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The world's most charismatic mathematician: John Horton Conway
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jul/23/john-horton-conway-the-most-charismatic-mathematician-in-the-world
The worlds most charismatic mathematician
John Horton Conway is a cross between Archimedes, Mick Jagger and Salvador Dalí. For many years, he worried that his obsession with playing silly games was ruining his career until he realised that it could lead to extraordinary discoveries
Siobhan Roberts
Thursday 23 July 2015 01.00 EDT
On a late September day in 1956, John Horton Conway left home with a trunk on his back. He was a skinny 18-year-old, with long, unkempt hair a sort of proto-hippie and although he generally preferred to go barefoot, on this occasion he wore strappy Jesus sandals. He travelled by steam train from Liverpool to Cambridge, where he was to start life as an undergraduate. During the five-hour journey, via Crewe with a connection in Bletchley, something dawned on him: this was a chance to reinvent himself.
In junior school, one of Conways teachers had nicknamed him Mary. He was a delicate, effeminate creature. Being Mary made his life absolute hell until he moved on to secondary school, at Liverpools Holt High School for Boys. Soon after term began, the headmaster called each boy into his office and asked what he planned to do with his life. John said he wanted to read mathematics at Cambridge. Instead of Mary he became known as The Prof. These nicknames confirmed Conway as a terribly introverted adolescent, painfully aware of his own suffering.
After loitering for a time with the teenage reprobates at the back of the classroom, Conway ultimately did well enough on the university entrance exams to receive a minor scholarship and get his name published in the Liverpool Daily Post. As he sat on the train to Cambridge, it dawned on him that since none of his classmates would be joining him at university, he would be able to transform himself into a new person: an extrovert! He wasnt sure it would work. He worried that his introversion might be too entrenched, but he decided to try. He would be boisterous and witty, he would tell funny stories at parties, he would laugh at himself that was key.
Roughly speaking, he recalled, I was going to become the kind of person you see now. It was a free decision.
Now 77, John Horton Conway is perhaps the worlds most lovable egomaniac. He is Archimedes, Mick Jagger, Salvador Dalí, and Richard Feynman, all rolled into one. He is one of the greatest living mathematicians, with a sly sense of humour, a polymaths promiscuous curiosity, and a compulsion to explain everything about the world to everyone in it. According to Sir Michael Atiyah, former president of the Royal Society and arbiter of mathematical fashion, Conway is the most magical mathematician in the world.
<snip>
The worlds most charismatic mathematician
John Horton Conway is a cross between Archimedes, Mick Jagger and Salvador Dalí. For many years, he worried that his obsession with playing silly games was ruining his career until he realised that it could lead to extraordinary discoveries
Siobhan Roberts
Thursday 23 July 2015 01.00 EDT
On a late September day in 1956, John Horton Conway left home with a trunk on his back. He was a skinny 18-year-old, with long, unkempt hair a sort of proto-hippie and although he generally preferred to go barefoot, on this occasion he wore strappy Jesus sandals. He travelled by steam train from Liverpool to Cambridge, where he was to start life as an undergraduate. During the five-hour journey, via Crewe with a connection in Bletchley, something dawned on him: this was a chance to reinvent himself.
In junior school, one of Conways teachers had nicknamed him Mary. He was a delicate, effeminate creature. Being Mary made his life absolute hell until he moved on to secondary school, at Liverpools Holt High School for Boys. Soon after term began, the headmaster called each boy into his office and asked what he planned to do with his life. John said he wanted to read mathematics at Cambridge. Instead of Mary he became known as The Prof. These nicknames confirmed Conway as a terribly introverted adolescent, painfully aware of his own suffering.
After loitering for a time with the teenage reprobates at the back of the classroom, Conway ultimately did well enough on the university entrance exams to receive a minor scholarship and get his name published in the Liverpool Daily Post. As he sat on the train to Cambridge, it dawned on him that since none of his classmates would be joining him at university, he would be able to transform himself into a new person: an extrovert! He wasnt sure it would work. He worried that his introversion might be too entrenched, but he decided to try. He would be boisterous and witty, he would tell funny stories at parties, he would laugh at himself that was key.
Roughly speaking, he recalled, I was going to become the kind of person you see now. It was a free decision.
Now 77, John Horton Conway is perhaps the worlds most lovable egomaniac. He is Archimedes, Mick Jagger, Salvador Dalí, and Richard Feynman, all rolled into one. He is one of the greatest living mathematicians, with a sly sense of humour, a polymaths promiscuous curiosity, and a compulsion to explain everything about the world to everyone in it. According to Sir Michael Atiyah, former president of the Royal Society and arbiter of mathematical fashion, Conway is the most magical mathematician in the world.
<snip>
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The world's most charismatic mathematician: John Horton Conway (Original Post)
bananas
Jul 2015
OP
immoderate
(20,885 posts)1. His *Game of Life* is a great step to understanding 'emergent behavior.'
--imm
longship
(40,416 posts)2. Life, don't talk to me about life.
eppur_se_muova
(36,293 posts)3. Enjoyed his "Book of Numbers" ...
struggle4progress
(118,350 posts)4. He's very good at what he does.
His idea that numbers could be generalized as games was quite productive
http://www.amazon.com/On-Numbers-Games-John-Conway/dp/1568811276
His book on quaternions is pretty good too
http://www.amazon.com/Quaternions-Octonions-John-Horton-Conway/dp/1568811349