Mathematics is not a deductive science that's a cliche. When you try to prove a theorem, you don't just list the hypotheses, and then start to reason. What you do is trial and error, experimentation, guesswork.
More Quotes from Paul R. Halmos:
... the student skit at Christmas contained a plaintive line 'Give us Master's exams that our faculty can pass, or give us a faculty that can pass our Master's exams.'Paul R. Halmos
...the source of all great mathematics is the special case, the concrete example. It is frequent in mathematics that every instance of a concept of seemingly great generality is in essence the same as a small and concrete special case.
Paul R. Halmos
The joy of suddenly learning a former secret and the joy of suddenly discovering a hitherto unknown truth are the same to me both have the flash of enlightenment, the almost incredibly enhanced vision, and the ecstasy and euphoria of released tension.
Paul R. Halmos
I remember one occasion when I tried to add a little seasoning to a review, but I wasn't allowed to. The paper was by Dorothy Maharam, and it was a perfectly sound contribution to abstract measure theory. The domains of the underlying measures were not sets but elements of more general Boolean algebras, and their range consisted not of positive numbers but of certain abstract equivalence classes. My proposed first sentence was 'The author discusses valueless measures in pointless spaces.'
Paul R. Halmos
Don't just read it fight it Ask your own questions, look for your own examples, discover your own proofs. Is the hypothesis necessary Is the converse true What happens in the classical special case What about the degenerate cases Where does the proof use the hypothesis.
Paul R. Halmos
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Based on Topics: Error & Mistake Quotes, Hypothesis Quotes, Mathematics Quotes, Reasoning QuotesBased on Keywords: deductive, guesswork, theorem
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