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About the Author

Edward Frenkel is a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and winner of the Hermann Weyl Prize. He lives in Berkeley, California.

Works by Edward Frenkel

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13 reviews
I very much enjoyed Frenkel's book, but although I am eager to re-read it I am intent on doing so using a paper copy: whether it was due to poor Kindle formatting or my own (lack of) familiarity with how Kindle deals with foot/end-notes, reading the notes was a chore and I ultimately gave up on it -- and without reading the notes, understanding the mathematical side of this was a losing battle.

Frenkel's English is very very good, but the occasional lapse made me return to my oft-visited show more complaint: where was the copy editor? Do such people even exist any more? Are they just too expensive? show less
I picked this book up at the library because I have been interested in pure and applied math for a long time now, although I was unacquainted with the author. He has two main subjects he wanted to convey in the book. The first one the story of how hard he had to struggle in the old Soviet system with its semi-official anti-semitism when it came to career advancement and which ended up forcing him to leave just at the time when the country was opening up to the West under Gorbachev. He had show more some references to mathematical ideas in this section, to provide background on the kinds of problems he was trying to solve, but at a relatively popular level. The second subject begins when he starts to work as a professional full-time mathematician in the West pursuing the Langlands program of unifying three far-flung fields in math along with the allied field of quantum physics. This was quite a bit more technical. At the very end, he talks about a couple of collaborative art projects he has been involved with. He wrote for a film project giving the proper context for the word "Love" in title of the book: which refers not to the ordinary emotion between people but the feeling a mathematician has for the beauty of mathematical truths.

I thought the book was interesting, though it seemed odd to think that it would be of widespread appeal with the rather lengthy technical sections with many pages of footnotes. He steers well clear from talking much about his domestic life with his parents and at home during his marriage, preferring to concentrate on what he did professionally. I didn't really know anything about the Langlands program as such before I read this book but had read with interest something about recent theorems connecting number theory, harmonic analysis, and Riemannian surfaces, so this was a good introduction.
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Aside from the autobiographical parts, an attempted popularization of group theory and its role in the Langlands Program for connecting disparate branches of mathematics. Especially when the extensive endnotes are taken into account, I think the author underestimates how difficult the many abstract concepts (Kac-Moody algebras, automorphic sheaves, dual toric fibrations, etc) will be for lay readers. (Or maybe it's just that my brain is the only one in the world (?) congenitally incapable of show more appreciating the glories of group theory.) Well worth reading, as long as one doesn't start out expecting to understand all the technicalities. show less
Frenkel, a world-renowned mathematician, combines his autobiography with an overview of his work on the Langlands Program, a unified theory of mathematics.

The author, a Russian Jew, has had a remarkable life, first trying to educate himself while being blocked by Soviet prejudice from getting an advanced degree despite his brilliance, and then, after Perestroika, working and teaching in the U.S., to which he was invited by Harvard at age 20. The autobiography, which is scattered throughout show more the book, is quite amazing. The mathematical explanations, though, are very tough going and far more difficult than I had the energy (or intention) to work through. I read this for the biographical component and just skipped the math, and his is quite a story, well-worth the read. show less

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Works
5
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½ 3.6
Reviews
13
ISBNs
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