11 comments

  • docdeek 3 minutes ago

    > Ronald Graham, a fellow mathematician-juggler...

    I first read about Graham as a friend and collaborator of Paul Erdos in 'The Man Who Loved Only Numbers'. As well as his mathematical achievements, Graham was also at one time president of the Internal Jugglers Association. If you have never read the book, it is a fascinating insight into the lives and non-math idiosyncrasies of Erdos and his fellow wizards.

  • lqet an hour ago

    Kind of off-topic, but one thing that really confuses me about Shannon's biography is the following: according to the authors of "A Mind at Play", Shannon was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 1983 [0], and the illness progressed "very quickly". They continue:

    > In too-brief moments, the family was given a flash of the Claude they knew. [His daughter] Peggy remembered that she “actually had a conversation with him in 1992 about graduate school programs and what problems I might pursue. And I remember being just amazed how he could cut to the core of the questions I was thinking about, I was like, ‘Wow, even in his compromised state he still has that ability.’”

    So in 1992, an actual meaningful conversation with him seemed to be unexpected, and after 9 years of "quickly progressing" Alzheimer's, I would expect him to be in really terribly shape and barely coherent. Yet there is an article about him from 1992 [1], which shows him at age 75, in good shape, still able to juggle and to hold a conversation about his achievements and about information theory:

    > “My first thinking about [information theory]," Shannon said, “was how you best improve information transmission over a noisy channel. This was a specific problem, where you're thinking about a telegraph system or a telephone system. But when you get to thinking about that, you begin to generalize in your head about all these broader applications."

    [0] https://www.quora.com/How-did-Claude-Shannon-come-to-terms-w...

    [1] https://spectrum.ieee.org/claude-shannon-tinkerer-prankster-...

  • prophesi 19 minutes ago

    Highly recommend giving The Bit Player[0] a watch for those interested in learning more about Claude Shannon and their pursuits in both their academic and personal life.

    [0] https://thebitplayer.com/

    • graemep 7 minutes ago

      Loved that film.

      I particularly liked the idea that he is one of the most important figures in science/tech/maths that most people have not heard of.

  • nemesis17 15 minutes ago

    Our 3.5 friend was named after him.

  • pcl 3 hours ago
  • jjcc an hour ago

    One of the photo shows his highly concentration. I have a hypothesis that many world class masters have talent to get into "Flow State". Juggling is one of the activity that associate with the state.

    Another example is DHH who created RoR eventually became professional sport car racer.

    It's well know that in sports area, many top players have the talent. My guess is it's also applicable on "mind sports".

    • machiaweliczny an hour ago

      I’ve watched vide with guy that supposedly has 200IQ and in his view IQ is ability to focus on small on small set of things but many high IQ ppl can’t „refocus” it easily and aren’t doing well in life.

  • overu589 5 days ago

    It’s funny seeing Shannon as an old man. Yeah, sure, it was a long time ago and everyone gets old. For some reason, in my mind’s eye he is immortalized as the ~35yr old of his prime.

  • soufron 2 hours ago

    And proto-nazi ?