I already mentioned what Halmos' stance was. What I'm more interested in is how is it possible to work without examples.
The point I was trying to make is that it may not be necessary to have "a large stack of examples". It might instead be much more useful to have a couple of "protoypal concrete examples...a root example". Kontsevich seems to have similar thought patterns.
After reading Luke's interview with Scott Aaronson, I've decided to come back to an issue that's been bugging me.
Specifically, in the answer to Luke's question about object-level tactics, Scott says (under 3):
In a similar vein, there's the Halmos quote which has been heavily upvoted in the November Rationality Quotes:
Every time I see an opinion expressing a similar sentiment, I can't help but contrast it with the opinions and practices of two wildly successful (very) theoretical mathematicians:
Alexander Grothendieck
(from Allyn Jackson's account of Grothendieck's life).
Maxim Kontsevich
(from the IPMU interview).
Are they fooling themselves, or is there something to be learned? Perhaps it's possible to mention Gowers' Two Cultures in the answer.
P.S. First content post here, I would appreciate feedback.