Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Bill Thurston writes:
Mathematics is a process of staring hard enough with enough perseverance at the fog of muddle and confusion to eventually break through to improved clarity.
Andy Matuschak • Cultivating Depth and Stillness in Research
In June 1983, Alexander Grothendieck sits down to write the preface to a mathematical manuscript called Pursuing Stacks . He is concerned by what he sees as a tacit disdain for the more “feminine side” of mathematics (which is related to what I’m calling the solitary creative state) in favor of the “hammer and chisel” of the finished theorem. By el... See more
Cultivating a State of Mind Where New Ideas Are Born
In June 1983, Alexander Grothendieck sits down to write the preface to a mathematical manuscript called Pursuing Stacks . He is concerned by what he sees as a tacit disdain for the more “feminine side” of mathematics (which is related to what I’m calling the solitary creative state) in favor of the “hammer and chisel” of the finished theorem. By el... See more
Henrik Karlsson • Cultivating a state of mind where new ideas are born
Thurston’s response offers a radical change of perspective: The product of mathematics is clarity and understanding. Not theorems, by themselves. The world does not suffer from an oversupply of clarity and understanding (to put it mildly). The real satisfaction from mathematics is in learning from others and sharing with others. All of us have clea
... See moreDavid Bessis • Mathematica
Fuller cautions: Specialization tends to shut off the wide-band tuning searches and thus to preclude further discovery.
The Marginalian • Buckminster Fuller’s Manifesto for the Genius of Generalists

