Cédric Villani
Author of Birth of a Theorem: A Mathematical Adventure
About the Author
Image credit: Cedric Villani. Photo by Renate Schmid.
Works by Cédric Villani
Associated Works
Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy (2016) — Preface, some editions — 2,129 copies, 101 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Villani, Cédric
- Birthdate
- 1973-10-05
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Université Paris-Dauphine
École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France
Lycée Louis-le-Grand, Paris, France - Occupations
- mathematician
- Awards and honors
- Fields Medal (2010)
Fermat Prize (2009)
Henri Poincaré Prize (2009)
Jacques Herbrand Prize (2007)
French Academy of Sciences (2013)
Legion of Honor (2011) (show all 7)
National Order of Merit (2009) - Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Brive-la-Gaillarde, Corrèze, France
- Places of residence
- Lyon, France
Paris, France
Princeton, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- France
Members
Reviews
The book gives a great feeling for the process of mathematics, and for the lifestyle of a mathematician. It is hard to give a sense of the actual mathematical research, but everything around that is conveyed well. For example, Villani gives a fantastic sense for developing the main theorem, sketched out in emails with his collaborator, as they write a LaTeX paper (by emailed drafts, without version control) and develop the proofs simultaneously. He conveys the ups and downs, the false show more breakthroughs, the mistakes as well as the actual breakthroughs. He also gets across the social life and itinerancy of a mathematician, traveling the world between institutes with few solid relationships outside his immediate family.
It mixes in some history of mathematics (with brief portraits of famous mathematicians). It does not really attempt to convey any of the mathematics itself, except in a very sketchy, impressionistic way; this was fine for me.
The writing is extremely overindulgent. I could do without reading his random dreams, or the stories he reads to his children, or the list of all his favorite songs on Spotify (with an explanation for why he likes each song, and the lyrics for some of them!). There is lots of filler! His language is often overly flowery; for example, he describes a math conference with, "Revelers swanning about from one event to the next in luxury limos and romantic rickshaws, everywhere celebrating the unity and diversity of mathematics, its ever-shifting shapes and forms; everywhere overcome with joy at what has so far been accomplished and wonder before all that yet remains to be discovered; everywhere, day and night, dreaming of the unknown." Perhaps this was his honest experience—who am I to say? He had just won the Fields Medal. But it rings false.
Additionally, Villani has an incredible ego. He tries to disguise it to some extent, but it still comes through very strongly. He is obsessed, for example, with the Fields Medal, and is convinced that every other mathematician is equally obsessed. (In fact, I think he is in small minority.) I am not sure of his professional ethics—several times he announces a result without having a proof—but he is obviously brilliant. show less
It mixes in some history of mathematics (with brief portraits of famous mathematicians). It does not really attempt to convey any of the mathematics itself, except in a very sketchy, impressionistic way; this was fine for me.
The writing is extremely overindulgent. I could do without reading his random dreams, or the stories he reads to his children, or the list of all his favorite songs on Spotify (with an explanation for why he likes each song, and the lyrics for some of them!). There is lots of filler! His language is often overly flowery; for example, he describes a math conference with, "Revelers swanning about from one event to the next in luxury limos and romantic rickshaws, everywhere celebrating the unity and diversity of mathematics, its ever-shifting shapes and forms; everywhere overcome with joy at what has so far been accomplished and wonder before all that yet remains to be discovered; everywhere, day and night, dreaming of the unknown." Perhaps this was his honest experience—who am I to say? He had just won the Fields Medal. But it rings false.
Additionally, Villani has an incredible ego. He tries to disguise it to some extent, but it still comes through very strongly. He is obsessed, for example, with the Fields Medal, and is convinced that every other mathematician is equally obsessed. (In fact, I think he is in small minority.) I am not sure of his professional ethics—several times he announces a result without having a proof—but he is obviously brilliant. show less
A strangely compelling account of a few years in the life of a celebrated french mathematician. There are many equations and descriptions of mathematical techniques that will baffle almost everyone who reads this book. Although I had no clue what he was writing about most of the time, Villani's passion for his chosen profession made me want to read through to the end.
Short and sweet. I would have liked there to be more technical stuff (or at least, some explanation of what the technical stuff was), but hey, what can you expect for a popular autobiography? I'd recommend it.
Cédric Villani was the recipient of the Fields Medal in 2010. He recall the months leading to 2010.
This is an hard act to follow for people who are not mathematics graduate students.
This is an hard act to follow for people who are not mathematics graduate students.
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Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 17
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 407
- Popularity
- #59,757
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 36
- Languages
- 5

















