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by krajzeg
4793 days ago
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I'm far from claiming that the proof is invalid based on my feelings on the subject. My only issue is that in the article, and in other writing on the subject, nobody is even contemplating the possibility that Mochizuki's work might be unreadable for reasons other than it being too brilliant to grasp. I wanted to present an alternative possibility which seems to be disregarded at the moment in favor of the attractive "eccentric genius" narrative. On the topic of Perelman - he did reject the Fields Medal. However, he did give a series of talks at MIT, Princeton and other places a year after publishing his proof. |
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So to me, that read more as, this is a curiosity that has a deep and interesting past and an even more interesting present.
> I wanted to present an alternative possibility which seems to be disregarded at the moment
That is entirely fair and valid. I just misread your comment as more along the lines of "Does no one else see how obvious it is that this guy is crazy?!" My fault.
> On the topic of Perelman
Yes I was already corrected. I couldn't remember with certainty whether he did or didn't. I thought he had, but then what I remembered about his personality made me reconsider that.