On Some Quotes from G.H. Hardy
10 hours ago
- #career
- #exposition
- #mathematics
- The author, an academic descendant of G.H. Hardy, shares personal reflections on Hardy's well-known quotes, particularly from 'A Mathematician's Apology'.
- Hardy's scorn for 'men who explain' (expositors) is critiqued; the author argues that exposition, while perhaps scorned by creators, is valuable for education and funding in mathematics.
- Hardy's praise of ambition is reinterpreted: ambition should be about creating 'something worthwhile' rather than just seeking permanent value or being the best.
- Instead of Hardy's motivations for research, the author suggests focusing on what makes a satisfying career: intellectual curiosity, discipline, and talent (with talent being third).
- The 'value added' principle is key in research: pursue projects that are worthwhile and uniquely suited to one's abilities, avoiding overly competitive or negative-sum ambitions.
- Beauty in mathematics is acknowledged but seen as a 'small-scale' view; elegance in theorems is likened to a Shakespearean sword fight, whereas broader impact matters more.
- Hardy's quote 'I hate teaching [but] I love lecturing' is discussed; the author distinguishes lecturing (traditional format) from teaching, emphasizing the importance of real teaching.