How Much Work Does it Take to be a Successful Mathematician?
http://mathoverflow.net/questions/9799/how-much-work-does-it-take-to-be-a-successful-mathematician#
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Hi Everyone,
Famous anecdotes of G.H. Hardy relay that his work habits consisted of working no more than four hours a day in the morning and then reserving the rest of the day for cricket and tennis. Apparently his best ideas came to him when he wasn't "doing work." Poincare also said that he solved problems after working on them intensely, getting stuck and then letting his subconscious digest the problem. This is communicated in another anecdote where right as he stepped on a bus he had a profound insight in hyperbolic geometry.
I am less interested in hearing more of these anecdotes, but rather I am interested in what people consider an appropriate amount of time to spend on doing mathematics in a given day if one has career ambitions of eventually being a tenured mathematician at a university.
I imagine everyone has different work habits, but I'd like to hear them and in particular I'd like to hear how the number of hours per day spent doing mathematics changes during different times in a person's career: undergrad, grad school, post doc and finally while climbing the faculty ladder. "Work" is meant to include working on problems, reading papers, math books, etcetera (I'll leave the question of whether or not answering questions on MO counts as work to you). Also, since teaching is considered an integral part of most mathematicians' careers, it might be good to track, but I am interested in primarily hours spent on learning the preliminaries for and directly doing research.
I ask this question in part because I have many colleagues and friends in computer science and physics, where pulling late nights or all-nighters is commonplace among grad students and even faculty. I wonder if the nature of mathematics is such that putting in such long hours is neither necessary nor sufficient for being "successful" or getting a post-doc/faculty job at a good university. In particular, does Malcom Gladwell's 10,000 hour rule apply to mathematicians?
Happy Holidays!
__________________________________________________________________________________________
I agree that hard work and stubbornness are very important (I think we should all take after Wiles and Perelman as much as we can). But it is also important how you spend the many hours you dedicate to mathematics. For instance, choice of problems is quite important: it is important to make sure that when you work on something, you spend your time usefully, i.e. you not only make progress on this particular problem, but also learn something new about mathematics in general. It is also important not to get hyperfocused on a fruitless attempt to solve a problem; after some time and effort spent on it, it becomes addictive. In such a situation, it is sometimes better to stop and ask for help/read something or switch to another problem for a while. Often, you'll wake up one morning a month or a year later and see that the insurmountable obstacle has magically disappeared! Or maybe this "Aha!" moment will come during a discussion with another mathematician, or while listening to a talk. For many people it is also helpful to have many simultaneous projects, so that when you get stuck on one, you can work on another. To summarize, I think that not only the number of hours matters, but also how efficiently you spend them, not only in terms of publishable results, but also in terms of your personal growth as a mathematician.
____________________________________________________________________________________________
Neglecting good sleep as a way of doing mathematics is not a good idea. To do mathematics, you need to get enough rest. As to the number of hours per day, it is impossible to count this. When you think about a mathematical problem, you think about it all the time, including when you are asleep. It is true that mathematicians who work more do tend to achieve more, and those with the very top achievements do tend to work really a lot. But no amount of hours spent per day sitting at the table guarantees anyone anything in mathematics. The key word is not "long hours", but "dedication".
____________________________________________________________________________________________
Well, I can't consider my self a successful mathematician, but from observing a few ones I know, here is my 2 cents:
The 10,000 hour rule (this is of course pseudo-science) certainly apply almost by definition: most mathematician start training in college if not before. If you count up to postdoc, which is very typical, that is about 12 years, and an average of 3 hours/day give you 10,000 already.
Certainly work habits vary, but it does seem that quite a few successful mathematicians I have met know how to enjoy life. Having said that, I think a blessing/curse of our profession is that the lab is in our mind. So it looks like we do not work that hard, compared to some other fields, since some of my friends in physics/biology have to stay at the lab at nights frequently because of experiments. On the other hand, math can follow you around even when you are playing tennis (I can confirm that from personal experience!).
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Grothendieck was known to work 10-12 hours a day more or less every day for the (something like) 25 years of his mathematical carrier. I think it's written in some memoirs of Cartier that this was one of the underlying reasons he decided to quit mathematics - he simply was too tired.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Every excellent mathematician that I know works extremely hard and for very long hours; however there are many others who also work extremely hard who are just average or "journeyman" mathematicians.
In other words, hard work is necessary but not sufficient - the existence of prodigies such as the Terry Taos and Akshay Venkateshs (just to name two Aussies that I've at least met) seems to me to be sufficient evidence that some natural talent/creativity/imagination/genius is necessary beyond mere hard work.
The working habits of mathematicians can also be endlessly amusing - we currently have a visitor who feels that he is full of creative energy immediately on waking, and so rather than getting out of bed and wasting that energy showering and having breakfast etc., he puts in an hour or two of maths and only starts the daily routine when he reaches his first dip in energy.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
In order for your question to make sense, you need to define the terms "successful mathematician" and "good university". An idealistic response might skirt the issue altogether and claim that it does not matter what other people think. On the other hand, you are constantly being evaluated throughout your schooling and well into your professional career. Maybe you can focus on what it means to do good mathematics.
In his essay "What is Good Mathematics" Terrence Tao explains why he thinks Szemeredi's Theoremis good math. The theorem states that any subset of natural numbers with "positive upper density" contains arithmetic sequences of arbitrary length. Although this was proven by Szemeredi in the 1970's, it was proven by many other people using tools from all over mathematics: dynamical systems, Fourier analysis, hypergraph theory.
One of my favorite solutions is the proof of the Baik-Deift-Johansson conjecture on the longest increasing subsequence of a random permutation. Proofs of this theorem relate this statistic to eigenvalues of random Hermitean matrices and to the lengths of random Young tableaux under Plancherel measure. Again the techniques use here come from different branches of math: e.g. the Riemann-Hilbert correspondence, the representation theory of the symmetric group, orthogonal polynomials, random matrices and quantum gravity. See Longest Increasing Subsequences: From Patience Sorting to the Baik-Deift-Johansson Theorem
Good mathematics takes a certain mixed of creativity and technical know-how to pose and solve. By solving thousands of problems, you can develop your own mathematical taste. Then you can judge for yourself what good mathematics is and what it isn't.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
How Much Work Does it Take to be a Successful Mathematician?的更多相关文章
- Elasticsearch 5.0 中term 查询和match 查询的认识
Elasticsearch 5.0 关于term query和match query的认识 一.基本情况 前言:term query和match query牵扯的东西比较多,例如分词器.mapping ...
- Git 在团队中的最佳实践--如何正确使用Git Flow
我们已经从SVN 切换到Git很多年了,现在几乎所有的项目都在使用Github管理, 本篇文章讲一下为什么使用Git, 以及如何在团队中正确使用. Git的优点 Git的优点很多,但是这里只列出我认为 ...
- 一百元的智能家居——Asp.Net Mvc Api+讯飞语音+Android+Arduino
大半夜的,先说些废话提提神 如今智能家居已经不再停留在概念阶段,高大上的科技公司都已经推出了自己的部分或全套的智能家居解决方案,不过就目前的现状而言,大多还停留在展厅阶段,还没有广泛的推广起来,有人说 ...
- 以bank account 数据为例,认识elasticsearch query 和 filter
Elasticsearch 查询语言(Query DSL)认识(一) 一.基本认识 查询子句的行为取决于 query context filter context 也就是执行的是查询(query)还是 ...
- ElasticSearch 5学习(10)——结构化查询(包括新特性)
之前我们所有的查询都属于命令行查询,但是不利于复杂的查询,而且一般在项目开发中不使用命令行查询方式,只有在调试测试时使用简单命令行查询,但是,如果想要善用搜索,我们必须使用请求体查询(request ...
- 基于Oracle安装Zabbix
软件版本 Oracle Enterprise Linux 7.1 64bit Oracle Enterprise Edition 12.1.0.2 64bit Zabbix 3.2.1 准备工作 上传 ...
- 源码分析netty服务器创建过程vs java nio服务器创建
1.Java NIO服务端创建 首先,我们通过一个时序图来看下如何创建一个NIO服务端并启动监听,接收多个客户端的连接,进行消息的异步读写. 示例代码(参考文献[2]): import java.io ...
- zookeeper源码分析之四服务端(单机)处理请求流程
上文: zookeeper源码分析之一服务端启动过程 中,我们介绍了zookeeper服务器的启动过程,其中单机是ZookeeperServer启动,集群使用QuorumPeer启动,那么这次我们分析 ...
- zookeeper源码分析之二客户端启动
ZooKeeper Client Library提供了丰富直观的API供用户程序使用,下面是一些常用的API: create(path, data, flags): 创建一个ZNode, path是其 ...
- PHP之用户验证和标签推荐的简单使用
本篇主要是讲解一些最简单的验证知识 效果图 bookmark_fns.php <?php require_once('output_fns.php'); require_once('db_fns ...
随机推荐
- SQL复制表及表结构
复制表结构和数据SQL语句 1:复制表结构及数据到新表 select * into 目的数据库名.dbo.目的表名 from 原表名 select * into my0735home.dbo.info ...
- Tomcat 7.0配置SSL的问题及解决办法
http://dong-shuai22-126-com.iteye.com/blog/1830209 以前一直在用Tomcat 6.0.29版本,今下载了apache-tomcat-7.0.33- ...
- python - pip 从已有的安装列表 安装
已经安装好的机器:sudo pip freeze > install_list.list 需要安装的机器:sudo pip install -r install_list.list
- LeetCode: Combination Sum I && II && III
Title: https://leetcode.com/problems/combination-sum/ Given a set of candidate numbers (C) and a tar ...
- Android 打勾显示输入的密码
main.xml: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><LinearLayout xmlns:and ...
- hdu 2594-Simpsons’ Hidden Talents(KMP)
题意: 给你两个串a,b,求既是a的前缀又是b的后缀的最长子串的长度. 分析: 很自然的想到把两个串连接起来,根据KMP的性质求即可 #include <map> #include < ...
- 《Python CookBook2》 第一章 文本 - 过滤字符串中不属于指定集合的字符 && 检查一个字符串是文本还是二进制
过滤字符串中不属于指定集合的字符 任务: 给定一个需要保留的字符串的集合,构建一个过滤函数,并可将其应用于任何字符串s,函数返回一个s的拷贝,该拷贝只包含指定字符集合中的元素. 解决方案: impor ...
- qt 设置背景图片
博客出处:http://www.cppblog.com/qianqian/archive/2010/07/25/121238.htm 工作似乎走上正轨了,上周五的工作是做一个界面,用到QFrame和Q ...
- hadoop 权限错误 Permission denied: user=root, access=WRITE, inode="/":hdfs:super
关于不能执行Hadoop命令 并报权限问题执行错误1.Permission denied: user=root, access=WRITE, inode="/":hdfs:supe ...
- JQuery:各种操作表单元素方法小结
来源:http://www.ido321.com/1220.html 表单元素无处不在,已然成了Web应用不可或缺的一个部分.对表单最最最常见的操作就是获取表单元素的值或者更改表单元素的值.那在JQu ...