𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Science, computers, and people: From the tree of mathematics: Stanislaw M. Ulam, (Mark C. Reynolds and Gian-Carlo Rota, Eds.), preface by Martin Gardner, Birkhauser, Boston, 1986 xxi + 264 pp.

✍ Scribed by Martin H Krieger


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1987
Tongue
English
Weight
40 KB
Volume
64
Category
Article
ISSN
0001-8708

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Ularn is a mythic mathematician. He plays agaiut a variety of American values: hard work-apercus, insights, ideas, and infinite fertility characterize him; the ideal of the ivory tower of pure thought-"Bring me your tired, your worn, your concrete problems..." and I will make mathematics out of them; lone genius-collaboration was his ideal mode; get rich off your ideas-others seem to have been the entrepreneurs, Ulam the inventor. And of course, like much of what is American, he is Polish (or it could be Hungarian in this mythic realm). All of this leads to second-rate hagiography, when in fact his actual writings are modest yet filled with ideas worth stealing. Like Walter Benjamin and Wittgenstein, Ulam seems to defy a truly human account.

Ulam's reputation is haunted by that "idea" he had for the hydrogen bomb. But his understanding of complex systems in biology or in computation, and of complex people, is how he ought be known.