Douglas_Knight comments on Open Thread May 2 - May 8, 2016 - Less Wrong

5 Post author: Elo 02 May 2016 02:43AM

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Comment author: Douglas_Knight 26 May 2016 02:13:29AM 0 points [-]

What were these books? I don't speak Russian, so I'll probably follow up with: who were a few important mathematicians who worked in factories?

I’ve heard a few stories of people being demoted from desk jobs to manual labor after applying for exit visas, but that’s not quite the same as never getting a desk job in the first place. I've heard a lot of stories of badly-connected pure mathematicians being sent to applied think tanks, but that's pretty cushy and there wasn't much obligation to do the nominal work, so they just kept doing pure math. I can't remember them, but I think I've heard stories of mathematicians getting non-research desk jobs, but doing math at work.

Comment author: Viliam 28 May 2016 04:32:59PM 1 point [-]

Masha Gessen: Perfect Rigour: A Genius and the Mathematical Breakthrough of the Century

This is a story about one person, but there is a lot of background information on doing math in Soviet Union.

Comment author: Douglas_Knight 01 June 2016 01:42:11AM 0 points [-]

Thanks! Since that's in English, I will take at least a look at it.

Gessen does not strike me as a reliable source, so for now I am completely discounting everything you said about it, in favor of what I have heard directly from Russian mathematicians, which is a lot less extreme.