> mathematics only exists in a living community of mathematicians that spreads understanding and breaths life into ideas both old and new. The real satisfaction from mathematics is in learning from others and sharing with others. All of us have clear understanding of a few things and murky concepts of many more. There is no way to run out of ideas in need of clarification.
Yes! And this applies to all human culture, not just math. Everything people have figured out needs to be in living form to carried on. The more people the better. If math, or any product of human skill, is only recorded in papers or videos, that isn't the same as having millions of people understanding it in their own ways.
Modern culture often emphasizes innovation and fails to value mere maintenance, tradition, and upkeep. This can lead to people like the OP feeling that they have nothing to contribute, when actually, just learning math, being able to do it, being able to help others learn it - all of these are contributions.
We are all needed to keep civilization afloat, in ways we cannot anticipate. We all need to pursue some kind of excellence just to keep human culture alive.
In theory, sure. In practice, our society is a) not set up to value things which don’t have an immediate financial ROI, b) is valuing them less as time progresses, not more, and c) is experiencing some very serious transitions that may destroy the financial viability of devoting a lot of your time and energy to some very important things.
> Everything people have figured out needs to be in living form to carried on.
It would appear that LLMs are invalidating this claim. Things can live in synthetic form and carry on just fine. Instead of cultivating a population of learned minds we are just feeding a few dozen egregores of models and training corpuses.
After reading another post about the most recent advances LLMs have made in finding and writing up novel, correct proofs, it sounds like the frontier models are now at the point of PhD student level. I wonder how a math student could contribute today, if they're just starting on the PhD track? Maybe by using LLMs as a mighty tool and providing skilled usage and oversight?
It must feel similar to those who wanted to become chess or go masters after computers surpassed humanity in those games.
I wonder if AI is one means to overcome the natural limits of human knowledge aggregation [0].
On the other hand, in the very long run, what does it mean if a talented human being does not have enough years of life to fully analyze and understand an extremely advanced proof created by AI?
If we see our contributions as brownian motion rather than preconceived trajectories, then, rather than focusing on the Gausses, Einsteins, Patons as providing singular progress, they become the the dominant least energy paths to what we recognize as truth. Without negating the individual’s contribution, the ones we see as truly important are the ones that supported by every other’s attempt, finds the path forward.
This should provide hope, if we can leave aside our egos and focus on humanity, we can, and do, all contribute even though a few seems to get all the credit.
This also goes for AI, it may be an accelerant in research, but the probability distribution of reality is large, large enough for humans to wonder, ask questions and stumble upon a new path forward, that computers alone don’t find.
At the very foundation, chaining sentences together is what we call logic.
If you chain unrelated sentences, you are a retard. If you chain sentences like most people, it is common sense. If you chain sentences airtight, it is math.
You ask what a true mathematician does. He chains sentences like everyone else but with an effort to make them airtight.
From one of the answers:
> mathematics only exists in a living community of mathematicians that spreads understanding and breaths life into ideas both old and new. The real satisfaction from mathematics is in learning from others and sharing with others. All of us have clear understanding of a few things and murky concepts of many more. There is no way to run out of ideas in need of clarification.
Yes! And this applies to all human culture, not just math. Everything people have figured out needs to be in living form to carried on. The more people the better. If math, or any product of human skill, is only recorded in papers or videos, that isn't the same as having millions of people understanding it in their own ways.
Modern culture often emphasizes innovation and fails to value mere maintenance, tradition, and upkeep. This can lead to people like the OP feeling that they have nothing to contribute, when actually, just learning math, being able to do it, being able to help others learn it - all of these are contributions.
We are all needed to keep civilization afloat, in ways we cannot anticipate. We all need to pursue some kind of excellence just to keep human culture alive.
In theory, sure. In practice, our society is a) not set up to value things which don’t have an immediate financial ROI, b) is valuing them less as time progresses, not more, and c) is experiencing some very serious transitions that may destroy the financial viability of devoting a lot of your time and energy to some very important things.
> Everything people have figured out needs to be in living form to carried on.
It would appear that LLMs are invalidating this claim. Things can live in synthetic form and carry on just fine. Instead of cultivating a population of learned minds we are just feeding a few dozen egregores of models and training corpuses.
Fortunately doing something novel is one of the main things llms can't do.
But unfortunately human knowledge accumulation and advancement over the last many thousand years has been pretty large deep and varied.
Finding something novel for phds or profits or crime or whatever th fk is harder everyday.
After reading another post about the most recent advances LLMs have made in finding and writing up novel, correct proofs, it sounds like the frontier models are now at the point of PhD student level. I wonder how a math student could contribute today, if they're just starting on the PhD track? Maybe by using LLMs as a mighty tool and providing skilled usage and oversight?
It must feel similar to those who wanted to become chess or go masters after computers surpassed humanity in those games.
I wonder if AI is one means to overcome the natural limits of human knowledge aggregation [0].
On the other hand, in the very long run, what does it mean if a talented human being does not have enough years of life to fully analyze and understand an extremely advanced proof created by AI?
[0]: https://slatestarcodex.com/2017/11/09/ars-longa-vita-brevis/
If we see our contributions as brownian motion rather than preconceived trajectories, then, rather than focusing on the Gausses, Einsteins, Patons as providing singular progress, they become the the dominant least energy paths to what we recognize as truth. Without negating the individual’s contribution, the ones we see as truly important are the ones that supported by every other’s attempt, finds the path forward. This should provide hope, if we can leave aside our egos and focus on humanity, we can, and do, all contribute even though a few seems to get all the credit.
This also goes for AI, it may be an accelerant in research, but the probability distribution of reality is large, large enough for humans to wonder, ask questions and stumble upon a new path forward, that computers alone don’t find.
Yeah I don’t think invention or technological development is inevitable. It’s path dependent and colored by individuals and culture.
At the very foundation, chaining sentences together is what we call logic.
If you chain unrelated sentences, you are a retard. If you chain sentences like most people, it is common sense. If you chain sentences airtight, it is math.
You ask what a true mathematician does. He chains sentences like everyone else but with an effort to make them airtight.