https://rio2016.5ch.net/test/read.cgi/math/1666358764/72n0058132人目の素数さん2023/05/20(土) 18:45:13.56ID:lMDDrskn>>47 金はともかく、名誉欲は重要な動機だよ。 もちろん数学者にとっても名誉欲は重要 0059132人目の素数さん2023/06/14(水) 07:47:16.17ID:MM9Wlc1J 数学嫌いが多いとか数学界で新たな発見には限りがあるとか!? 0060132人目の素数さん2023/06/14(水) 21:10:23.72ID:Yj0avtil>>58 というか名誉欲は人間最大の欲望だろ 名誉があれば金も女も付いてくる 0061132人目の素数さん2023/06/22(木) 23:51:54.23ID:qlR7WsfR News from the AMS, Lieb Wins 2023 Kyoto Prize, June 16, 2023 Elliott H. Lieb, professor emeritus at Princeton University, has won the 2023 Kyoto Prize in Basic Sciences. According to a press release, Lieb “is one of the intellectual giants in the field of mathematical sciences. … Primarily through his achievements in many-body physics, [Lieb] established a foundation for mathematical research in fields such as physics, chemistry, and quantum information science. His contributions to the development of mathematical analysis are significant as well.”
Lieb responded, “I am deeply honored to have been selected for the Kyoto Prize. Its founder, Dr. Kazuo Inamori, and I share not only a birth year but also a philosophy that has guided my activities in research and education. “It is especially gratifying to see my work in mathematics and physics recognized in a city that played an important role in my cultural and scientific life,” Lieb added. “It was in Kyoto in 1956 that I wrote my first post-doctoral paper and where my immersion in Japanese culture made a profound and continuing impact on my life.” 0062132人目の素数さん2023/06/22(木) 23:52:06.26ID:qlR7WsfR Lieb will receive the prize, which includes a diploma, a medal made of twenty-carat gold, and a cash award of 100 million yen (approximately US $700,000), at a ceremony in Kyoto, Japan, on November 10. Established in 1984 by the Inamori Foundation, the Kyoto Prize is an international award to "individuals who have contributed significantly to the scientific, cultural, and spiritual betterment of humankind." The prize annually honors an individual in the fields of Advanced Technology, Arts and Philosophy, and Basic Sciences (which includes pure mathematics in a five-year cycle). Read more about its philosophy. Read more about Lieb and previous Kyoto Prize winners in mathematical sciences, which have included Japanese mathematician Masaki Kashiwara (2018), American theoretical and mathematical physicist Edward Witten (2014), and Hungarian mathematician László Lovász (2010). A life member of the American Mathematical Society, Lieb joined the AMS in 1969.