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by embiaa
3912 days ago
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I am a research mathematician. I don't think this quote is an accurate reflection of how 99% of experts feel about Mochizuki's work. Most experts expect that if Mochizuki's work is correct (and even if not) it contains a lot of valuable ideas. Proofs of this kind are almost never mathematical dead ends - they are difficult because they require fresh insights and these insights can always be applied to other areas. Mathematics is not solely about the proof. Good mathematics is about the communication of the proof and the ideas in it. I think it is fair to say Mochuzuki's work is not being communicated effectively. Though I am not saying the problem lies with Mochizuki alone. |
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It sounds to me as if you are implying, that it is Mochizuki's responsebility to be pedagogical. If being pedagogical is good (because it is more social?), how is mathematics different from any other discipline? Surely one ought to be social in every regard.
If the proof turn out to be correct, would you still say Mochizuki communicated it wrong?
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grigori_Perelman#Verification