Thursday, 23 July 2009

You and Your Research by R. Hamming

Richard Hamming, a mathematician known for the Hamming Code, the Hamming distance along with numerical methods gave an interesting, and inspiring speech at Bell Labs 7 July 1986: You and Your Research. For those who don't have time do go through the entire speech, a condensed version can be found in: A Stroke of Genius: Striving for Greatness in All You Do.

It stroke me when I read that researchers do not cope with problems for which they don't have an "obvious" approach:
There are many right problems, but very few people search carefully for them. Rather they simply drift along doing what comes to them, following the easiest path to tomorrow. Great scientists all spend a lot of time and effort in examining the important problems in their field. Many have a list of 10 to 20 problems that might be important if they had a decent attack. As a result, when they notice something new that they had not known but seems to be relevant, then they are prepared to turn to the corresponding problem, work on it, and get there first.


I also found comforting statements from the ``big guys'' that one doesn't have to be a genius for making substantial contributions:
Newton said, ``If others would think as hard as I did, then they would get similar results.''
Edison said that genius was 99% perspiration and 1% inspiration.
and let's conclude with the Google Scholar tagline, from Newton:
"If I had seen farther than others it is because I stood on the shoulders of giants."
Happy reading, and researching!