Wednesday, July 05, 2006

 

Assessing the modern math world

One of the stories that should be about to come out is the reality that I am not some "crackpot" but am a major discoverer who has been in a pitched battle against a mathematical community dead set on blocking knowledge of my mathematical accomplishments.

So I picked a problem they'd have trouble getting away with lying about—the factoring problem.

For those of you who don't know, the factoring problem is generally believed (for a little while longer) to be extremely difficult, so modern security systems are built around it.

I now strongly believe that it is trivially solved and now am considering the question of why the modern mathematical community spent so much time telling people they were safe with a flawed approach.

My opinion is that mathematical discovery is hard, few people come up with ideas at the level like I just did in coming up with my factoring idea, but LOTS more people want the title of mathematician than can actually be a real mathematician, and if you get enough people together working at something, they can come up with a flawed solution.

I suggest to you that modern "mathematicians" realized they could just write papers that LOOKED mathematical, SAY as a group the papers were correct, and it not seem to matter if they actually were.

So they came up with "pure math" which by being useless in applicability was perfect for their needs, as if no one could ever test the math in the real world, it couldn't be shown to be crap.

And that way all these people who could never be mathematicians if they had to come up with new and important mathematical insights, and have perfectly correct arguments, could still take the title, get the paycheck in some cases, and teach students.

They could have careers as mathematicians.

My guess is that the world may have about a hundred real research
mathematicians—if even close to that many as I'm being generous.

That probably is about all that would be born with this number of people on the planet, and that may seem low, but mathematical discovery is just a hard business.

With room for maybe a hundred real mathematicians, there is a lot of pressure from the wannabe's to just take over, and crowd real mathematicians out.

Like they came after me when I made my discoveries.

Of course there is a lot more room for people who TEACH mathematics, so there can still be thousands of people in the math field, who could teach and do scholarly work.

But there will probably never be more than a hundred—if there are that many—real research mathematicians capable of doing significant research.

My hope after this massive debacle plays its way through is that the lesson is learned that you can't just trust people.

You need objective checking. You need to look for danger signs from a community.

And you need to understand that mathematics is VERY important to our world, and also VERY difficult when it comes to original and important research.

Since people at my level come around only every couple of hundred years or so, it's easy for people to forget what we are like, and too easy I think, for pretenders to take over and crowd out the real researchers.

Which forces someone like me when I arrive to clean house, which can get very, very, very messy.

And not just messy for mathematicians, as many of you will learn, but without such work, civilization itself is in danger, and the future of humanity is at risk.

My role is something many of you will find impossible to fully grasp, so don't worry yourselves too much about it.

Let's just say, I am here to set some things straight in the mathematical field.

The pathos is a result of a situation unlike one most can imagine, where my remarkable accomplishments have been fought by a mathematical community which contradictorily shows it despises mathematics.

To prove that I am telling the truth I've focused on an area where they can't lie, and found an incredibly simple way to factor.

And they are quiet about it so far from what I've seen.

If you have a hint of a clue that I am telling the truth I suggest you prepare yourself for the worst case scenario, though I hope it won't occur. Stock up on supplies. Shift funds out of areas vulnerable to a melt-down if it turns out that the entire Internet has to change, forcefully, overnight.

Make sure your social networks are refreshed, and if there's someone you have been putting off talking to or spending time with, do it now.

The world you knew is about to end, and while I don't want to be too doom and gloom as the benefits to society are going to be immense—eventually—I do want those of you smart enough to listen to me, to have your chance to prepare.

The wait is nearly over—prepare yourselves.





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