Love and Math: The Heart of Hidden Reality — Edward Frenkel

On Reddit someone asked mathematicians what is beautiful about math; it’s the rare interesting-but-SFW Reddit question and, while I’m not a mathematician, I could contribute because I just read Edward Frenkel’s Love and Math: The Heart of Hidden Reality (it’s recommended to anyone who wants to understand more about the relationship of the subjects in the title).

In the preface Frenel says that he hopes “Mathematics will get under your skin just like it did under mine, and your worldview will never be the same.” To him, “we have a hunger to discover something new, reach new meaning, understand better the universe and our place in it,” and math enables us to do so. Throughout the book, he describes many of the unexpected correspondences among branches of math, which I could more or less follow.

The story of love and math is bound with Frenkel’s personal story and how he managed to pursue math despite the Soviet Union’s anti-Semitism, and there are many vignettes about mathematicians along the way, like this one: “Perhaps most importantly, Gelfand possessed an excellent taste for beautiful mathematics as well as an astute intuition about which areas of mathematics were the most interesting and promising. He was like an oracle who had the power to predict in which direction mathematics would move.”

Admiration for math also becomes admiration for the mathematicians who do it: “Galois did not solve the problem of finding a formula for solutions of polynomial equations in the sense in which it was understood. He hacked the problem! He reformulated it, bent and warped it, looked at it in a totally different light. And his brilliant insight forever changed the way people think about numbers and equations.”

Math feels like a thrilling story in Frenkel’s telling, and he persistently and perhaps aptly criticizes the way it is commonly taught in schools, saying that if math were taught like painting, students would endlessly study how to paint a fence but would never look at masters like Cézanne or Titian. Frenkel also thinks in metaphor, as virtually all great writers must, and his use of metaphors anchors otherwise abstract ideas.

Stories about science and discovery are one way to get away from the standard romance plots that power much fiction, and away from many of the portrayals of consciousness that have become effectively masturbatory in much capital-L Literary Fiction. David Leavitt’s The Indian Clerk is a good and underrated example of this.

Thoughts on Dallas Buyers Club

* The movie is brutal; it’s easy for someone who didn’t live through the 1980s to forget or not know how frightening AIDS was when no one knew anything about the disease.

* Like most movies Dallas Buyers Club is too long, by at least 20 minutes and probably 30. Still, many scenes were delightfully under-elaborated, letting watchers fill in gaps.

* Darshak Sanghavi’s article The Pills of Last Resort: How Dying Patients Get Access to Experimental Drugs is out today and covers similar ground from a clinical / abstract perspective; Alex Tabarrok’s argument about the F.D.A.’s slowness, from Launching the Innovation Renaissance, gets a narrative boost from Dallas Buyers Club. Sanghavi observes that Thalidomide launched the modern F.D.A. drug trial rules, but drugs for a minor issue (nausea during pregnancy) and drugs for major issues (imminent death) should have different rules and different standards for safety. The reaction to the Thalidomide story has resulted in a situation that may be worse than the original problem.

* Compare how doctors and bureaucrats are portrayed in Contagion versus Dallas Buyers Club.

Links: Ads, antibiotics, Paul de Man, Pages, and more!

* The unbelievably brilliant ad campaign by Eat24, a food delivery service: “How to Advertise on a Porn Website.” Note that this is safe for work, provided you don’t work in a religious organization or elementary school.

* The most important piece and yet likely to be the least read: “We’ve Reached ‘The End of Antibiotics, Period.’

* “The Many Betrayals of Paul de Man,” or, why it is sometimes impossible to separate the work from the life.

* Pages 5: An unmitigated disaster.

* “Why women lose the [late] dating game: Bettina Arndt listens to the other voices in this debate: the men.”

* “How Texas lost the world’s largest super collider,” a story that is really about the dysfunction and misplaced priorities of American politics.

* Seattle wants gigabit broadband, Mayor McGinn wants to deliver it.