whish was unknown.
I would say that in this world, it is good that the sentences do not appear as an image but that one accesses only the semantics. It is good to have the sentence pointing to “hypothesis” because it guides us, nevertheless it should not slow the process of research in an abrupt manner.
To be immersed in this search for idea, it is better to have the paper and the pen because this allows to fix anchor points.
In this world, the motor is a familiar unknown. It is familiar to us because it is populated with knowledge we have, has a logic but it is an unknown
because if it was not, we would not be in this abstract world.
I would say finally that there must be life in this world, it is essential.
9 March, 2017 at 3:01 pm
quasihumanist
Dear Terry,
I am thinking that, with the academic job market (especially for tenure-track positions) significantly worse now than when this was originally written 10 years ago and showing no signs of ever improving, this post might be somewhat irresponsible.
There is nothing in it I disagree with, but with the current job market, it seems necessary to add the caveat that many more people are capable of making significant contributions to mathematics than society seems willing to pay to do mathematics. Hence, although many people who are not the “best” mathematicians can contribute to mathematics, only the “best” (or at least the “better”) mathematicians will be able to make a living doing mathematics, and the rest, if they wish to contribute to mathematics, will have to do it solely as a hobby. Therefore, as a practical matter, they may wish to spend some of their time training for other careers instead of studying mathematics.
15 March, 2017 at 6:27 am
Does one have to be a genius to do maths?
[…] Better beware of notions like genius and inspiration; they are a sort of magic wand and should be used sparingly by anybody who wants to see things clearly. (José Ortega y Gasset, “Notes on t… – Read full story at Hacker News […]
20 April, 2017 at 1:03 am
Chapter 2: How geniuses think. | Vexation
[…] Reference: Career-advice/does-one-have-to-be-a-genius-to-do-maths/ […]
28 May, 2017 at 8:05 am
Alguém precisa ser um gênio para fazer matemática?
[…] original do matemático Terence […]
30 May, 2017 at 3:40 pm
chris3991m
A question for you:
If you think genius isn’t that important, when was a time where you found a math problem to be completely impossible? Where despite your high intellect, you felt crushed by said problem to the point of existential hopelessness?
Sincerely,
Chris
3 June, 2017 at 9:46 am
Bill Thurston’s “On Proof and Progress” or as I like to think – Why do I, as an individual, matter? | My Neat Blog
[…] 3rd Update: I forgot to mention that Terry Tao also writes roughly the same argument here on his blog under career […]
17 June, 2017 at 4:31 am
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[…] —Terence Tao, “Does one have to be a genius to do maths?” […]
17 July, 2017 at 4:28 pm
Ricky
Terrence, thank you for your insights on the subject. I believe your advice applies to many fields of human endeavour. I’ve always had that romantic notion and your thoughts on nuts and bolts made me think I’ve quit the mathematical field too soon in retrospect.
27 July, 2017 at 5:15 am
Do You Have To Be A Genius To Study Math At TUM? – Journey In Mathematics
[…] Even for that, though, I believe the answer is no. You again do not have to be another Einstein. A friend of mine who has recently acquired his MSc. in math at TUM revealed that in reality, most people (of his year) did not fail but rather decided that math was not right for them. These people changed their course of study voluntarily – not by force! For more on that refer to Terrence Tao’s response to the question “Does one have to be a genius to do maths?”. […]
14 August, 2017 at 7:56 am
Aryan Sharma
Inspirational
6 September, 2017 at 6:55 pm
Anonymous
When this topic pops up, I always recall a quote (“Anna Karenina”):
“Vronsky, Anna, and Golenishtchev, on their way home, were particularly lively and cheerful. They talked of Mihailov and his pictures. The word talent, by which they meant an inborn, almost physical, aptitude apart from brain and heart, and in which they tried to find an expression for all the artist had gained from life, recurred particularly often in their talk, as though it were necessary for them to sum up what they had no conception of, though they wanted to talk of it.”
To rewrite: talent is a social concept, it serves to describe the social role of an individual (Mihailov wrote the portrait) rather than his job (how he did it, what was required to do it, and so on); as a social concept, it’s fairly useful.
8 September, 2017 at 6:46 am
D. Heider
I disagree with the majority of items given in the main text while agreeing with the overall statement.
First the statement that given a reasonable education, intelligence and (innate) talent there is an area of mathematics where an Individual can contribute is formally correct but has limited practical relevance. Contributing depends as a weak factor on social and institutional circumstances as well to quite some extent. Furthermore, the notion of “can” is ambiguous. Does it mean being capable or, with an eye on the necessary education, being allowed to. In my country of origin, the Federal Republic, the distinction plays a role because of 1 Million + refugees partially well-educated entering Germany from the Middle East. The institutional factors can not be neglected because evolutionary human beings are social creatures. A crappy PhD advisor as are many of them can even trigger suicide as occured to two friends of mine. My criticism rattles down to stating that hard work, diligence and passion for the subject combined with the necessary educational background is not the (full) answer.
My second criticism concerns the point that mathematics is not a sport. It is not a sport in the sense that everyone is preparing for the Fields medal in the morning, the Abel prize in the evening and doing Putnam problems during lunch. For the more realistic goals in the life plan of research aspirants, there is a (global) competition. May it be referees delaying publications because they are working on the same problem, plagiarism (the case Perelman being prominent but non-exceptional) as well as mafia-like intra- and inter-universital societal constructions with tenured people preferring to play the poker of power (sexual abuse also happened to a friend of mine, a math PhD by the way). Given that a significant amount of machiavellistic behavior seemingly increasing research newcomers’ career chances, I’d add to the statement in the beginning of this paragrph: “…but it is a dirty fight for one’s own career”.
In order to keep the comment well-sized, I return to the beginning of the article: Does one have to be a genius? No, in order to contribute to mathematics and other branches of science, you can simply design a novel model, investigate a novel structure and get results published, possibly in an open-access non-peer review journal. Formally, the requirements are fulfilled for a contribution.
Typos are either due to autocorrect or the fact english is not my mother tongue or a combination thereof.
Let the shit storm happen to me *sarcasm
9 September, 2017 at 4:22 pm
Michael Kaminski
i cant believe someone so smart can sound like such an idiot.
9 September, 2017 at 9:25 pm
anyreasonableexplanation?
Professor Tao: Why have Jewish people outperformed every other group in contribution to math and sciences?
9 September, 2017 at 10:08 pm
D. Heider
In the 19th and beginning 20th century, the Jewish people were more socially accepted in the scientifically leading countries than before. Traditionally, jewish people from central and Western Europe were in charge of many but not all of what we call modern banking. Sendung people to university was much More common among jews due to the financial resources and – of course – a good international network dating back to earlier times when the jewish minority was segregated from the Christian majority.
That bring said there is also a cultural reason, namely the conservation of existing knowledge in the form of books and narrations AS well AS an above-average primary and secondary education of the young generation at home or in synagoges. Especially the latter led to a disproportionally high (compared to other social classes) openness for scientific endeavor and accustomedness to scientific methods.
I once had the same question in a history course a couple of years ago and this was – in quintessence – the explanation offered by the instructor.
10 September, 2017 at 6:44 am
Anonymous
This explanation does not work e. g. for the Soviet Union. Therefore, the reason does not boil down to banking & finances. It must be something cultural, like the kind of thinking that has to be used to internalise successfully the lessons of life that parents teach to their children.
10 September, 2017 at 6:50 am
Anonymous
> education … at home
That may be the point; no synagogues, of course; at least, they couldn’t have played any major role in the USSR. But I think there must be something “immaterial” as well in that kind of thinking. Not just education properly speaking.
21 September, 2017 at 7:34 am
수학은 천재나 하는 것인가? (Terrence Tao) – GrayEcon's Library
[…] 원문 링크 […]
26 September, 2017 at 8:52 pm
ShreyChheda
Could you help me with building spontaneous
mathematical processes in my mind so that
I get wide front for application of concepts and solving problems?
Spontaneos processes mean:After I learn a concept the way I should remember it so that l begin to see things almost subconsciously in very original form.
however big the process is.
I need your help Terry.
23 October, 2017 at 2:14 pm
Reminder: Next meetup on Oct 24 – SSC Helsinki Meetups
[…] (related: https://terrytao.wordpress.com/career-advice/does-one-have-to-be-a-genius-to-do-maths/ ; also applicable to other fields.) […]
26 November, 2017 at 9:40 am
Lucas Alves Ribeiro
Many thanks, Professor So, these counsels are valuable, I think many students go through a lot of difficulties because they need to fit into this so-called “genius” outfit, and obviously many get frustrated and really get discouraged. hugs.
16 February, 2018 at 11:36 pm
umar
I get wide front for application of concepts and solving problems?
Spontaneous processes mean: After I learn a concept the way I should remember it so that l begin to see things almost subconsciously in very original form.
however big the process is.
I need your help, Terry.
22 February, 2018 at 1:10 pm
Ngoc Minh Nguyen
Dear Dr. Terence Tao,
A thought has just occurred to me as something of an epiphany! If you really believe what you say and preach about “genius” (however it is defined) being irrelevant and even unnecessary in doing mathematics (outstanding or ordinary), then it has occurred to me that in practice then that you do not mind and should not have a problem with doing mathematics with only a 132 IQ SD16 or less instead of at the extremely rarefied level of intelligence of 189 IQ SD16 (a reduction of 3.56+ standard deviations in IQ points), which you are cognitively measured at and do possess. So am I right, or am I sadly mistaken? Please address this question for us as I am sure that we all here would love to read your response. Thank you. A fan and an admirer.
2 May, 2018 at 10:43 pm
Fernando
To have mathematics be your career is something anyone with average intelligence can do.
To be a genius, renowned for one’s achievements, progress, and contributions, to be one who has displayed extraordinary abilities since childhood, and still does to this day, is something that does require “genius” abilities. You need to be a genius to be a genius!
But, who would want to say their success is all due to the fact they were born with a “better brain” than all of their colleagues? I know I certainly wouldn’t, and I know you probably don’t, Mr. Tao. Besides, there are examples that extraordinary abilities do not always grant a conventional image of a “genius”, as we have seen with other individuals included in the same groups as you.
I have a question for you, Mr. Tao. How do you feel about your own intelligence? You are most commonly referred to when the phrase “World’s smartest man” comes up. How has this affected you, when you ponder the source of your achievements, or if there even is a source?
3 May, 2018 at 3:11 am
Anonymous
Some related Newton’s quotes
1. If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants.
2. Genius is patience.
3. I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.
4. My powers are ordinary. Only my application brings me success.
9 May, 2018 at 2:08 am
Un mestiere per geni – Education Around
[…] Per approfondire il tema, soprattutto in ambito universitario: https://terrytao.wordpress.com/career-advice/does-one-have-to-be-a-genius-to-do-maths/ […]
16 May, 2018 at 10:43 pm
Evan William Chandra
Dear Professor Tao,
I really appreciate your exposition here in this article. It really motivates me as I am currently pursuing my master degree in mathematical analysis. To be completely honest, I am not an inborn genius with high innate talents to learn sophisticated abstract mathematical concepts.
During my undergraduate study, I remember how I was struggling for 3 months to understand the epsilon-delta definition of limit operator. Now, I am struggling yet again with another tougher (more difficult) problems and sometimes I lose the faith to believe in myself. Reading your article here is truly reassuring and keeps me motivated to do the research at my own (most effective) pace.
Thank you for your wonderful inspiration.
Yours sincerely
5 June, 2018 at 12:49 am
shalvi jain
very nice… i really like your blog…
Signs of genius
9 June, 2018 at 12:50 am
sign of genius
nice content,sign of genius
16 July, 2018 at 7:08 pm
Does one have to be a genius to do mathematics? Neither necessary nor sufficient.
[…] Terry Tao has given a clear argument for the case that it is indeed not necessary to be a genius to do mathematics: […]
19 July, 2018 at 2:26 am
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[…] Further Reading: “Does one have to be a genius to do maths?”,by Terrence Tao. […]