This brings to mind the childhood of John Stuart Mill:
- Learned Greek starting age three.
- Was studying Plato at age six.
- Studied Latin starting at age eight.
And more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Stuart_Mill#Biography
I guess it helps that he had Jeremy Bentham hanging around his house from an early age.
Incredible. Knowing about Abelian groups, being able to graph
y = x^3 — 2x^2 + x in one minute, and performing integration at age 7. Chomping up university-level math textbooks by 8. A classical math prodigy.
I definitely empathize with "his preference for using an analytic, highly logical problem-solving strategy" (I'm not a genius ofc). It's often more immediately clear for me than visual/spatial manipulation.
This really reminded me of the first part Flowers for Algernon. The main character undergoes a treatment which improves is intelligence and the story is narrated via a series of diary entries which become successively more fluent and sophisticated.
I am interested in his new book, "Six Math Essentials", but I doubt it will be on my very low level of math understanding..
My brain initially parsed the title as an obituary title and I was really sad for a moment.
I could have been just like him if I tried hard enough.
Humbling.
Interesting it's hosted on gwern...