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Alexander Grothendieck Revolutionized 20th-Century Mathematics

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Why This Matters

Alexander Grothendieck's groundbreaking work in algebraic geometry transformed the way mathematicians understand shapes and structures, emphasizing relationships over objects. His revolutionary ideas continue to influence the field decades after his departure, highlighting the importance of abstraction and hidden structures in mathematics, which can inspire innovations across tech industries such as data science, cryptography, and computer graphics.

Key Takeaways

What Albert Einstein was to 20th-century physics, Alexander Grothendieck was to 20th-century mathematics. He is much less well known because math gets technical even more quickly than physics does. But as with Einstein, Grothendieck’s impact came not just from his own results, revolutionary though they were. His work also reoriented his entire discipline in radical new directions.

Grothendieck was intense and ascetic from his early days. Starting in the early 1950s, when he was in his 20s, he produced thousands of pages of formal and informal notes that changed the course of mathematics. Then in 1970, he quit. He left his post at a prestigious research institute just outside of Paris to teach at the provincial university in Montpellier where he studied as an undergraduate. He mostly stopped talking to other mathematicians. In the early 1990s, he moved to a small village in the Pyrenees, where he lived as a hermit.

Mathematicians are still grappling with the innovations he made half a century ago. His work pushed mathematics to a new level of abstraction by focusing on the relationships between objects rather than the objects themselves. “If there is one thing in mathematics which fascinates me more than any other (and undoubtedly always has), it is neither ‘number’ nor ‘size,’ but invariably shape,” he wrote in his memoirs. “And among the thousand and one faces under which shape chooses to reveal itself to us, that which has fascinated me more than any other and continues to do so is the structure hidden in mathematical things.”

His revolutionary mathematics centered around that search for hidden structure.

Revealing Shapes

Grothendieck is most famous for his work in algebraic geometry. The field first developed as the study of shapes defined by polynomial equations — equations that add together variables raised to fixed powers. These can be as simple as a line (x – y = 0) or a circle (x2 + y2 – 1 = 0). But as you consider more and more variables raised to higher powers and also look for solutions that satisfy sets of many equations instead of just one, things quickly get more complicated — and more abstract.