The other ideas here are worth a read as well.

Udhay

http://www.nytimes.com/projects/magazine/ideas/2009/#m-2

 In January, Timothy Gowers, a professor of mathematics at Cambridge
and a holder of the Fields Medal, math's highest honor, decided to see
if the comment section of his blog could prove a theorem he could not.

In two blog posts — one titled "Is Massively Collaborative Mathematics
Possible?" — he proposed an attack on a stubborn math problem called
the Density Hales-Jewett Theorem. He encouraged the thousands of
readers of his blog to jump in and start proving. Mathematics is a
process of generating vast quantities of ideas and rejecting the
majority that don't work; maybe, Gowers reasoned, the participation of
so many people would speed the sifting.

The resulting comment thread spanned hundreds of thousands of words
and drew in dozens of contributors, including Terry Tao, a fellow
Fields Medalist, and Jason Dyer, a high-school teacher.

It makes fascinating, if forbiddingly technical, reading. Gowers's
goals for the so-called Polymath Project were modest. "I will regard
the experiment as a success," he wrote, "if it leads to anything that
could count as genuine progress toward an understanding of the
problem." Six weeks later, the theorem was proved. The plan is to
submit the resulting paper to a top journal, attributed to one D.H.J.
Polymath.

By now we're used to the idea that gigantic aggregates of human brains
— especially when allowed to communicate nearly instantaneously via
the Internet — can carry out fantastically difficult cognitive tasks,
like writing an encyclopedia or mapping a social network. But some
problems we still jealously guard as the province of individual
beautiful minds: writing a novel, choosing a spouse, creating a new
mathematical theorem. The Polymath experiment suggests this prejudice
may need to be rethought. In the near future, we might talk not only
about the wisdom of crowds but also of their genius. JORDAN ELLENBERG


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

Reply via email to