134 points by gurjeet 14 hours ago | 8 comments
chao- 55 minutes ago
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.

creamyhorror 46 minutes ago
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.

markisus 1 hour ago
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.
LostMyLogin 31 minutes ago
We had to read it in middle school and man did it have me in tears at the end.
jorl17 53 minutes ago
Had me in tears by the end. One of my favorite books. So glad a friend recommended it to me.
TheChaplain 48 minutes ago
I am interested in his new book, "Six Math Essentials", but I doubt it will be on my very low level of math understanding..
elromulous 1 hour ago
My brain initially parsed the title as an obituary title and I was really sad for a moment.
sayamqazi 9 minutes ago
I could have been just like him if I tried hard enough.
jibal 1 hour ago
Humbling.
markus_zhang 1 hour ago
Indeed. He definitely knows more Math than I do.
canadiantim 1 hour ago
Interesting it's hosted on gwern...
poidos 1 hour ago
Gwern hosts a lot of PDFs -- see https://gwern.net/archiving