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AMS Graduate Student Blog 网上今年十月有人记载了用邮件方式与2006年 Fields奖华裔得主Terence C. Tao 进行的一次访谈。年轻人和年轻的名人的交谈,总与大多数人的访谈有所不同,故转载。
(来自:http://mathgradblog.williams.edu/?p=399)
4th October 2009, 05:46 pm
By Kareem Carr
Fields medalist Terence Tao is undoubtedly a very successful mathematician. He works primarily in harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, geometric combinatorics, arithmetic combinatorics, analytic number theory, compressed sensing and algebraic combinatorics. I interviewed him over email to gain some insight into how aspiring mathematicians can become successful too.
Q: There is an extensive list of career advice on your page which I encourage everyone to read. What do you think is the most important piece of advice on your website for young mathematicians?
A: It would depend on the mathematician! For instance, I know some who are very hard working, but don’t ask the type of “dumb” questions that would advance their knowledge nearly as much as they should; and then I know other young mathematicians who are exactly the opposite. But perhaps my favorite piece of advice on those pages isn’t even my own, it is the initial quote by Erica Jong: “Advice is what we ask for when we already know the answer but wish we didn’t”.
Ultimately you should follow advice not because someone tells you to, but because it was something that you already knew you should be doing.
Q: As a long time reader of your blog, it’s hard not to notice how productive you are. You seem to get an amazing amount of work done. How many hours a day do you spend doing mathematics as opposed to other things?
A: It varies tremendously from day to day – I look at what I’m scheduled to be doing that day, and the various tasks that I need to get around to (of varying levels of mathematical sophistication), and also examine my own energy levels and motivation, and figure it out from there. I don’t always accomplish what I might initially intend to do, but I usually make progress on something (even if this “something” is just the task of replenishing my own motivation levels). One nice thing about having a blog is that it provides something to do when one wants to do something reasonably sophisticated mathematically (e.g. learn about topic X properly), but doesn’t have the time and energy to really work on an open problem or something. (I usually can’t maintain that level of focused concentration for more than an hour or two at a time anyway.)
But there are definitely some days in which I am too fatigued or caught up in non-mathematical tasks to get much “real” work done. That’s usually a good day to do errands, proofread papers or blog articles, and respond to email.