stoutfellow: Joker (Joker)
stoutfellow ([personal profile] stoutfellow) wrote2018-01-20 08:09 am
Entry tags:

Abstract

A week or two before a colloquium talk, posters go up announcing it. They include a brief description of the talk, usually a rather dry abstract.

I am strongly tempted to submit the following description for my talk:

"The first person to stumble on it refused to take it seriously.

The first person to take it seriously refused to discuss it in public.

The first person to discuss it publicly used a language few mathematicians understood.

The first person to discuss it in a well-known language got curb-stomped by the greatest mathematician of the age.

Here at SIUE, we teach it every fall.

This is the story of non-Euclidean geometry."
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2018-01-20 04:55 pm (UTC)(link)
It's accurate, it's concise, it's not misleading due to concision, and it sounds interesting.

Unless "sounds interesting" is considered improper, can't see why you shouldn't use that description.

[personal profile] ndrosen 2018-01-21 11:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Was the language which few mathematicians understood Hungarian? Or would Bolyai have used Latin?

Maybe I ought to come to Indiana and attend your colloquium.

[personal profile] ndrosen 2018-01-23 04:16 am (UTC)(link)
I stand corrected on several points. 8-)
desertvixen: (Default)

[personal profile] desertvixen 2018-01-22 01:31 am (UTC)(link)
I like it!