A Princeton math professor
March 8, 2008
Throughout the course of my first semester, my math professor, Alex, said a few memorable quotes. I wrote them down, and now I feel like sharing them.
“If you can parametrize this equation you can prove that all of 20th century mathematics is bullshit.”
“It’s like saying God exists, saying that a particle goes to its lowest energy.”
“I don’t know much about screws; I screw something once every three years.”
–
Student: “After we take the midterm, do we still have classes?”
Alex cocks head: “I suspect so.”
–
Alex: “How will this one [problem] look?”
Student: “The same way…?”
Alex: “Are you sure? Are you really sure?”
Student: “Yea…”
Alex: “Yeah okay, you’re right.”
–
Alex: “Just put your surveys here, I actually have to run away today.”
Student: “Run away!”
–
Student: “Hey Alex, where are you going for fall break?”
Alex: “Boston and then Chicago.”
Student: “How come?”
Alex: “I’m going to give talks on string theory.”
Student: “Oh that’s cool! So you think strings exist?”
Alex: “I don’t really care.”
–
“Aristotle once said everything goes to its natural position; a stone falls and for man his natural position is his grave.”
“It’s called z simple, but they should say z not so simple.” (When talking about triple integration)