It's a good (and long) interview, and I genuinely enjoyed it. Terry Tao comes across as a truly nice person. However, I noticed that he tends to be somewhat non-committal in his responses. For each question posed, he provides thorough explanations that most with a basic understanding of math can follow. Nevertheless, he rarely makes predictions or offers his opinion. He frequently ends with a remark such as, "Yes, well, it's a challenging problem."
I completely understand where he is coming from. While it's true that "we don't know what we don't know", I would appreciate hearing more about his (opinionated) thoughts regarding the topics discussed during the interview.
Fascinating observation. Maybe he is better at research partly by being disciplined to not have such opinions. Having an opinion can bias one’s approach to a problem, making it harder to solve.
maybe a more mathematical interviewer could hove drawn out more predictions. i appreciate lex for having invited tao. i hope he manages to convince perelman.
Just about anyone would be a more mathematical interviewer than Fridman. Even when it comes to CS, it’s blatantly obvious he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
I think Lex is prepping his interviews very well. He will ask questions that address the areas in which the interviewee is an expert in. However, you begin to realize that he often struggles to ask follow-up questions that are relevant to what the interviewee has shared on various topics.
This differs in other podcasts. For example, Sean Carroll, a theoretical physicist, conducts interviews with colleagues, who are also theoretical physicists. This enables him to engage in a meaningful conversation with the person being interviewed. When both parties strive to use language that a wider audience can understand, it truly becomes enjoyable.
It's a lot to ask of two experts to also be excellent communicators for an audience that may struggle to follow along.
I wonder if a potential application of LLMS could be: have two experts have a really interesting but dense conversation with each other, and then translate the conversation into simpler language with interjections for explanations.
It may not be enjoyable for the most general audience, but it would scratch an itch for some of us.
I think we already have something quite similar available. There are AI podcasts that can be generated automatically (Google Notebooks, ElevenLabs, ...). If you input a transcript of an expert conversation and request it to be explained in simpler terms, I think you would closely match what you're looking for.
What a weird comment/expectation. He's an academic mathematician not an influencer. What exactly do you expect him to predict - whether the Riemann hypothesis will be proven?
i think the desire being expressed is to hear tao’s view on what is likely to happen on the various problems . as one of the most prominent mathematicians of our time his personal opinion would be valuable.
> what is likely to happen on the various problems
Pure math just doesn't work like that. Literally no one has any idea when XYZ problem will be proven - there's no way to know! It's not like building a stadium or a road or even a company , where you can see or anticipate the coming of a proof before it arrives. It could happen tomorrow or it could happen never. For example, of Hilbert's original 23 problems posed in 1900, three are still open.
Some problems are characterized by many mathematicians as exceptionally challenging, to the point that there are currently no known methods or branches of mathematics capable of addressing them. For these issues, it is often proposed that a entirely new branch of mathematics needs to be developed to effectively address these types of challenges.
And then there are other problems for which progress has been made over the past decades. At times, a weaker version may have been proved. Occasionally, new ideas emerge in the field regarding how to advance effectively. An upper or lower bound may be identified and gradually improved over time.
Of course, while no one can predict the future, making an educated guess is of course interesting. I would appreciate it if Terry could share his thoughts on such estimates.
i agree. but if tao has any opinions on what will fall first or with what techniques, i would listen. tao himself says that some problems lack handholds to climb the sheer cliff . it would be nice to know what he views as handholds on the various problems that have them.
perhaps , but having some opinions shared is also a kind of guidance for people who don’t have access to the mathematics establishment. plus, if anyone can just shrug off that type of “told you so” nonsense it surely must be tao.
I completely understand where he is coming from. While it's true that "we don't know what we don't know", I would appreciate hearing more about his (opinionated) thoughts regarding the topics discussed during the interview.