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'A Beautiful Mind:' American Pi
The beauty of mathematics, says Harvard- and Oxford-trained mathematician Jonathan David Farley, can never be fully captured on film
By
JONATHAN DAVID FARLEY

AP Russell Crowe on the set of 'A Beautiful Mind' |
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Saturday, Jan. 05, 2002
A few months ago, I was at a party when somebody said,
"Listen to this joke: Let epsilon be a large negative
number..." Those of us who were mathematicians cracked
up laughing; everybody else stood around looking
puzzled.
I would have never laughed at that same joke fourteen
years ago. That was the year before I entered college,
and I visited the Math Department at Harvard
University along with a few other students who, like
me, intended to major in math. I remember two
things from that visit: First, a very strange and
sheepish boy a senior with a perpetual five o'clock
shadow and wide, staring eyes, someone whom we might
uncharitably call a "geek" or a "nerd." It was clear
that mathematics was his entire life, and he was
undoubtedly good at it. I prayed I would not become
like him. The second thing I remember is a word we
used: "beauty." There were no girls present, so we
weren't referring to
them. There were no Monets or Rembrandts around
either. We were talking
about the pure, unadulterated beauty of mathematics
itself. And
I remember thinking, I'll be damned if I'm ever so
lost as to think of math as beautiful.
Fourteen years later, I am wonderfully, happily
Lost lost in a surreal world of the imagination, a
world not merely of numbers but of shapes, of
structure, of order. I even laugh at math jokes. But
unfortunately, when people ask me what I do, I don't
know what to say. "I study compact disconnected
topological spaces." No, that wouldn't do. When a
physicist talks, at least, about atoms and stars, his
audience will nod meaningfully. An artist can show us
her canvas; an economist, money and markets. We
mathematicians have nothing to show. That's why the
new movies about math hold such promise. They're
opportunities for others to tell our stories better
than we could hope to.
"A Beautiful Mind," starring Russell Crowe, is the
latest film to make this daring attempt. It's the true
story of John Nash, the man who set the mathematical
world ablaze at twenty-one, but went mad at age
thirty; a genius who believed he could speak with
extraterrestrials and who still won the Nobel Prize
(in economics there is no prize for mathematics).
Nash, a diffident, socially awkward boy from West
Virginia, dreamt up the idea that would make him
famous when he was an undergraduate at Carnegie
Institute. He had only ever taken one economics
course. Later, at Princeton, he produced a twenty-seven page thesis which laid the foundations for the Theory of Games. His theory showed how the rules we use to play poker can
be applied to everything, from Cold War politics, to
evolutionary biology, to economics. Nash's insight was
to say that, whenever two parties have differing
interests, they're like "players" in a
"non-cooperative game." The merits or demerits of
their strategies for winning the game can be
numerically calculated and compared until one finds
the "Nash equilibrium," the best strategy for both
players. (The Americans and the Soviets both hired
mathematicians during the Cold War to keep it from
turning hot.) But a genius (it's been said) is someone
who has two good ideas. Nash, who dazzled his
contemporaries with his quickness, went on to make
seminal contributions to several "pure" fields, areas
of mathematics with no current or future applicability
to the real world. Until his own world fell apart.
Nash is the universal archetype of the mathematician:
an erratic wunderkind on the verge of great
discoveries, or madness. We see him (and occasionally
her) in acclaimed films
like
"Good Will Hunting," "Pi," and "Enigma," in
award-winning plays like
"Proof" and "Arcadia," even in the sci-fi thriller
"Jurassic Park." But why
are we seeing more math on film? Because our lives are
increasingly
governed by numbers PIN numbers, credit card
numbers, social security
numbers. All of this information is kept safe thanks
to
advances in cryptography that is, thanks to
mathematics. And just as the threats of the nuclear
age thrust physics into the popular consciousness, the
importance of information and the importance of
protecting it have done the same for math. If a
mathematician were to prove a theorem called "P=NP"
tomorrow, the world's banking systems might very well
collapse, and our nation's military secrets would be
laid bare. (Safe encryption depends on the fact that
it's hard to factor big numbers, numbers with 200
digits or more; "P=NP" would imply that there's a way
to factor numbers and hence crack codes quickly.)
Mathematics is what keeps us safe.
While it is gratifying to see Hollywood hunks like
Crowe playing
Mathematicians a sort of "Gladiator" meets
"Calculator" the
beauty of math is too wild to be captured on camera.
The real
action takes place in the caverns of the mind, and the
enterprise of
mathematics cannot be reduced, for public consumption,
to the formula
"boy
meets girl." Make no mistake, the romance is
there the Hungarian
mathematician Paul Erdos said he preferred mathematics to sex,
and the Indian
genius Ramanujan regarded numbers among his best
friends but it
is a people-less passion. Like Saint Paul, we
mathematicians do not
care
so much for this world as we do for a world invisible,
a world in which
we however ordinary our lives, however failed our
relationships with other human beings are
knights-errant on a quest
for
that elusive beauty, Truth. Ironically, "A Beautiful
Mind," by
focusing
on that which can be easily filmed, love affairs and
dementia, fails to
capture the beauty of math itself, which is spiritual.
It
betrays the prize-winning book of the same name on
which it is based.
And "A Beautiful Mind" is a terrible thing to waste.
Dr. Jonathan David Farley is a Fulbright Distinguished
Scholar at Oxford University
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