if you go beyond your limit, dont drive phone home
if you go beyond your limit, dont drive phone home


i am a mathematician so i ain't got no other talent. star wars and science geek. twenty-fucking-three year old. a couple of black moors, a bike. that's all i have. body mods (vertical labret and some other stuff). ink. noise. destruction. weed. distortion. neon lights. revolution. rave. bike, fuck that, i don't even remember where i left it. Twitter, Last.fm, Facebook  humanoid(s) online
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poculum:

Maths genius Grigori Perelman turned down $1 million prize.
Russian mathematician Grigori Perelman solved the seemingly unsolvable Poincaré conjecture, a 100-year-old problem to prove that any shape without a hole can be formed into a sphere.
The problem was one of the seven listed on Cambridge, Massachusetts’ Clay Mathematics Institute’s Millennium Prize list.
The bounty on such a solution? One million dollars and the Fields Medal, math’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize.
Considered one of the world’s smartest men, Perelman published two  proofs of the theorem in 2002 and 2003. It took until last year for a  team of mathematicians to validate his results.
While his work was celebrated, he rejected any accolades. The  reclusive genius is only now talking about why he turned down the money.
When it comes to awards and monetary gain, Perelman just isn’t  interested; the genius refused the prize, claiming the knowledge gained  to be worth more than the financial reward.
“I’m not interested in money or fame,” Perelman stated.
“Emptiness is everywhere and it can be calculated, which gives us a   great opportunity. I know how to control the universe. So tell me, why   should I run for a million?” he told the Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda.
Source

poculum:

Maths genius Grigori Perelman turned down $1 million prize.

Russian mathematician Grigori Perelman solved the seemingly unsolvable Poincaré conjecture, a 100-year-old problem to prove that any shape without a hole can be formed into a sphere.

The problem was one of the seven listed on Cambridge, Massachusetts’ Clay Mathematics Institute’s Millennium Prize list.

The bounty on such a solution? One million dollars and the Fields Medal, math’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize.

Considered one of the world’s smartest men, Perelman published two proofs of the theorem in 2002 and 2003. It took until last year for a team of mathematicians to validate his results.

While his work was celebrated, he rejected any accolades. The reclusive genius is only now talking about why he turned down the money.

When it comes to awards and monetary gain, Perelman just isn’t interested; the genius refused the prize, claiming the knowledge gained to be worth more than the financial reward.

“I’m not interested in money or fame,” Perelman stated.

“Emptiness is everywhere and it can be calculated, which gives us a great opportunity. I know how to control the universe. So tell me, why should I run for a million?” he told the Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda.

Source

(via poculum-deactivated20120319)



  1. wereweever reblogged this from earlyfrost
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  7. ollidaccep reblogged this from shrouded-in-veils and added:
    It’s possible for other people to be smarter than him and that does say a lot.
  8. shrouded-in-veils reblogged this from boogans and added:
    Perelman is one of the creepiest guys in the whole planet imho. I don’t even dare to think about why he didn’t take the...
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