|
|
|
|
|
by lisper
2115 days ago
|
|
You may not be facetious, but you are being condescending by implying that I have never read a math textbook, or that I have made no attempt to find this information. In fact, I have read fairly extensively about elliptic curves and I have never seen any source that describes the history. To the contrary, many sources say that elliptic curves have nothing to do with ellipses, but this series of tweets seems to imply that this isn't true. So if you want to point me to an actual source, that would be much appreciated. But all you have to say is RTFM then my response is STFU. |
|
I'd like to think that I'm pretty good with elliptic curves, given that I explain them to other folks. However, this tweet-thread still showed me things that I didn't know about the history of maths. Some of these tweets directly led to minutes (hours) on Wikipedia and chasing down various PDFs to read.
Honestly, you could stand to be less self-aggrandizing. It's okay if you don't get every joke immediately; you don't have to know every bit of historical background.
Elliptic curves aren't interesting because of the answers that we have. They're interesting because of the questions. One open question [0] is on the Millennium Prize list. Another open question is almost never written down because it's so simple; "why 1728?" [1] Coming to understand these questions is the goal of our entire process, so there's not much that I can really do other than to ask you to join the process of exploration.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch_and_Swinnerton-Dyer_conj...
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J-invariant