babyent 12 hours ago

That was a fun read.

What really stuck out to me was how R failed in a bunch of other subjects except math because he wasn’t interested in them.

I know society and norms expect students to learn all these other subjects.

But what if those just aren’t interesting to someone?

I wonder how many geniuses we skip on because doing the chores of homework and getting through boring classes is busywork and memorization for the sake of getting an A.

Meanwhile, hardly anyone actually remembers anything about those topics and even the best students mostly go on to achieve only above average things.

My class valedictorian went on to become a doctor and while that is certainly impressive to me, there are many doctors and he practices (like almost every other doctor) and isn’t pushing the boundaries of medical science. I feel terrible writing that because I’m certainly not as smart as him, but R is just so impressive and I’m glad he got his lucky break.

People like R would be lost in the sea of averages because their genius would be kept shut by norms.

Almost every extraordinary person I read about seems like they were 1 step away from being forgotten, and got some huge universal break that boosted them.

  • nordsieck 12 hours ago

    IMO, you're thinking about this backwards.

    It's good that public school exposes children to many subjects - hopefully most of them. So that they can discover if they click with one of them. The real danger is that someone never gets exposed to a subject at all. College is the place to specialize in a subject.

    • seiferteric 11 hours ago

      Exposure is good, but success in school requires you to be successful in these subjects as well. I have had similar thoughts recently as OP thinking about what I want for my young kids and what my experiences in school were. Being _really_ good in one thing should allow you to make up for being subpar in other areas, but it doesn't. You can only get an A (or A+) in math for example, even if your a genius. But maybe you should be able to get an A++++ that makes up for D's or F's in English for example and still get accepted into top universities. We need a system that accommodates spiky people better.

      • jyunwai 11 hours ago

        The admissions process to universities in the province of Ontario in Canada has a direct solution for this, which applies to well-known universities in the global technology industry, such as the University of Toronto and the University of Waterloo.

        Most of these universities look at an applicant's grades for just six courses. After looking at the courses required for certain programs (such as calculus and physics for certain programs), the remainder of the six courses comprise the student's top grades for any courses at the Grade 12 (final year) level.

        So, a high school student aiming for a top engineering or mathematics program will not be hamstrung by a poor grade in Grade 12 English, nor will a student aiming for a top international relations program be hamstrung by a poor grade in Calculus. At the same time, the student going into a STEM program will have an exposure to Shakespeare, which can provide inspiration and a rich set of works to explore later in life. The student going into international relations may later be inspired some years later to study mathematics for its beauty as a hobby, some years later.

        I remember the feeling that I was wasting time with many of my courses in those years, despite having good teachers for many of them—I thought my time spent on mandatory humanities courses like music took time away from more practical subjects, and I wish I took a programming course (though I did love my English classes). Perhaps this remains true for many students, but I personally took an interest in music performance as a hobby years later in life, and the years-old lessons in music theory came back to me. My English classes also introduced me to literature, which has remained a very important part of my life that has guided me through highly consequential life decisions for the better. It is unlikely that I would have taken an interest in literary works without my exposure to English in school.

        • computerdl 5 hours ago

          Although I agree with the sentiment, the Ontario university system doesn't actually work that way. For example for Software Engineering at Waterloo, the admission average is calculated using the five required courses plus whatever your highest course is excluding the former[0].

          In practice, I believe every single Ontario university program lists English one of the required courses so it will always be included in your top six average.

          [0]: https://uwaterloo.ca/undergraduate-admissions/admissions/adm...

        • ecshafer 9 hours ago

          6 courses in your senior year doesn't seem like a great solution. If you figure you take Math, Science, History, English in your senior year, Then take 2 electives, that is basically a full schedule already. Short of replacing one of the poor grades with a freebie like Gym, I am not seeing where that solves the issue. This might be a difference in US and Canadian education, so maybe 6 courses means something different.

          • jyunwai 8 hours ago

            A mathematics-focused student in Ontario could take Calculus & Vectors, Advanced Functions [1], Computer Science, and Physics—the first two courses should be straightforward for this student.

            Though Computer Science and Physics are distinctly different from the mathematics courses, these are still directly useful for a mathematics student to learn—the problem-solving skills should also carry over. Key mathematical discoveries have been inspired by problems in computer science and physics, and many rigorous university-level mathematics books still draw from problems in these fields to motivate certain problems. At the least, they are less laboratory-heavy than Biology and Chemistry (the student could still attempt these subjects, though, and choose to omit the grades for university admissions).

            That leaves a couple of other classes—or just one if English is required, as noted by another commenter. My school offered subjects like Grade 12 Drama, Visual Arts, and Music, where much of the grading was effort-based. In my school, most students in my classes saw these courses as a break from other intensive courses, with grades not being as much of a concern. This would allow the student to avoid using a grade for History, Economics, French (or another foreign language), or another subject.

            The English requirement would then be a difficult challenge for the mathematics-focused student. I wish I could speak more about what it was like for most of my classmates who went on to study engineering, as many of them took the standard English course (I took a more demanding version of the course, due to personal interest). My classmates at the time did not seem to have an issue with university admissions to competitive programs despite not enjoying the subject at the time, but the other commenter makes a good point that minimum grades for admission standards have increased greatly since then.

            --

            [1] As an aside: a past classmate—who was brilliant at mathematics and also great with people—later poked fun some years later about the Ontario government's naming for math courses. He said, "there's Grade 11 Functions... and then in Grade 12, there's Advanced (!) Functions." The last I heard, he went on to work as an investment banker at a top hedge fund by profitability in the United States.

            • ckcheng 8 hours ago

              > then in Grade 12, there's Advanced (!) Functions."

              Then in university, there’s Elementary Functional Analysis!

              • dagw 3 hours ago

                The first math course as math major in university involved proving that a+b=b+a and that a+(b+c)=(a+b)+c. It's quite fun to go from 'advanced' calculus during the final classes of high school, to "OK, let's consider the expression 1+1=2. What does it actually mean and why is it true?"

                • thaumasiotes an hour ago

                  > The first math course as math major in university involved proving that a+b=b+a and that a+(b+c)=(a+b)+c.

                  Really? What were the axioms?

                  • dagw an hour ago

                    Basically the Peano axioms

                    • thaumasiotes 37 minutes ago

                      How did that proof work for rational numbers?

                      • dagw 18 minutes ago

                        It's been 20+ years, and I don't remember the exact steps the course went thought. But basically we started with defining N using the Peano axioms (although I don't recall the name 'Peano' being mentioned) and proving some basic rules of addition and equality. Then we defined subtraction, multiplication and inverse elements, and constructed Z and Q. From there you get to algebraic groups, and from there you can hand wave a lot of details.

                        As I said it was literally one of the first math courses we did, so it wasn't super rigorous with all the technical and logical details.

          • Supermancho 7 hours ago

            You can get tested into qualification, by most colleges. Colleges (which includes Universities, State schools, etc) aren't robotic. This is part of the responsibility of the administration. You may get delayed a semester or a year, with a little community college gatekeeping. Dedicated students can always get into a University.

        • melagonster 10 hours ago

          I like the first reply immediately try to scoff you :) Maybe oop is right, but the real problem is people always try to do this.

        • 3vidence 9 hours ago

          Note here, in the current years, grades / competition has exploded so for the more competitive programs it is nearly impossible to get in without high 90s in all the required courses (English is required for all programs).

          So responding to OP, you indeed must be an expert in all subjects to have a chance to study in your field of expertise.

        • chongli 10 hours ago

          To add to this I feel the need to point out that the writing skill demonstrated by the average mid-length Hacker News comment is above the level you’d need to pass grade 12 English in Ontario. It’s an extremely low bar!

          Of course, if English is not your first language then you’re not required to take this course. You have an alternate path which may be a lot more work for an English-language-learner but it doesn’t demand the critical reading and writing skills you would need for grade 12 English.

          • ykonstant 4 hours ago

            I don't know how things work across the ocean, but here in Greece essay grading is a veritable mystery. The highest grade I ever got in a school essay was 16/20 and I had thought that was my masterpiece. Feedback always seemed cryptic (your essay contains platitudes, you are not developing your point enough etc.) and when I tried asking for specifics I got shrugs and you-still-don't-get-it groans. There are people who get 20/20 on essays consistently, so there must be some method to the grading madness; but I could not crack that method in my school years :(

      • atoav 6 hours ago

        A few points on this:

        - How and when would you know a subject doesn't click? In my case German (my first language) and English sucked for roughly 8 years. I ended school with A in both and was the only student in my school without a single mistake in my exam.

        - School gives you good grades if you managed to learn the topics at hand. Being able to learn what is needed or what you are bad at — not what you want and are good at is a skill in itself that can be important in life. I'd argue unless you are an exceptional genius (unlike 99,999% of pupils) you gain more from pulling through than you would if you called yourself a genius and focused on a single topic. Schools goal is to educate the majority

        - pupils (and often also their parents) are utterly unable to judge which bits of school will be essential to their later life. I had many collegues who utterly hated every second of a multitude of subjects, only to years later tell me how glad they are now to have had been subjected to it (which brings me back to my first point)

        We could (and should!) argue on how school works as a system of grades, teachers and pupils — ideally teachers would motivate students to become curious about and proficient in subjects without the motivation of good or the threat of bad grades. But if my experience as an educator at the university levels (without grades in mh case) shows one thing it is that those first semester students who are really able to judge what will be useful to them later on are not many. Many of them are more like the dog in the meme: "Only stick, no take" — they want to be able to do the cool thing without knowing what is needed to do the cool thing.

        • pezezin 4 hours ago

          In my very limited experience as an educator (I worked as a teacher for two years at the trade school level), I completely agree with your excellent comment.

          I would argue that sometimes students are right when they complaint about a subject being useless or obsolete (e.g. our network professor told us everything about the OSI protocol stack in great detail, and barely touched TCP/IP), but most of the time they don't know what will be useful later in life.

        • FeepingCreature 5 hours ago

          I mean, just as a counter-note: I utterly hated every second of a multitude of subjects, and indeed now I am 37 and I never needed them and was entirely correct about what I would require later.

          • weweweoo 3 hours ago

            Personally I loved history, social science and geography, but none of that has been useful in working life. Being good at mathematics is prerequisite for nearly all well-paying jobs, humanities are not of much use except for being able to write and read well.

        • CM30 3 hours ago

          Yeah, these are definitely points worth noting. Especially as in many cases, the way something is taught can have a huge effect on how well you do in it/understand it, and students will end up not liking subjects that they could have liked in university or the workplace.

          So you also have to wonder how many potential math prodigies we've missed out on, simply because they had a bad maths education at school.

      • irjustin 11 hours ago

        > Exposure is good, but success in school requires you to be successful in these subjects as well.

        Being specific, it's not school, it's what school grants you i.e. a paying job. The higher paying, thusly more coveted jobs, generally filter against good grades which then the requirement pushes downwards into schools because, at scale, it's a decent system; leveraging the schools to help decide who is good.

        > Being _really_ good in one thing should allow you to make up for being subpar in other areas, but it doesn't.

        I counter with, if you are "_really_" good, it shows because you truly are a genius and you get fast tracked on that subject, but I think your "_really_" is actually just "_pretty_" and you're trying to include more than the 1 in 100 million.

        To directly answer your point, for the "slightly smarter than everyone else" my middle school allowed kids to attend highschool in specific subjects and then highschool into the nearby community college and considered "harder/more prestigious" than the AP programs - admittedly only in math for this latter part. The school was in a more affluent neighborhood so I recognize the privilege.

        • WgaqPdNr7PGLGVW 11 hours ago

          > but I think your "_really_" is actually just "_pretty_" and you're trying to include more than the 1 in 100 million.

          I don't quite understand your point. Pretty good still puts you far ahead of the average. I could easily handle second year college maths and computer science while in high school. And I couldn't hold a candle to Ramanujan.

          I still needed to do well in my other courses in order to be able to get into my chosen college.

          • elijaht 11 hours ago

            I think that's the point - "pretty good" isn't good enough for a top school to want to admit you. Second year college/CS is pretty good but I went to a great high school where there were 50+ kids at that level. That's not enough to stand out in a meaningful way.

            Whereas if someone was Ramanujan-level, their raw talent would be so apparent they wouldn't have this issue and would clearly stand out.

            • seiferteric 10 hours ago

              Maybe, but TFA says at least in Ramanujan's case:

              But he ignored all subjects besides math and lost his scholarship within a year. He later enrolled in another university, this time in Madras (now Chennai), the provincial capital some 250 kilometers north. Again he flunked out.

              Maybe it would be different now?

              • hgomersall 6 hours ago

                If you get into the IMO team you'll be accepted anywhere good for maths. Probably a high position in the local competition would be enough. (YMMV as my understanding is coloured by a little knowledge of the system in the UK)

            • WgaqPdNr7PGLGVW 11 hours ago

              > Second year college/CS is pretty good but I went to a great high school where there were 50+ kids at that level. That's not enough to stand out in a meaningful way.

              It is not enough to stand out in the current system.

              The parent was saying selecting the 50 kids who can handle it is a much better approach than just taking the highest overall grades.

              The average A's across the board high school student can't handle second year college maths. Yet they will be placed ahead of the observably better at math kids.

              Imagine if jobs worked like this - "Yes, we know you are a great developer but you don't really understand economics. Sorry".

              Being well-rounded and having exposure to a bunch of topics is valuable to an extent. However, in my experience most of the people making a real difference in the workplace and academia are not particularly well rounded.

              Thankfully in tech there are alternative pathways. However, for many professions there aren't and these high performers are simply excluded to societies detriment.

              • kiba 9 hours ago

                Being well-rounded and having exposure to a bunch of topics is valuable to an extent. However, in my experience most of the people making a real difference in the workplace and academia are not particularly well rounded.

                You can only progress so much in a field of expertise before hitting diminishing return.

                At some point it makes sense to broaden your knowledge and skillset.

                • bryanrasmussen 6 hours ago

                  >You can only progress so much in a field of expertise before hitting diminishing return.

                  I suppose how long you can progress for and how far you can progress depends somewhat on the breadth and depth of the field of expertise.

                  Many fields of expertise are so broad and deep that they have their own sub-fields just to make them manageable.

                  So you would probably be in a sub-field and then broaden your knowledge and skill-set in a related sub-field of the overall field that you are well suited to.

                  I'm betting it's likely you can see how your own particular field, as you are on HN, replicates this pattern.

              • fn-mote 10 hours ago

                > Imagine if jobs worked like this - "Yes, we know you are a great developer but you don't really understand economics. Sorry".

                This is exactly the route to exploitation by MBA managers.

                Great developer, loyal, doesn't understand the need to change companies to get paid a competitive salary. Perfect hire.

                The person who doesn't understand economics pays the price themselves.

      • high_na_euv an hour ago

        >but success in school requires you to be successful in these subjects as well

        It doesnt, at least in my country.

        Here you have a few school leaving exams that you need to perform at

        Math, native lang and english.

        And one at advanced level, but its your choice when it comes to subject.

        What you are talking about is GPA and GPA is meaningless tbf

      • graemep 4 hours ago

        That is an advantage of the British system. You have a wide education until 16 and sit a broad range of exams at that age (GCSEs) and then specialise in a few (most often three) subjects from 16 to 18.

        You usually need to pass English and maths GCSEs, but universities mostly care about the subjects you do in the last two years (except for very competitive courses).

        This can be a problem for those who want to keep options open until they are 18 (like my younger daughter).

        Even the system up to 16 is pretty flexible. There is a huge range of available subjects - although most schools offer only a limited selection (my kids were out of school by secondary school age so we had a huge choice and did some less usual subjects like astronomy and Latin).

        • dagw 4 hours ago

          As someone who did my GCSE's but then moved abroad before my A Levels and ended up taking the International Baccalaureate, I'm in hindsight really glad I didn't do A Levels. Had I stayed in England I would have studied just maths, physics and chemistry. Being forced by the IB program to also study english, philosophy and economics really expanded my horizons and has been huge boon to me in my life and I'm really happy I was afforded the opportunity to do so.

          • sensanaty 3 hours ago

            I did IGCSE's (the international version as I lived in Indonesia) and AS/A levels myself, while a lot of my friends who went to a different school did IB and I generally disagree. My most hated school years were the IGCSE times, exactly because I was forced into learning about crap I didn't care about in the slightest, like English Literature when all I wanted to do was the various sciences and especially mathematics.

            I feel like the IGCSE times were more than enough exposure to those other subjects to give me a reasonably well-rounded image of those subjects. Now, a decade later, I'm definitely glad I went the STEM route rather than ever touching on any humanities subjects in any amount of detail.

            • graemep 2 hours ago

              IGCSEs per se are a lot more flexible about that. You can do any subjects in any combination you like. Its a decision by the school to make English literature compulsory. Home educated kids often do not do it, on the other hand there are are huge number of subjects they can pick from: https://he-exams.fandom.com/wiki/Category:Subjects

              British universities do often (usually?) require English language (or an equivalent) and maths (I)GCSEs, as do British employers and further education colleges etc. so its a really bad idea to skip those.

              I do think its good to give kids a broad education, and for some it would be good to continue that for longer. For others (like you) its just boring.

              I also think there should be more opportunities for adult education, so if you decide later in life that you would like to learn about English literature or physics or whatever you should have a chance to do it. AT the moment in the UK things seem to be going the other way, with an over expansion of universities sucking up money, and further education colleges that used to offer adult education putting the resources into "16 to 18" courses.

        • Cthulhu_ 3 hours ago

          Same in the Netherlands, it's become more flexible even since I went through school. It sucks until about age 16 (or 17/18 if you take a higher level education that includes e.g. Latin / Greek), then you get to go to vocational education and either do a work/school combo (1 day a week of school), or continue fulltime school for 3-10 years (3 years for most associate's degrees, 4 for bachelor's, more for a master's, and often you can go from the one to a higher level if you choose to).

          But yeah, until that age it sucks and a lot of people struggle because they have to do classes they aren't at all interested in.

      • vishnugupta 4 hours ago

        > maybe you should be able to get an A++++

        What does an A++++ mean? I guess it's equivalent of publishing a novel result/idea, solving a long standing conjecture sort of ability? If yes then I'd say the system does accommodate them. Terrance Tao for example was fast tracked and didn't get lost in the system.

        Though it probably requires some effort from parents to figure out the right path for their prodigies.

      • wiz21c 5 hours ago

        In my experience, people who are really good at something usually are at least average on many others. Thus they can do the minimum in other courses to pass, it's just a matter of working enough.

        In my country, there are several students (12-18 years old) who can mix sport at high level (national championship) and a lighter school activity. They work like mad but they do it. But they have to prove there are good enough to get it, which is OK to me.

        Being really good is not something you appreciate yourself, it's the others that notice.

      • panta 6 hours ago

        The school should form decent individuals before than useful workers, and for that it's necessary to have a passing level of culture. For example, everyone should have a basic grasp of ethics (and know a bit of history), even those of us working in technology or science. Geniuses like Ramanunjan or John von Neumann are such a rare occurrence that the school system can not and should not optimize for them (and my very personal view is also that we'll have even less geniuses in the future, as our distraction-based society is not conducive anymore to cognitive development).

      • jncfhnb an hour ago

        That’s irrelevant to 99.99% of people. An A in math is not especially difficult to achieve.

        To actually be meaningfully better at math you need to go far, far further than the coursework presented in schools, at which point it becomes an extra curricular which is already considered. If you’re a math savant proving novel theorems, they will notice that.

        But nobody gives a shit if you’re just really, really good at factoring polynomials from Algebra 2 tests.

      • jojobas 10 hours ago

        So in grade 5 you maths is A++++ (like college entry level), you're excused from English, Civics and what not, and when by the time of graduation you've fizzled out (which most prodigies do) you're just an unemployable nerd.

        School education standards are the barest minimum and anyone of IQ > 85 can make them.

        • ChadNauseam 9 hours ago

          Personally I can’t say I learned anything professionally useful in english or civics. An actually decent math class in just one of my years of k-12 would have been much more useful.

          • fizx 7 hours ago

            When you're a scientist, you'd assume the calculus is the most useful thing you learn in high school, but actually its the 10 page essay on deadline for grant writing.

          • dagw 4 hours ago

            I learned anything professionally useful in English

            Even as someone who went full 'STEM' for both my education and career, English is probably among the most professionally useful courses I did in high school. A surprisingly large part of my job involves reading things, understanding them, and then writing a clear and reasoned response to them, all skills I first learned and really got to practice in English class.

            • scotty79 3 hours ago

              Reading and writing is a huge part of software development. But I didn't learn these skills at school. If anything, school soured them for me, by making me read things I didn't want to read and writing things I didn't want to write. School should let you read what you want. Today that you read it could be checked with AI prepared quiz. And writing should be mostly focused on communication not essays. Very small fraction of people ends up getting significant utility writing their ramblings into the void.

              • circlefavshape 2 hours ago

                > making me read things I didn't want to read and writing things I didn't want to write

                How to do things you don't want to do is a fundamental requirement for adulthood, and probably the most important skill anyone learns in school

                • scotty79 2 hours ago

                  I absolutely disagree. Adulthood is freedom. It's when you decide what you choose to do. Sometimes things feel like you have to do them but that's just remnants of the conditioning you were moulded by as a child. When you are pressed to the wall you are eventually forced to understand that you don't really have to do them, you just choose to, because however hard they may be it's easier for you than the available alternative. You don't have that level of agency as a child when you are constantly exposed to indoctrination from everybody more powerful than you (which at this stage is pretty much everybody).

                  • circlefavshape 16 minutes ago

                    > Adulthood is freedom.

                    Freedom? That has not been my experience of adulthood. To me adulthood is about making responsible choices based on their consequences for you and the people around you ... which means that the majority of my time is spent doing things that other people need rather than because I want to do them

          • AlexandrB 9 hours ago

            It's weird to say that about English when good communication is essential for success in any engineering field. Even if all English does is force you to read more, it's probably a win in this regard.

            • nordsieck 8 hours ago

              > It's weird to say that about English when good communication is essential for success in any engineering field

              Some of what's taught in English classes is about clear communication, and some of it isn't.

              I think learning the 5 paragraph essay structure was very useful. But that's maybe 3 months worth of learning. The rest was English major stuff. Which is fine, but please don't pretend that it has a lot to do with "good communication".

              > Even if all English does is force you to read more, it's probably a win in this regard.

              It's not enough to say people had to read for English classes. You have to compare it to the counterfactual. In that regard, I don't think it stood up well.

              1. I was already reading a lot. I just read different things.

              2. I came to hate pretty much everything I read in class. It's only decades later that I've been able to appreciate some of the classics that we read.

              On this point, I think English class was a net harm, at least for me. Of course, everyone has different circumstances; I'm sure there are people for whom a similar program as what I went through would have been a benefit.

              • tallanvor 3 hours ago

                This is a very immature take.

                Of course you can BELIEVE that English classes didn't help you learn how to read and write more effectively or how to better understand what was left unsaid or unwritten, but believing something doesn't make it so.

                And yes, as a student reading the classics often sucks. After all, you're not reading them for pleasure - you're reading them to learn how to identify and discuss their themes. But more than that, you see how themes are repeated throughout history, and how the author's experiences changed how they illustrated those themes. English classes taught you plenty of history - not so much in rote facts, but rather by illustrating parts of the cultural zeitgeist of different eras and how authors reinforced, protested, or recorded what was happening at the time.

                I doubt many children appreciate education while they're learning, but adults certainly can be thankful that they weren't left in the dark.

                • scotty79 2 hours ago

                  It's very impolite to label lived experience of another educated and probably somewhat accomplished adult as immature.

                  At 45 years old I can confidently say that anything I've "learned" on my native language classes through 12 years of having them was totally useless garbage and I'm using none of it in my writing, reading and culturural appreciation or understanding of the world. Everything I use was self-acquired in the time I had that was not spent in native language classes. Ideas of education are great, but the implementation is terrible to the point of being useless.

                  On the other hand math, physics and chemistry I learned at school has been immensely practically and culturally useful and I wouldn't know a fraction of it if I wasn't taught it in school.

      • meiraleal 10 hours ago

        > but success in school requires you to be successful in these subjects as well.

        It requires a very small success on a very basic level. It is not good to be a super math genius and know nothing about geography and history.

      • anal_reactor 5 hours ago

        In my country there is a system where a kid applying to high school gets accepted based on a standard test, or can skip the line by performing well on a contest organized by the ministry of education. In my class something like 80% of kids were admitted through contests. When applying to the university there's a similar thing, except it's much harder to skip the line, but universities are free to set up their own admission rules as long as the rules are based on the national standard test. In my case, the final admission score was calculated something like "90% maths 10% everything else"

      • dclowd9901 6 hours ago

        Something about this sniffs as elitist to me. A person who’s intelligent is curious and a person who’s curious should be curious about all things, not just some limited set.

        Now, that’s not to say the only issue is someone’s curiosity. Traditional teaching methods make it very hard to be interested in some topics (history and language comes to mind), but barring that, I’m not sure I accept “it’s not interesting” as a reason not to explore a subject.

    • db48x 10 hours ago

      Specialization does begin earlier than that. Most high schools in the US have advanced classes that students can opt in to, and there is the AP program.

      Personally I think that we could do better by tailoring every student’s education to their abilities. Put in simplest possible terms, we could arrange classes by complexity rather than by year. Have one class for addition and subtraction, another for multiplication and division, then geometry, algebra, etc, etc. Then let students graduate from one to the next based on proven ability rather than by age. Do the same for language, history, etc. Let every student proceed through the courses at their own speed.

      • kyawzazaw 10 hours ago

        A bit too late if you are comparing to football level of specialization to produce people like messi

    • brutal_true_101 12 hours ago

      Most colleges now inundate students with painful core classes that go on into senior year. It's getting ridiculous.

      • Arainach 11 hours ago

        College is not trade school. College exists not to generate people who are masters of Framework v3.0, but to generate people who can quickly learn to use whatever tool they're given and who can connect the dots to solve generic problems. Part of that is exposure to a broad range of ideas. Part of that is showing that you can learn about and deliver results on things you're not necessarily excited about.

        • forgotoldacc 11 hours ago

          This is true, but college general education requirements don't fulfill that role. They're classes of 250 people listening to a professor say "write this down because it'll be on the exam". Then the questions on the exam are what the professor said verbatim.

          My university didn't allow any classes above the most introductory ones to be considered as fulfilling the general education requirement. I signed up for a history class that would involve doing research and having weekly discussions with a small group. I was stoked. Then the professor made a note that it didn't fulfill the general education requirements. I had to drop it and switch to a huge-ass mindless lecture of hundreds of people. I would've liked to still take the more in-depth history class even if it didn't fit the gen ed requirement, but so many of those BS classes are required that my schedule was completely packed all 4 years with zero leeway.

        • kiba 11 hours ago

          I don't think college teaches people how to learn, and if they do it's only by accident. There's a body of knowledge on how to teach and how to self educate and it takes a long time for systems to incorporate these knowledge.

        • esafak 11 hours ago

          Isn't that what high school is for? What's the difference then?

          • BurningFrog 11 hours ago

            Most of school is primarily baby sitting these days, if were being really real.

          • WgaqPdNr7PGLGVW 11 hours ago

            High school has been dumbed down and is mostly a waste of time.

        • hnfong 11 hours ago

          > Part of that is showing that you can learn about and deliver results on things you're not necessarily excited about.

          Why is that useful besides for the employer trying to impose Framework v3.0 onto their subjects?

          To me at least, learning things one is not excited about is only useful to capitalist society that views human beings as replaceable resources.

      • shiroiushi 11 hours ago

        It's probably because secondary school has become mostly worthless in the US, so college is taking its place.

      • fn-mote 10 hours ago

        Specific citation needed.

        At Big US Engineering School, many people are done with their prerequisites in a year.

        Unless you're talking about painful core classes like "compiler design" and "networking", which I would say is a different conversation.

        • seanmcdirmid 7 hours ago

          Prerequisites are different from core stuff, like say you study computer science but hey take this English class as well for your W credits. I gamed my university on these, taking easy courses that I wouldn’t have bothered with, I think it was one or two quarters of BS (dual acronym meaning) classes.

    • bluecalm 6 hours ago

      The problem is that there is too much of this general exposure and specialization happens way too late once the brain is not as good at learning anymore. People peak in competitive fields when they are in early 20s or even before that. In our education system we are not even allowed to do the job before we are like 25 or later. There is only so much you can learn sitting in a chair listening to a professor. It's a completely backwards system that limits potential of about anyone with average+ intelligence.

    • kiba 11 hours ago

      I missed out on theater and improvisational comedy only because I pigeonholed myself as a computer nerd and engineering type and almost nothing else.

      I found that I have a certain knack for it and really enjoyed performing.

    • llm_trw 10 hours ago

      To quote an artist friend: exposure is good until you die from it.

      Being forced to do subjects that you hate is not exposure, it is being forced to do things which you are completely unsuited for.

      I would go so far as saying that being forced to take music until 7th grade put me off any musical pursuits for the next 20 years. The less said about the torture disguised as education that is PE the better.

      • jajko 3 hours ago

        Yeah that's a common result of forced learning by lets be polite mediocre folks. Utter hate of the whole topic for easily 2 decades too. Then finding slowly my own personal way back to them, despite school.

        If anything, current (and this is valid globally) school system is not designed at excellence at its core, its about raising an army of obedient but not too stupid citizens. And its not missed expectation, just look at what type of work they expect to fill in. Don't expect massive changes unless society changes itself.

        Some narrow excellence is not what our society at large values, those few that made it through made it despite their environment.

    • babyent 11 hours ago

      I'm honestly no genius but I can relate to R in that one way.

      As a child I used to get all As and even got into a Stanford pre-collegiate program as a kid where I learned C++ and geometry.

      Unfortunately after a surgery in 9th grade that left me unable to attend school for 3-4 months and just terrible QOL for about a year my grades slipped (went from A+ studen to C grade student) and I basically became average. I lost all interest in most subjects at school due to depression and other things.

      My goal as a child was to get a Stanford JD/MD MBA (lol I know..), and today I have only a bachelors from a low ranked state college in business.

      I enjoyed programming so much as a kid that one summer, so later in life I ended up going back to it. Taught myself enough in a month to get on some projects as a swe. Later I got lucky working at a unicorn company that IPO'd.

      Now I am trying to build my own company and see how far I can get as a solo founder. Sometimes I wonder how my life would have turned out if it wasn't for that injury, but oh well. Shit happens, right?

      Jeez sorry for the sob story but it feels good to get it off.

      • jyunwai 9 hours ago

        Another student at a martial arts gym unexpectedly gave me some advice that is somewhat common, but had an impact because the words came at the right time and from the right person: he kindly told me to never judge myself based on the person that I might have been, and to instead compare myself now to how I was a month ago.

        I believe that any person here with an inkling of relatable technical experience can greatly appreciate the work you've been doing. Software development can be complicated and frustrating, especially when things don't work as you expect them to (but then, you learn and become better). Leading a business is very difficult, often due to sources of problems you don't expect (such as regulatory and legal requirements, accounting, and publicity).

        Some people cruise on to great careers without facing many barriers. But many others face unexpected setbacks and have to manage them. A close friend of mine was living an overall good life until it was profoundly disrupted by a civil war in his home country. But he made it to my country where he began his undergraduate degree at a great university that he loves. A past colleague of mine spent much of her early twenties managing physical disability, but successfully received treatment and went on to graduate with an engineering degree. She has since landed a position at a top aerospace company that she really wanted to work at.

        You are setting up a good life for yourself. Many people lack that kind of drive or struggle with executing ideas; several people I personally know would be very proud to one day experience just a small part of your successes so far.

        • babyent 9 hours ago

          Thank you for your kind response. I am happy for your friends and also the message you received at your gym.

          Life is truly a journey unique to each one of us.

          I’ve found peace and I carry a signed index card in my wallet on which I’ve written my “ethos”. It took me a long time to come up with it and I’m sure it’s common, but those 5 points are something I try to remain true towards.

          Cheers mate, best.

    • trgn 10 hours ago

      > College is the place to specialize in a subject.

      In Europe maybe, but in America a lot of students receive their general purpose liberal arts education in College, and will then specialize later with a post graduate degree.

      • bonzini 7 hours ago

        So what is high school for?

        Also does the above apply also to the most selective and renowned institutions, or only to community colleges?

        • trgn 26 minutes ago

          High school is preparing to be able to do a college education? A bachelor's isn't that trivial most of the time.

          I'd say applies to most colleges, of any size. Community colleges tend to be more like trade schools

    • flockonus 6 hours ago

      To overemphasize in a complex topic as good | bad is overly simplistic and doesn't help at all. Hardly anything is complete good or completely bad, it's meaningless to make a black or white point.

    • oh_my_goodness 11 hours ago

      It is good to expose them. But that doesn't mean the previous point is backwards.

    • eviks 10 hours ago

      "Exposure" would be spending much much less time on those subjects, especially the free home time. Then the number of subjects is practically infinite, so expecting "most" is just as unrealistic (and colleges also continue this "exposure")

    • TeeMassive 7 hours ago

      Is it "good", certainly, but I don't think most of the stuff is worth it in the technological world. Let kids follow their interests, keep the general stuff to a minimum and you will have a lot more of happy kids with who excel more.

    • echelon 8 hours ago

      > It's good that public school exposes children to many subjects - hopefully most of them. So that they can discover if they click with one of them. The real danger is that someone never gets exposed to a subject at all. College is the place to specialize in a subject.

      While some exposure is probably better on average than none, in some instances bad experiences can trip the fuse on developing an interest.

      The rote nature of canned education, bad teachers, bad parents, or bullies can turn kids off of subjects they might otherwise come to love.

    • paulpauper 10 hours ago

      It's good that public school exposes children to many subjects - hopefully most of them. So that they can discover if they click with one of them. The real danger is that someone never gets exposed to a subject at all. College is the place to specialize in a subject.

      then why does this 'discovery process' have to continue into college? That was the OP's point. When money and time is on the line, let adults decide what they want to study. An 18-year-old is no longer a child.

    • Onavo 11 hours ago

      But if their overall SAT scores aren't good enough to get into the elite colleges, won't we just be denying the eccentric geniuses?

      • theGnuMe 10 hours ago

        I like to look at the backgrounds of the people who win the Nobel prize. Everyone is interdisciplinary.

        For college and life in general, I think main skill needed is emotional regulation. Everything else flows from that.

      • coliveira 11 hours ago

        Well, the eccentric geniuses have already left the system... Frankly, if you go through the last 30 years, how many such geniuses you can find in American universities? I only see a little bit higher than average, so it seems that the system has already eliminated the geniuses.

        • clipsy 10 hours ago

          > I only see a little bit higher than average

          Could you share your source for statistics on "eccentric geniuses"?

      • Spooky23 8 hours ago

        The eccentric geniuses at these elite schools will end up doing stupid shit for a bank.

  • js8 7 hours ago

    Well, my solution would be this:

    Instead of giving kids grades with a ceiling, each subject would have (unlimited number of) levels of proficiency, and to attain a level, kids would have to pass a test (demonstrate certain skill). The choice of subjects and levels to attain would be up to each kid, but they would have to choose to do something (working at getting next level of something would be mandatory). (Although perhaps they should be encouraged to explore different subjects and attain some minimum of levels.)

    Also, I would group kids by subject, and not by age. So kids of slightly different levels would train together, and the higher level kids would be obligated to help kids on lower level to learn, while lower level kids were taught to be respectful of higher level kids.

    • ddfs123 3 hours ago

      >Also, I would group kids by subject, and not by age.

      I would be cautious with this, they may have the same academic ability but a large gap in social skills.

      • thaumasiotes 39 minutes ago

        Why is that worse than having large gaps in academic ability and social skills?

  • dspillett 2 hours ago

    > My class valedictorian went on to become a doctor and while that is certainly impressive to me, there are many doctors and he practices (like almost every other doctor) and isn’t pushing the boundaries of medical science.

    I think in this example you are vastly overestimating the “average genius”, in comparison to those rare few who truly push the boundaries. We tend to do this because of the way our brains estimate things of significant scale, like the fact that keeps floating around social media about how bad most of us are at having a concept of the difference between thousands, millions, and billions.

    There are many valedictorians (of the order of some per thousand) but few Ramanujans (of the order of tens per billion?), and gearing an overall education system specifically for those few could do a disservice to a great many others at every level below. Ramanujan was not the result of an effective education system anyway: like a lot of other world changing minds he was largely self-taught. Perhaps there is room to encourage more investigation to the side of the curriculum a lot more than we currently do, but the problems that stop other "Ramanujan"s, that could so easily have scuppered Ramanujan himself, are usually not caused by the education system but by other societal problems (death & disease, racism, sexism, caste or class biases, etc.) not giving them a chance to explore & self-learn or have useful access to education & other resources at all. Addressing those problems will help a much wider chunk of the population, as well as reducing constraints for the truly exceptional geniuses¹ amongst them.

    ----

    [1] And of course those non-geniuses who luck out and have that one brilliant idea. Their contribution is often vital for progress too, and I'd wager that there are orders of magnitude more of them than there are true geniuses!

  • slightwinder an hour ago

    > But what if those just aren’t interesting to someone?

    That doesn't matter. A student is unable to evaluate the value of unknown subjects and the synergy between subjects. People are often unmotivated to do important things, because we are just lazy s**.

    > I wonder how many geniuses we skip on because doing the chores of homework and getting through boring classes is busywork and memorization for the sake of getting an A.

    And how many lunatics making wrong decisions did we prevented by forcing them to learn necessary things?

    > Meanwhile, hardly anyone actually remembers anything about those topics

    They are engraved in your mind. Even when you don't remember every little detail, they still helped you in forming your understanding of the world.

  • geodel 9 hours ago

    > People like R would be lost in the sea of averages because their genius would be kept shut by norms.

    Well norms were in place when R did his work. Even the most strict systems have made concessions for extraordinary people. It is just that mostly average people go around claiming they'd be genius, had system not smothered their creativity.

    > I wonder how many geniuses we skip on because doing the chores of homework..

    I think from not many to hardly any as I can't believe if kids who are really genius can just go on for more than a decade of primary schooling without ever finding outlet for their creativity.

  • loveparade 10 hours ago

    If you are optimizing for finding geniuses like R, you may be right. Many probably fall through the cracks of the educational system. But I don't think this is what we are or should be optimizing for. The vast majority of people would end up unemployable if they weren't "forced" to study things they don't enjoy because some skills are just more employable than others. You're lucky if you enjoy engineering/science, but not so lucky if you only care about art literature.

  • crystal_revenge 8 hours ago

    You're applying the logic of "that someone" is "Ramanujan", but the system isn't designed around students at the extremes.

    Generally I think: "Unless you're Ramanujan, then you should probably have some breadth to your knowledge rather than pure depth" is not a terrible policy.

  • ken47 3 hours ago

    You’re absolutely right. The education system was meant to be a factory of production line workers, at the cost of missing out on geniuses who don’t care about other subjects.

    This system is meant for a worker that no longer exists. If someone wants to specialize at the age of 13 and has shown reasonable aptitude in that subject, then let them do it. Sure, give them a well rounded education, but don’t weight those grades anywhere close to equally.

  • herodoturtle 4 hours ago

    > My class valedictorian went on to become a doctor and while that is certainly impressive to me, there are many doctors and he practices (like almost every other doctor) and isn’t pushing the boundaries of medical science.

    You seem like someone who thinks things through, so I suspect you’ll know what I’m about to say, but given the sentiment of your comment, I think it’s worth explicitly sharing this:

    The fact that your class valedictorian went on to be a doctor is great. Not everyone needs to push the boundaries. Your classmate may end up saving/helping countless lives.

    • silvestrov 4 hours ago

      He isn't saying that being a doctor isn't great.

      He is saying that the people who add most value to science isn't always the ones who are at the top of the hierarchy in the school system.

      Performing well in school is like a F1 racing car: very fast, but can only go on paths very well trodden already, i.e. paved road.

  • anonzzzies 8 hours ago

    I have always been only interested in the 'exact' sciences since I was a little kid; I did not do other things even if I had to. I just didn't turn up; I was doing 'more important stuff'. I graduated with a special letter from the queen; all aces for exact sciences and the rest massive fail. It turned out that this made me a good programmer and employer, so I made a shitload of money (in eu terms; pocket change compared to what usa peers did). But it was a big mistake; now I really want to learn languages and history, but I never had the basics as a kid so I struggle far more than my peers. My ability to memorize things is not very good as I never needed to in school; formulas and code is not really memorizing as such I found. It is a massive regret. There are no do overs, but I guess even if I could time travel, I would've not be able to explain this to myself enough for me to listen.

    • returnInfinity 7 hours ago

      What we need to do is, make the subjects interesting to learn with tech.

      It may now be possible with Videos, Games and VR.

      • NamTaf 5 hours ago

        Tech is not necessary. You just have to make the subjects interesting to learn. Good teachers are way more value than they are valued, and will make the classes interesting to learn.

  • yumraj 9 hours ago

    Now think about the college admission process in the US, where kids are expected to take arbitrary number of AP courses and get 5 in all of them, and write world class essays about passion and solving world hunger while excelling at several extra curricular activities and showing leadership and so on and on…..

  • barrettondricka 11 hours ago

    The best way to learn is to play and come up with stuff yourself. But playing doesn't get you anywhere specific. People who play around a lot, clearly know much more and in depth than everyone else, but when you hand them a random checklist, chances are they won't know a few.

    Standardized tests are screwing everything up. People who learn on their own might stumble upon the entire alphabet except for the letter "B," but standardized tests want only the first 5 letters. Hence the incredible efficiency of knowing the entire alphabet is thrown under the bus in favor of making sure none of the 5 are missing.

    You can't teach someone to play, and there is no way to play systematically, at scale, and with guaranteed results. All the incredible people I know have some hole in "basic" knowledge, and if it is revealed nobody cares about them being miles ahead elsewhere. "Their basics seem lacking, in the name of stability and norm, throw them back to square one."

    Following standards never produces something new, but the world is so afraid of failure and lack of definitions in "messing around" that they are willing to trade their souls for it.

    Take any hacker here on HN, and ask how much they learned in CS class vs. how much they learned messing around with Perl on a weekend.

    • kiba 11 hours ago

      Standardized tests are tool for systems to be able to compare and work toward a uniformity of outcome. Expecting it to help anything beyond that is a foolish errand. Public schools need to educate million of people each years with differing deposition and life circumstances and do so with relative competency.

      Excellence requires individual attention and cannot be so readily mass produced.

      • coliveira 11 hours ago

        > and do so with relative competency

        I dispute this on the grounds that students are going through American schools and many of them don't even know how to read.

        • kiba 10 hours ago

          92% of adults know how to read to varying level.[1]

          The number, while high, is not satisfactory. Clearly, we also want adults to be functionally and not pass a super low bar of being able to read a sentence which 92% does not care to distinguish, but it is not fact true that "many of them don't even know how to read".

          1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literacy_in_the_United_States

          • amenhotep an hour ago

            In terms of not being able to read, I would count 8% as "many"? Select a group of ten random Americans and you'd expect one of them to be illiterate - that's appalling.

  • keepamovin 5 hours ago

    Unfortunately, the purpose of the education system at this stage of human civilization development is not the realization of individual potential or the creation of geniuses. Geniuses, however cool they may be, are not necessarily the most effective increase in unit production efficiency per person that you can create. The point of the education system is essentially to create workers that make the economy productive.

    I don’t think you can say, even all these years later, that Ramanujan, that mathematician, made the economy more productive, but he certainly increased the high watermark of human civilization and created an inspiring story for individual achievement, creative realization, and artistic and mathematical expression. There’s something sublime and transcendental—no pun intended—in the kind of truths that he was able to tease out and the unique, idiosyncratic way that he expressed them. Sort of like a Basquiat of mathematics, I suppose. Or probably better than that.

    That aside, I think it’s unfortunate that he died of cholera or something, isn’t it? I mean, he apparently didn’t think it was unfortunate that he was going to die. And certainly, the formal education system didn’t necessarily fail him, in that a professor at a university recognized his genius and sponsored him to the UK.

    But I think, in a sense that you identify, there is this general failure of the education systems in the human civilizations on this planet to foster perhaps the best thing that they could be fostering. They’re more like a manufacturing assembly line to produce cogs as part of the economic machine.

    Not that there’s anything necessarily wrong with that. I think it’s good that people can have a role to play in the larger economy and that there are pathways to bring people to the level of capability where they can contribute like that. But the lack of pathways that these systems provide—those that could contribute to the creation of the full realization and expression of individual potential—I think is sad. And I think that’s what you’re kind of identifying.

  • trueismywork 6 hours ago

    I was this person, also from India. I am interested in most topics under the sun, but was never interested in being an excellent student, apart from math where I was ranked in top 30 in my national olympiads.

    I got mediocre marks in high school but thankfully did well in JEE. Now I have a decent PhD in math with an extremely mediocre school record.

  • philwelch 6 hours ago

    Ramanujan was, what, a 1 in 100,000,000 level genius? The gap between Ramanujan and the average class valedictorian is much wider than the gap between the class valedictorian and the average student. I think if we optimize schooling for people like him, we are probably not going to do as well for the other 99,999,999 students.

    We probably aren’t going to get it quite right for that 1, either. Extreme outlier geniuses are extreme outliers and there’s no easily generalizable pattern around them. The ideal education for a young Ramanujan is probably different from the ideal education for a young Von Neumann. Of course in an ideal world we would give an extremely individualized education to every child, but that’s much easier said than done. Failing that maybe we could identify and then invest in the extreme geniuses, but that’s what we already try to do.

  • alnwlsn 10 hours ago

    These people are still out there. When I was in high school we had the normal people, then people who took advanced placement stuff, then the "super nerds" who were at the top of all the advanced placement stuff with perfect grades, and then there was this one guy who was most of the way through all the advanced math classes at the nearby university. Same guy was in one of my English classes, and was failing. More or less he couldn't be bothered.

    Sadly the later part of your comment may hold - I don't remember what ended up happening with him, whether he graduated high school or what. Hopefully at that level you just disappear into academia and not off the face of the earth in general.

  • vbezhenar 11 hours ago

    Education is optimized for average citizen who must work through boring tasks every day. I feel like geniuses probably more like survive in school rather than being supported.

  • moomin 2 hours ago

    Honestly I suspect a lot of potentially able people get left by the wayside in our lowest cost educational system. It's particularly tough on neurodiverse people, which one has to suspect included Ramanujan.

  • p1necone 11 hours ago

    I'm pretty sure I only have a successful career because I deeply enjoy programming and have a slightly neurotic obsession with code quality and ergonomics. I can't fathom giving enough of a shit about anything I don't enjoy for long enough to be successful otherwise.

  • readenough 10 hours ago

    Everyone here seems to have missed the significance of L.J. Rogers in this story.

  • ji_zai 10 hours ago

    Agreed.

    It's the crazy ones that push humanity forward. We lose far more than we can imagine by not enabling even just one of them. This is one of the most important problems for us to fix.

    • kiba 10 hours ago

      We shouldn't need crazy people to push the boundary. Rather, the crazier you are, the more likely you will flame out.

      People who are "weird" and yet are entirely functional are the best of both world and a much rarer combination.

  • de_elusive 2 hours ago

    School is for training good test-takers, not finding geniuses.

  • slibhb 10 hours ago

    You're assuming it's luck. But maybe we're actually good at identifying boundary-pushing geniuses? There are huge, huge incentives for being good at that.

  • tightbookkeeper 11 hours ago

    But if you notice the people who are in administrative positions are the people who are “well rounded” not those who are good at one thing.

    Even within academic stem fields you have people who know how to promote and speak and they have the most influence.

    I guess what I’m trying to say is the system is mostly selecting for what it wants.

  • rowanG077 11 hours ago

    I agree. That's also why I just don't believe at all when people say we have a shortage of talent (as in we need stuff like H1B) there is a ton of talent wasted. Everyone know that smart person who is working a menial job.

    • asciimov 9 hours ago

      In my experience it’s not talent but opportunity that is in short supply. One of the smartest people I know is an electrician, simply because he grew up in a rural area and couldn’t afford to leave for college.

  • nurettin 10 hours ago

    > I wonder how many geniuses we skip on because doing the chores of homework and getting through boring classes is busywork and memorization for the sake of getting an A.

    Zero? If you qualify as a prodigy, it is apparent from a young age. Maths prodigies are especially easy to distinguish. Given a little time, they will self-learn, grok and innovate on anything you throw at them and will likely attend higher education early unlike "the brilliant kid"s who will struggle with advanced concepts all their lives.

    • acka 42 minutes ago

      It seems you are assuming that all child prodigies are polymaths (no pun intended).

      There are children with exceptional mental abilities in a limited range of topics or even a single topic, such as math, music or drawing, They may struggle to various degrees with subjects or life skills that don't correspond closely with their specific topics of interest and ability.

  • graycat 10 hours ago

    > But what if those just aren’t interesting to someone?

    The school I went to grades 1--12 tried to be especially good so taught Latin, French. Some of the girls were in ballet. MIT came recruiting. The year before me two guys went to Princeton and ran against each other for President of the Freshman Class (whatever that meant!). In my class, one guy (did nearly as well on the SAT Math as I did!!!) went to MIT.

    In one of the early grades, I got dumped on (adenoids, couldn't hear well until that got fixed). Apparently the teachers talked to each other and had me with a dunce cap until I proved otherwise. In 1st algebra, discovered math: I liked it, was good at it, was the best in the class, proved myself, got sent to a math tournament, couldn't get dumped on, etc. Continued that way: Was so good at math that I got an unspoken but powerful by in any subject, e.g., English literature, I didn't like.

    Got sent to summer math/physics enrichment programs.

    So, for that example, for

    > But what if those just aren’t interesting to someone?

    some schools will let a student who is good at some one subject get a by in other subjects.

    Really, schools, K-Ph.D., have a tough time finding any students really good in even just one subject, are thrilled when they find one that is, and don't want to block him/her because he viewed fictional literature as a not very credible presentation of common reality?

    That by pattern continued: In grad school, they insisted that I take their computer science course. My background in computing was already nicely above that course, and I'd already taught a similar course at Georgetown. Soooo, mostly laughed at the course: E.g., they had a test question about Quicksort (very common topic then), and I answered with material they didn't know.

    The best case of by: Took a reading course; decided to address a question in the pure math of optimization; two weeks later had a surprising theorem and from that an answer to the question. The work, clearly publishable, was instant news all over the department, some profs angry that I had done well, others pleased. Angry/pleased, the work got me a general purpose by, a gold crown, immunity from any criticism, and an unspoken, implicit, easy path to the rest of the Ph.D.

  • swayvil 10 hours ago

    you can't serve two masters.

    How would you characterize R's master and the "normie" master?

profsummergig 11 hours ago

In the Ramanujan story, a true MVP is G.H. Hardy. He read letters from some random unknown guy (a savage "native" no less!) half the world away, and took them seriously. And then organized resources to have that guy travel to England. A true MVP. All the others Ramanujan wrote to ignored him (understandably so). Such a tragedy that he died so young.

  • kumarm 7 hours ago

    If you want to understand how human potential was wasted in old world, Ramanujan belongs to a caste in India that is only caste that is supposed to be educated (Representing probably < 5% of population) in those days.

    Ramanujan short life itself is a loss to the world, Imagine how many Ramanujan's were ignored where there is no G.H. Hardy and what about Ramanujans in the other 95%?

    • maeil 6 hours ago

      In the New World, the Ramanujans' lives are spent optimizing high-frequency trading, ads or video recommendation algorithms. This is arguably even worse for society than them not being discovered altogethrt.

      • fragmede 6 hours ago

        Arguably. Assuming that's actually where they end up, they earn lots of money and they get to choose what they want to do with it. We should force them to be mathematicians if they didn't want to be?

        The other version in the West is he moves to rural Montana and sends bombs through the mail.

        • sealeck 3 hours ago

          > The other version in the West is he moves to rural Montana and sends bombs through the mail.

          There might be a middle ground between the two?

        • mandmandam an hour ago

          > Assuming that's actually where they end up, they earn lots of money and they get to choose what they want to do with it. We should force them to be mathematicians if they didn't want to be?

          I think that if you tried you could imagine a world where Ramanujans are both supported and respected with nice lives, while also contributing to the future of the species rather than helping dig our own grave.

          > The other version in the West is he moves to rural Montana and sends bombs through the mail.

          Why in the world would those be the only two options?? What a profoundly strange thing to say.

        • ImHereToVote 5 hours ago

          Those bombs might have done more good than his potential math career. Considering we just had our first AI millionaire. Perhaps there is hope for humanity to wake up.

    • elgenie 5 hours ago

      Ramanujan himself survived childhood smallpox and died at just 32 from what's thought to be complications from an earlier bout with dysentery. But he had lucked out in that he was born male in an urban setting in a high caste, with access to education, textbooks, and the language of the imperial core, and managed to make it to adulthood at all.

      “I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.” ~ Stephen Jay Gould

      • scotty79 2 hours ago

        If we individual makeup was so irrelevant we wouldn't have just had me Ramanujan so far. Although I agree that Einstein is probably very unremarkable and was mostly the right (genius) person in the right place at the right time in history of science to marry together things other people figured out and sprinkle some unique framing onto that.

    • Cthulhu_ 3 hours ago

      This is why education and opportunities should be available for all, regardless of social / economic status. I reaped the benefits from that in the Netherlands where the government paid for most of my education (bachelor equivalent) and consequent professional life (white collar / middle class), instead of staying in my parents' / ancestors' "class" (blue collar / working class).

      But people in the upper classes don't like that, so they're telling working class people that people even worse off are after their jobs.

    • gen_greyface 2 hours ago

      caste system in india is an evil that persists even today, and is a complex topic. majority of the indian-origin users on hackernews or people in the IT community are very likely upper castes. see [1] If you are interested to learn more about the caste system in india it is recommended to get your facts from multiple sources. start from [2]

      [1] https://www.hup.harvard.edu/books/9780674987883 [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caste_system_in_India

      • cubefox 32 minutes ago

        People from a higher caste tend to have higher IQ, see e.g. https://emilkirkegaard.dk/en/wp-content/uploads/Lynn-Cheng-2...

        If you mix populations with different mean IQ together, you get an average. And then you get fewer people with exceptionally high IQ like Ramanujan, because IQ is approximately normally distributed. Even a small difference in means makes a large difference at the tails.

    • ykrishnan 3 hours ago

      > ...only caste that is supposed to be educated...

      Tall claim.

    • uncharted9 4 hours ago

      This is such a common and dangerous rhetoric, which has been repeated millions of times in India today, that people are willing to believe that one community has wickedly tried to subjugate everyone by denying them the right to education. But this is completely false. The early government records of British India themselves attempt to record detailed demographic records of the communities that studied in the early 'modern' schools. And no, the Brahmins didn't have a monopoly.

      This is similar to another popular narrative that no girl received an education until some sympathetic Englishman in partnership with a local woman allowed girls to go to school. What a load of BS.

    • thwori23423423 5 hours ago

      [flagged]

  • rq1 an hour ago

    What a kind heart!

  • non_low_key 2 hours ago

    What do you mean by savage "native" here ? He is coming from a culture of long and rich intellectual history.

    • uncharted9 2 hours ago

      I think he was referring to the way colonizers commonly referred to the subjects of their colonies pejoratively as "savage natives". This applies to Native Americans, Africans, South Asians, etc. Racism was the norm in the old days.

  • paulddraper 10 hours ago

    If it had not been for Hardy, we would know a fraction of what R did.

  • rramadass 5 hours ago

    Agreed. It is interesting to contrast G.H.Hardy's treatment of Ramanujan (nurturing) with Arthur Eddington's treatment of Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (petty and back-stabbing) decades later. A discussion with lots of links can be found at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41284239

barcode_feeder 9 hours ago

"The statements had been proved 20 years earlier by a little-known English mathematician named L.J. Rogers... Rogers was content to do his research in relative obscurity, play piano, garden and apply his spare time to a variety of other pursuits"

divinely inspiring

  • jb1991 4 hours ago

    Indeed. Also is the retirement dream for many working software engineers.

IAmGraydon 10 hours ago

The stories of mathematicians like Srinivasa Ramanujan, who claimed to have derived complex partitions and identities in dreams, have always captivated me. It's as if their minds were tapping into some hidden reservoir of knowledge. I'm curious what drives these intuitive leaps. Was Ramanujan's brain quietly processing patterns during sleep, leveraging its default mode network in ways we're still struggling to understand? Or was it something more fundamental – an emergent property of complex neural networks, perhaps, or even a glimpse into Jung's collective unconscious?

I'm curious to hear how others think about this phenomenon. Do recent advances in neuroscience, AI, or cognitive psychology offer any clues about how innovators like Ramanujan access these hidden sources of insight? Or are we still stuck in the realm of "genius is mysterious"?

  • Tier3r 10 hours ago

    Starting from the basics, Ramanujan was known to spend huge amounts of time in the library pouring over mathematical texts. He was also personally and spiritually obsessed with mathematics, thinking it was an expression of divinity. So its quite probable a significant chunk of his memories were already mathematical and random accesses to it were the same.

    • danielmarkbruce 9 hours ago

      This is the thing. You think about something with compulsion for long enough, it shows up in your dreams.

      • Lutger 3 hours ago

        People are impressed by the seemingly spontaneous origin of genius ideas, but forget all the analytical labor that went into preparing the mind for conceiving such thoughts. Genius doesn't come out of nowhere. The 'stroke of the genius' required a lot of hard work and experience.

        And, it works the same with us 'normal' people, even though the results are less spectacular. Want to have a good idea? You need to feed your brain everything you can and obsess over it, then let it stew for a bit. Again, and again. Only then do you stand a chance for a really good idea to just pop out.

    • pixelpoet 3 hours ago

      Please forgive, it's *poring

  • karel-3d 7 hours ago

    As others say - just study a lot of math. You will not be Ramanujan, but you will be better at math.

    That's not to say there isn't something spiritual and mystical in knowledge. I think the fact that he was from a different background gave him a different perspective. But yeah you cannot skip all the math studying.

  • danielmarkbruce 9 hours ago

    If you spend an enormous amount of time (like, too much) working on a single piece of software, you'll come up with solutions in your dreams and wake up and write them down. It's not that rare. Now... the solutions might be for loops so I'm not comparing such situations to Ramanujan, but it's not some extremely rare phenomenon.

  • yas_hmaheshwari 10 hours ago

    I am also intrigued by this question: What was different for guys like Ramanujan, and how were they able to tap in to this hidden reservoir of knowledge. And how can we replicate it

    One guy able to tap into this knowledge in dreams is an indication that it is possible. Now, how do we make this the default for everyone is the question I wonder about

    The way we found one variant of wheat in Mexico that was resistant to bacteria, and replicate that to the whole world -- can we do something like that for humans ( even I don't like the sound of it, but I hope you get the feeling )

    • profsummergig 9 hours ago

      > The way we found one variant of wheat in Mexico that was resistant to bacteria, and replicate that to the whole world

      Great analogy.

      Borlaug's famous Mexican dwarves.

      • gurjeet 9 hours ago

        > > ... found one variant of wheat in Mexico ...

        According to the Wikipedia page of Norman Borlaug, he _developed_ that variety of wheat.

    • wruza 3 hours ago

      how do we make this the default for everyone is the question I wonder about

      You delete stupid prejudices from society, then it allows itself to do that. One group of people forcibly practicing it for idiotic reasons now plagued the whole field with its label, amplified by religious ideas. The irony is, it’s that same limitation that disallows to address itself and continues to propagate.

  • chandureddyvari 9 hours ago

    There’s a relevant quote from Swami Vivekananda on this

    From Karma Yoga, Chapter: I, Karma in its effect on character—

    What we say a man “knows”, should, in strict psychological language, be what he “discovers” or “unveils”; what a man “learns” is really what he “discovers”, by taking the cover off his own soul, which is a mine of infinite knowledge.

    We say Newton discovered gravitation. Was it sitting anywhere in a corner waiting for him? It was in his own mind; the time came and he found it out. All knowledge that the world has ever received comes from the mind; the infinite library of the universe is in your own mind. The external world is simply the suggestion, the occasion, which sets you to study your own mind, but the object of your study is always your own mind. The falling of an apple gave the suggestion to Newton, and he studied his own mind. He rearranged all the previous links of thought in his mind and discovered a new link among them, which we call the law of gravitation. It was not in the apple nor in anything in the centre of the earth.

    Whenever I read about Ramanujan having divine revealing formulas in his dreams, I remember Swami Vivekananda’s quoute on consciousness and mind.

    edit: found another relevant quote from Upanishads on tapping the infinite knowledge:

    Mundaka Upanishad 2.2.9:

    “Eṣa sarveṣu bhūteṣu gūḍhātmanā prakāśate, dṛśyate tvagryayā buddhyā sūkṣmayā sūkṣmadarśibhiḥ”

    Translation: “The Self hidden in all beings does not shine forth, but it is seen by subtle seers through their one-pointed and subtle intellect.”

    Explanation: The ultimate knowledge or truth is hidden within all beings and is revealed through subtle inner perception. The idea is knowledge is latent within the mind, and it is discovered, not externally found.

    • wruza 3 hours ago

      Not sure I follow the explanation. And apologies cause I’m not that familiar with these texts, but afaik it talks about “soul” here, not information? Words like Brahman, Atman come to mind.

      In case I mistook it, ignore the above.

      All knowledge that the world has ever received comes from the mind

      Doesn’t it come from the mind’s interaction with the world? I don’t think that any important knowledge comes from doing nothing (apart from psychology due to its nature). It all sounds like a typical religious salad, tbh. “You” discover from your “mind”, but then some seers understand that “you” and “all” and “mind” are the same, etc. Well, you don’t have to be a seer to see it. “You discover from your mind” is a useless semantic loop that creates all this unnecessary complexity, imo.

    • dsubburam 8 hours ago

      > Translation: “The Self hidden in all beings does not shine forth, but it is seen by subtle seers through their one-pointed and subtle intellect.”

      That doesn't look sound to me. If the "seers" are seeing "The Self", are they beyond and separate from "The Self"? If they do so with their "subtle intellect", is that intellect outside of "The Self"?

      If affirmative, then "The Self" is something external to the seer, making the term a misnomer. And furthermore, there is something outside of The Self (that which is seeing The Self), which remains to be explicated.

      • chandureddyvari 7 hours ago

        I'll try to slightly dive into Advaita philosophy here. Both the Upanishads and the Yoga Vasistha affirm that the distinction between the seer and the Self is an illusion created by the mind. When this illusion is dispelled, the oneness of the Self is realized. The intellect, which seems to function as a separate tool, is ultimately part of the same illusion. True knowledge is realizing that there is no separation—everything is the Self.

        Quoting one from Katha Upanishad 1.3.10:

        "Indriyebhyaḥ parā hy artha, arthebhyas ca param manah, manasas tu parā buddhir buddher ātmā mahān parah"

        Translation: "Beyond the senses are the objects, beyond the objects is the mind, beyond the mind is the intellect, beyond the intellect is the Self."

        This quote emphasizes that the intellect is still a part of the illusion. Beyond even the intellect lies the Self, which is one and undivided.

    • hshshshshsh 5 hours ago

      Stupid question but why didn't Newton come up with Relativity instead?

      • ndsipa_pomu 4 hours ago

        Likely because it's far more complicated than Newtonian gravity and he wouldn't have been aware of the shortcomings of his theory e.g. Mercury's orbit. Also, the study of light was only just beginning in Newton's era - Ole Rømer's measurement of the speed of light was in 1676, but Maxwell's theories didn't come out until 1865.

    • sss111 9 hours ago

      That’s beautiful, thanks for sharing. I’ve seen that firsthand growing up. It’s like when you hear a song as a kid, and it just sounds cool. But then, later in life, you hear the same song, and it hits you on a whole different level—like the meaning was always there, but you had to live through stuff to really get it.

      • hshshshshsh 5 hours ago

        The master appears when the student is ready.

  • paulpauper 10 hours ago

    As the article mentions ,we was familiar with the literature. He communicated with other mathematicians, read papers, and submitted in journals while in India. he was not some hermit in a cave or something. I think this claim that he just dreamed the results part of mythology that has been built around him. From what I read, he he did a lot of the grunt work deriving these formulas but only published the final results, so it only appears that he conjured them out of nothing. It's not like he could have sent Hardy a book-sized letter of all the steps to derive those results.

reddit_clone 9 hours ago

It boggles my mind what could have been if he had lived to a ripe old age.

uptownfunk 7 hours ago

Ramanujan responsible for inspiring generations of mathematicians throughout the world. His life was a beautiful tragedy. One that leaves me in awe and also great inner sadness. If you come from a hardcore traditional br*hmin family, just to cross over the ocean by boat would risk you getting excommunicated. The culture which he came from makes the entire story all the more legendary. Just cutting off your topknot and forgoing the dhoti to wear a western suit. We don’t understand what he went through and what he gave up to give us his mathematics. What he had to sacrifice to practice his art.. to be.

  • thwori23423423 5 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • kitchi 4 hours ago

      Let's not be so aggressive.

      Comments on HN are meant to be for civil discussion, even on contentious topics.

    • uptownfunk 4 hours ago

      No hate here. And you’re very much not quoting anything I said so who knows where you got that from. Don’t be so insecure.

Alifatisk 2 hours ago

There is a movie covering his story, it's incredibly good!

utkarsh858 7 hours ago

He attributed his success to his family Goddess, claiming he had dreams of scrolls unfurling theorems against a bloodied wall.

"An equation for me has no meaning, unless it represents a thought of God" - Ramanujan

rramadass 9 hours ago

For people interested in learning more about Ramanujan and his Works;

1) Mathematics Wizard Srinivasa Ramanujan : Some glimpses into his Life and Work by two Indian Mathematicians Narendra Kumar Govil and Bhu Dev Sharma is a good biography with an introduction to his Mathematics and links to further resources. Good complement to Robert Kanigel's book The Man Who Knew Infinity.

2) In order to understand the fascination that Mathematicians have for Ramanujan see this and other lectures by Prof. Ken Ono who credits Ramanujan as his inspiration in becoming a Mathematician; Why Does Ramanujan, "The Man Who Knew Infinity," Matter? - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ynhiZJUMzA

3) Mathologer on Youtube has good walkthroughs of some of Ramanujan's most famous identities (eg. 1+2+3+... = -1/12) - https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=mathologer+rama...

4) All of Ramanujan's published papers and unpublished notebooks can be found online at - http://ramanujan.sirinudi.org/

PS: In the submitted article, George Andrews is wearing a Ramanujan tie :-)

gigatexal 6 hours ago

I wish we lived in the multiverse where he didn’t die. Imagine what he could have done. Cool article though.

  • jb1991 4 hours ago

    At least we don't live in the multiverse where he was never discovered and all his work was thrown away.

dyauspitr 12 hours ago

Ramanujan’s story is very interesting but I would love more Indian mathematicians and scientists to become household names. Mathematicians like Harish Chandra, C. R. Rao, Manjul Bhargava, Narendra Karmakar etc. Physicists like C. V. Raman, Satyendra Nath Bose, Meghnad Saha. Others like Har Gobind Khorana and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan too.

  • ks2048 11 hours ago

    You're right, some Indians don't have the recognition they deserve, but if it makes you feel better, few "western" mathematicians or scientists are household names either.

    • esperent 11 hours ago

      However, pretty much all of the ones who are household names, are western.

      Well, at least to western people. Are Indians more familiar with Indian scientists?

      • your_challenger 10 hours ago

        Amoung the people who are interested in science? Yes. But to the general public? No.

        I don't think a non STEM guy would know Ramanujan or C V Raman.

      • Lutger 3 hours ago

        Household names (in the west) are maybe Aristotle, Galileo, Newton and Einstein. If you are lucky. For a lot of people it is just Einstein, that's it.

  • sulam 11 hours ago

    Fwiw Chandra, Rao, and Bose are instantly recognizable to me. I’m not a mathematician or physicist and don’t know the other folks. That said I am very aware that Indians have made significant contributions to math, physics and I imagine other disciplines.

  • xanderlewis 10 hours ago

    > Satyendra Nath Bose

    I imagine most people won't recognise the name. But everyone's heard of a boson. So he's somewhat immortalised — more than most.

  • the-mitr 4 hours ago

    Universities press in India had bought out a series of books by G Venkataraman called Vignettes in Physics it also had books on Saha, Bhabha, Bose, Chandra and Raman. https://universitiespress.com/books?id=0&sid=161

    National Book Trust also has several books on Indian scientists.

  • billfruit 8 hours ago

    Physicists like Subrahmanyam Chandrashekhar and George Sudarshan. Also Mahalanobis for statistics.

    And Mani Chandy for computer science.

    • andrewflnr 7 hours ago

      Chandras(h?)ekhar is already there, at least if you're the kind of nerd who knows about physics at all. Probably even more so than Ramanujan, but that could just be my science bias as a kid.

  • xanderlewis 10 hours ago

    I've noticed India seems to be full of ring theorists/algebraic geometers. I wonder if that's actually true and, if so, why.

    • nasalspirant 9 hours ago

      Part of the answer is that research funding in India is predominantly from the public sector, and investments in pure science research have been low for a long time (not that applied sciences are doing much better). Thus many researchers lack the resources for experimental science whereas theoretical study is more accessible.

  • profsummergig 11 hours ago

    When I first encountered the Mahalanobis distance, I thought it sounded strangely Indian. Turned out it was!

  • chompychop 5 hours ago

    Manjul Bhargava is not Indian.

  • rramadass 8 hours ago

    This is entirely the fault of the Indian Education System and Popular Media. The current generation knows almost nothing about these Indian Greats.

    In order to rectify the status quo;

    1) Everybody should get the monthly magazine Science Reporter published by National Institute of Science Communication and Policy Research (NIScPR), Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi, India. which gives a overview into Indian Science - https://sciencereporter.niscpr.res.in/

    2) The two-volume The Mind of an Engineer by Purnendu Ghosh et al. published by Springer contains essays from many of our recent Scientists/Researchers/Engineers etc. - https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-10-0119-2

    3) Books on Indian Science/Scientists by various authors are available on Amazon India and are worth getting.

    4) Also see the books by the great astrophysicist/cosmologist Jayant Narlikar (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jayant_Narlikar), specifically; The Scientific Edge: The Indian Scientist From Vedic To Modern Times. - https://www.penguin.co.in/book/the-scientific-edge/ and Science and Mathematics: From Primitive to Modern Times - https://www.routledge.com/Science-and-Mathematics-From-Primi...

scotty79 2 hours ago

When we get to cloning people he's probably the most worthy person to get cloned first. Best chance of getting something usefult from a specific genetic makeup. You'd still probably need to make hundreds of clones to get one anywhere close to his level due to random epigenetics, even if raised in optimal environment but it's the best shot.

datavirtue 12 hours ago

Why aren't we working on drugs to make people smart?

  • elmomle 12 hours ago

    I used to think like you do. But the real place where we could make tons of progress is in relationships. Many stories of great thinkers involve one or a few crucial mentoring/pedagogical relationships. Without those, a person could forever find themselves trying to fit their square peg into the round hole of what "normal" society around them seems to expect. I can easily see how my life could have ended up like that.

    As someone who benefited greatly from a few mentors in childhood and adolescence, my goal is to be able to give the same to at least a few other people in my lifetime.

    • BLKNSLVR 9 hours ago

      Was just discussing various parenting stories with my colleagues over lunch and, like relationships, childhood environment and parental boundaries (or otherwise) would likely be the greatest influence to any individual.

      But then, if 'mentors' applies to parents, then I guess I'm saying the same thing.

      Having said that, my teenage son wastes a lot of his life playing online games with his friends, but having said that, I heard him say mid-game to a friend of his "Brazilian isn't a language you idiot!". So, I mean it's trivia, but he knows there's no language called Brazilian. He's a smart kid (that's not the only data point).

      (I had to look it up: Portugese is the official language of Brazil).

  • NAHWheatCracker 12 hours ago

    Lots of people are, they're called nootropics.

    Whether they are successful and whether they are mostly a bunch of snake oil is another question...

    • babyent 12 hours ago

      I feel way more productive since going sxe.

      I am naturally so tired around 9pm when I shut the lid of my laptop that I fall asleep within minutes of getting in bed.

      On a side note.. Somehow my dreams have been insane and I’ve low key enjoyed the vivid worlds I find myself in over the past few months.

      Wake up around 5 or 6, go for a stroll and then eat some breakfast.

      Then I can work taking only breaks for lunch and dinner. Sometimes a 30 min nap in the afternoon in the park.

      • aspenmayer 12 hours ago

        For those unfamiliar with the abbreviation sxe:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straight_edge

        > Straight edge (sometimes abbreviated as sXe or signified by XXX or simply X) is a subculture of hardcore punk whose adherents refrain from using alcohol, tobacco, and recreational drugs in reaction to the punk subculture's excesses. Some adherents refrain from engaging in promiscuous or casual sex, follow a vegetarian or vegan diet and do not consume caffeine or prescription drugs. The term "straight edge" was adopted from the 1981 song "Straight Edge" by the hardcore punk band Minor Threat.

      • muixoozie 12 hours ago

        > sxe

        Weird. First time I've ever seen that (abbreviation?) For straight-egde. Thought you were talking about some supplement at first.

        • drilbo 7 hours ago

          I thought the same and instantly googled, and immediately remembered I had seen it before. It's like a play off HxC

      • BLKNSLVR 9 hours ago

        I've always been pretty much straight-edge. Don't drink much alcohol, and recently went off caffeine.

        I'm naturally tired at around 2am. I barely dream, or can't remember my dreams. I struggle to wake up at 6:30 even after 7+ hours of sleep.

        I do like an afternoon nap, but Sunday's are almost the only opportunity. As a bad consolation prize, I involuntarily micro-sleep at my desk, working from home or in the office, a handful of times most days, generally at peak afternoon nap times (1:30pm - 3:30pm).

        I wouldn't say I'm productive, but I would say that the work I produce is generally of a high quality.

    • kevin_thibedeau 12 hours ago

      One billionaire is using them to speedrun his mental illness.

      • HKH2 8 hours ago

        Next he'll grow fangs and start drinking blood.

      • xanderlewis 10 hours ago

        'Source'.

        • willy_k 7 hours ago

          Well assuming we’re talking about Elon Musk, he has admitted to using prescription Ketamine for depression, which seems to have a negligible effect on cognition for therapeutic use

  • makeitdouble 12 hours ago

    I wonder what effects do you expect from that on a societal scale in the long term (at least 3,4 decades) ?

    For instance we banned meth and other drugs that have tremendous productivity effects at the expense of the individual and how we had to deal with them, so it's not a rhetoric question.

    • kennedywm 11 hours ago

      We didn’t fully ban them. We just prescribe them to anyone a doctor decides has ADHD.

      • naikrovek 11 hours ago

        Not quite, but if one does not have ADHD or something similar, things like adderall have a very different effect than they do to someone who has ADHD.

        Your apparent disbelief in ADHD doesn’t make it imaginary, by the way. Consider yourself lucky that you do not have it; I am unemployable without medication.

        • furyofantares 10 hours ago

          People without ADHD take adderall &etc for focus/performance enhancing reasons. Some get it from a friend, some are incorrectly diagnosed. I don't know if you disagree that this is the case, but I don't think it implies anything about ADHD.

    • nick__m 11 hours ago

      You will be surprised to learn that methamphetamine is not banned and that it is currently prescribed for refractary ADHD under the name desoxyn!

      • makeitdouble 11 hours ago

        I'm aware we never "ban" any specific substance, as we say the dose makes the poison. And any substance that has any effect is also a potential cure for the disease that has the opposite effect.

        I should have been clear I saw it in the "make people smart" light, as doping an already acceptable situation, instead of correcting something perceived as a pathology.

        Meth was widely available over the counter at some point, and we made it legally disappear outside of strict medical settings.

        • astrange 10 hours ago

          Anything in Schedule I is almost fully banned, though people will try hard enough to get around it that it doesn't matter.

  • RandomWorker 12 hours ago

    Caffeine is the most used drug in academia.

    • wyre 12 hours ago

      Surely the most used because of its affordablity and easy access. Coffee, energy drinks, tea, caffiene pills, etc.

      I wonder what academia would look like if adderall, vyvanse, modafinil were just as accessible, or even less controlled substances that are considered to enhance mental performance like L-tyrosine, alpha-GPC, Lion's Mane mushroom, Bacopa, or Ginko.

      • astrange 10 hours ago

        Alpha-GPC is just choline, so you can get it by eating eggs. Amino acids and mushrooms are also quite accessible.

        Modafinil is straight up better than caffeine though, which is a crappy and addictive stimulant.

        • drilbo 7 hours ago

          "just" choline is a little reductionist, it's much more bioavailable.

          I'm not sure where the distinction actually lies, but it is also considered a (generally recognized as safe) drug.

      • BurningFrog 11 hours ago

        Caffeine also has a track record of several centuries.

        We really, really know the long term effects.

        • hskalin 9 hours ago

          What are the long term effects? How harmful is caffeine addiction?

    • paulpauper 10 hours ago

      no, you mean Ritalin. caffeine is a joke compared to actual stimulants.

  • astrange 10 hours ago

    IIRC nicotine is the most effective nootropic by far, the problem being that it's super addictive.

    But none of them work as well as sleep and exercise.

    • abound 10 hours ago

      And eating right! Gotta complete that trifecta, each one compliments the others.

    • willy_k 7 hours ago

      IIRC nicotine itself isn’t super addictive when used solely in a less addictive form, as in gum or patch.

      • drilbo 7 hours ago

        Have you ever tried taking a vape away from a teenager?

        ...or me?

        • willy_k 6 hours ago

          A vape is definitely not a less addictive form, I can attest to that. But especially with the patch, and to a lesser extend with gum, it’s not that addictive to (most) people who that never had a cigarette/vaping/dipping/pouching addiction. Gum is probably still more addictive than coffee but I would guess it’s at least closer to that of coffee than inhaling it.

          • drilbo 6 hours ago

            In the past, when I've heard the 'less additive form', it was in contrast to nicotine from tobacco, where there are other chemicals and compounds at play. While it's true ROA can be a big part of habit formation, I'd argue it's a stretch to call it different form when it's the same chemical in either case.

            tbf tho, I am somewhat contradicting another comment I made about bioavailability on this very gp thread so suffice to say, I do understand your point.

            • willy_k 5 hours ago

              I mean they quite literally come in completely different forms of products, but I get your point. I thought nicotine vs tobacco was mostly important for health risk, with the exception of cigarettes which IIRC have all sorts of nasty stuff added or in trace amounts.

  • throwaway10oct 9 hours ago

    I think modafinil is a wonderful drug, far more potent than caffeine or nicotine. It's also very easy to get with no long term ill effects. There is a whole subreddit dedicated to this.

    Wonder why more people aren't using it.

    • OutOfHere 5 hours ago

      > no long term ill effects

      That is not totally true for at least three reasons:

      1. Modafinil can interact badly with some other stimulants. One must remain careful.

      2. Modafinil by itself can cause SJS and similar serious problems in rare cases.

      3. Chronic use of modafinil can easily produce anxiety, so much anxiety that it makes using modafinil impossible. This is even in a very low dose.

    • pelorat 5 hours ago

      > Wonder why more people aren't using it.

      Because it's classified as an amphetamine in large parts of the western world and would be illegal obtain without a prescription.

  • hereme888 12 hours ago

    We did and still are. You can only safely push hardware so much.

  • dmichulke 7 hours ago

    @HN: Downvoting questions is stupid.

    You're perpetuating "be ashamed of not knowing" instead of encouraging "learn by asking questions".

    If you agree, consider upvoting downvoted questions.

monacobolid 5 hours ago

> he came up with thousands of elegant and surprising results, often without proof. He was fond of saying that his equations had been bestowed on him by the gods

And somehow this guy is remembered as a 'genius'...

  • rammer 3 hours ago

    Obviously someone's burning