Hi, I’m Sarah. I’m 21 and going to grad school in math next fall. I’m interested in applied math and analysis, and I’m particularly interested in recent research about the sparse representation of large data sets. I think it will become important outside the professional math community. (I have a blog about that at http://numberblog.wordpress.com/.)
As far as hobbies go, I like music and weightlifting. I read and talk far too much about economics, politics, and philosophy. I have the hairstyle and cultural vocabulary of a 1930′s fast-talking dame. (I like the free, fresh wind in my hair, life without care; I’m broke, that’s Oke!)
Why am I here?
I clicked the link from Overcoming Bias.
In more detail, I’m here because I need to get my life in order. I’m a confused Jew, not a thoroughgoing atheist. I’ve been a liberal and then a libertarian and now need something more flexible and responsive to reason than either.
Some conversations with a friend, who’s a philosopher, have led me to understand that there are some experiences (in particular, experiences he’s had related to poverty and death) that nothing in my intellectual toolkit can deal with, and so I’ve had to reconsider a lot of preconceptions.
I’m here, to be honest, for help. I’ve had difficulty since childhood believing that I am valuable, partly because in mathematics you always have the example before you of people far better. Let me put it this way: I need to find something to do or believe that doesn’t crumble periodically into wishing I were dead, because otherwise I won’t have a very productive future. That sounds dismal, but really it’s a good problem to have—I’m pretty fortunate otherwise. Still, I want to solve it. I like this community, I think there’s a lot to learn here, and my inclination is always to solve problems by learning.
I’m here, to be honest, for help. I’ve had difficulty since childhood believing that I am valuable, partly because in mathematics you always have the example before you of people far better.
I don’t know if it will help you, but the concept of comparative advantage might help you appreciate how being valuable does not require being better than anyone else at any one thing. I found the concept enlightening, but I’m probably atypical...
I am familiar with it, actually. Never seemed to do much good, but maybe with a little meditation it might. If someone is paying me voluntarily, I must be earning my keep, in a sort of caveat emptor way...
I think gains from trade is one of the most uplifting (true) concepts in all of the social sciences. It is a tragedy that it is not more widely appreciated. Most people see trade as zero sum.
Hi, I’m Sarah. I’m 21 and going to grad school in math next fall. I’m interested in applied math and analysis, and I’m particularly interested in recent research about the sparse representation of large data sets. I think it will become important outside the professional math community. (I have a blog about that at http://numberblog.wordpress.com/.)
As far as hobbies go, I like music and weightlifting. I read and talk far too much about economics, politics, and philosophy. I have the hairstyle and cultural vocabulary of a 1930′s fast-talking dame. (I like the free, fresh wind in my hair, life without care; I’m broke, that’s Oke!)
Why am I here? I clicked the link from Overcoming Bias.
In more detail, I’m here because I need to get my life in order. I’m a confused Jew, not a thoroughgoing atheist. I’ve been a liberal and then a libertarian and now need something more flexible and responsive to reason than either.
Some conversations with a friend, who’s a philosopher, have led me to understand that there are some experiences (in particular, experiences he’s had related to poverty and death) that nothing in my intellectual toolkit can deal with, and so I’ve had to reconsider a lot of preconceptions.
I’m here, to be honest, for help. I’ve had difficulty since childhood believing that I am valuable, partly because in mathematics you always have the example before you of people far better. Let me put it this way: I need to find something to do or believe that doesn’t crumble periodically into wishing I were dead, because otherwise I won’t have a very productive future. That sounds dismal, but really it’s a good problem to have—I’m pretty fortunate otherwise. Still, I want to solve it. I like this community, I think there’s a lot to learn here, and my inclination is always to solve problems by learning.
I don’t know if it will help you, but the concept of comparative advantage might help you appreciate how being valuable does not require being better than anyone else at any one thing. I found the concept enlightening, but I’m probably atypical...
I am familiar with it, actually. Never seemed to do much good, but maybe with a little meditation it might. If someone is paying me voluntarily, I must be earning my keep, in a sort of caveat emptor way...
I think gains from trade is one of the most uplifting (true) concepts in all of the social sciences. It is a tragedy that it is not more widely appreciated. Most people see trade as zero sum.
Welcome, Sarah.
(I sometimes make comments on Overcoming Bias under the name Doug S.)