Laurent Schwartz cytaty

Laurent Schwartz – francuski matematyk.

Od roku 1953 profesor Sorbony, od 1963 w Ecole Polytechnique w Paryżu, gdzie wykładał do roku 1980. W roku 1975 został członkiem francuskiej Akademii Nauk.

Od 1991 członek PAN. Prowadził prace z teorii dystrybucji, analizy funkcjonalnej, topologii i fizyki matematycznej. W roku 1950 otrzymał medal Fieldsa.

✵ 5. Marzec 1915 – 4. Lipiec 2002
Laurent Schwartz: 4   Cytaty 0   Polubień

Laurent Schwartz: Cytaty po angielsku

“What is important is to deeply understand things and their relations to each other. This is where intelligence lies. The fact of being quick or slow isn't really relevant.”

A Mathematician Grappling With His Century (2001). Quoted in slide no.22 https://edpolicy.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/events/materials/elgw-boaler-ppt.pdf
Kontekst: I was always deeply uncertain about my own intellectual capacity; I thought I was unintelligent. And it is true that I was, and still am, rather slow. I need time to seize things because I always need to understand them fully. Even when I was the first to answer the teacher's questions, I knew it was because they happened to be questions to which I already knew the answer. But if a new question arose, usually students who weren't as good as I was answered before me. Towards the end of the eleventh grade, I secretly thought of myself as stupid. I worried about this for a long time. Not only did I believe I was stupid, but I couldn't understand the contradiction between this stupidity and my good grades. I never talked about this to anyone, but I always felt convinced that my imposture would someday be revealed: the whole world and myself would finally see that what looked like intelligence was really just an illusion. If this ever happened, apparently no one noticed it, and I’m still just as slow. (...)At the end of the eleventh grade, I took the measure of the situation, and came to the conclusion that rapidity doesn't have a precise relation to intelligence. What is important is to deeply understand things and their relations to each other. This is where intelligence lies. The fact of being quick or slow isn't really relevant. Naturally, it's helpful to be quick, like it is to have a good memory. But it's neither necessary nor sufficient for intellectual success.

“I have always thought that morality in politics was something essential, just like feelings and affinities.”

As quoted in his obituary in The Times (July 2002) http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Obits/Schwartz.html

“To discover something in mathematics is to overcome an inhibition and a tradition. You cannot move forward if you are not subversive.”

Laurent Schwartz książka A Mathematician Grappling with His Century

Un mathematicien aux prises avec le siecle (1997)

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