分享
 
 
 

美丽心灵(电影版) A Beautiful Mind

美丽心灵(电影版) A Beautiful Mind  点此进入淘宝搜索页搜索
  特别声明:本站仅为商品信息简介,并不出售商品,您可点击文中链接进入淘宝网搜索页搜索该商品,有任何问题请与具体淘宝商家联系。
  參考價格: 点此进入淘宝搜索页搜索
  分類: 图书,进口原版书,小说 Fiction ,

作者: Sylvia Nasar著

出 版 社:

出版时间: 2001-11-1字数:版次: 1页数: 461印刷时间: 2001/11/01开本: 16开印次: 1纸张: 胶版纸I S B N : 9780743224574包装: 平装编辑推荐

Spotlight Reviews

1.a mathematical mind, November 20, 2001

Reviewer: shelley isom (El Cerrito, CA United States)

I generally hate biographies. They are usually heavily loaded with details of no significance while lacking in a larger

meaning, plus most of their subjects wind up dead, thus defeating the purpose of biography (to make living seem

significant) and I wind up depressed by the whole exercise -- life always seems so pointless after reading a biography. I

make two exceptions to this: Boswell's Life of Johnson and this biography (obviously, I don't seek this kind of literary

genre so I realize I may have overlooked a few good ones). This book is less a biography in the usual sense than an

exploration of a human being with a special talent/obsession -- mathematics. Reading this book made me realize that

mathematics is really a branch of art and depends on living on the edge (close to insanity) so as to fish insight from the

chaos just on the other side of rationality. Creativity without danger is worthless.

John Forbes Nash was clearly not a "people" person although there is something appealing about him despite his

arrogance, ambition and vanity -- he is a truth teller, and while we all pretend to admire truth tellers, we always prefer

those who don't go near that cold inhospitable country. That he went mad seemed almost inevitable given the extent of his

ambition and hubris -- he wanted to fish out the biggest of mathematical fish and when he realized that his incapacity for

study and overestimation of his own talent and inspiration meant that his fish had already been landed by other

mathematicians and/or found to be illusory, he chose the lesser of two evils -- insanity. Anything but to become just

another mediocrity. He plunged into numerology (became a kind of numerical visionary) leaving strange little

numerological messages all over Fine Hall which he haunted like a prescient ghost. In his public life, he became an actor

in his own paranoid delusion, traveling here and there, trying to obtain citizenship in one country while forfeiting it in

another, an ad hoc peace broker. Like most paranoiacs, his delusions were solipsistic yet formulaic, following his political

inclinations. At Princeton, people who came across these little bursts of enigmatic enlightenment left on the walls and

blackboards felt moved to write them down. He lived like this for some 30 years, and then for some reason known only

to himself (he explains it as having realized that he could rein in his paranoiac ideation by simply recognizing when he was

beginning to go down that road and turning his thoughts elsewhere). This realization, by the way, puts him way up there in

my estimation. He learned to control his own mind, to make his return to sanity a triumph rather than a sad defeat. He

recognized where the danger lay and learned to avoid it when he wanted to. When he returned to the flatland of reason,

he never turned against his mad self. In fact, he said that his mathematical inspiration came from the same place as his

so-called delusional thinking. (Here's an idea: what if paranoid delusions are not really insane; they only seem so because

each person with these ideas couches them in a personal way, dresses them eccentrically according to whim, and we are

fooled by how silly they look rather than by how consistent they are from one so-called paranoid individual to the next --

maybe there is something out there taking over our minds. Maybe that's why our minds are so limited and getting more so

all the time. We haven't always been this stupid). His winning the Nobel Prize at this late stage was also a proof of his

great personal power. The Nobel Prize committee had deep reservations about the public relations danger of giving a prize to a man who had been publicly insane for 30 years. He won it also not for mathematics but in economics (a hotly debated topic -- many considered economics as a discipline unworthy of a Nobel Prize). The portion of the book about the Nobel Prize is just great. We get a good look at how this system works, how it keeps its equilibrium in the world of high thought and keeps its credibility by not making too many odd/wrong choices. I also liked the speech he gave when accepting it. He had put a great deal of single minded intentionality into winning a great prize and that he won the Nobel seems less a credit to the committee than to this man's indomitable will. At the same time, he had

lived past the sheer need for fame and he received it merely as a token to his young self (for his young self's work in

games theory) and was appreciative that it allowed him to obtain a credit card. I like his aside during his Nobel speech when he parenthetically gave an acknowledgment to his insane self -- his alter ego.

Other oddly mathematical touches in his life: two sons named John. One was illegitimate by a woman who clung to the

hope that Nash would marry her at some point or at least support her and her offspring. He never did. He married a

beauty (a physicist) instead -- Alicia -- and produced another son named John. This John has been diagnosed paranoid

schizophrenic. He had his father's footsteps to follow. In his meetings with this John, Nash sees himself at that age and

tells John not to indulge in insanity. Nash is a man who lived according to his own lights. His was not a social life, yet it is

instructive and it gives hope to people who refuse to conform to the social model. This great biography makes this clear.

2.The Book That Inspired The Movie, December 21, 2001

Reviewer: Francis J. Mcinerney (Commonwealth)

This book draws very sharp divisions between movies that are about a life, based on a life, or in this case, inspired by a life. Whether you have scene the movie or even the trailer, once you read this book it become immediately apparent Dr. Nash's life would not fit into any single film. To a degree this is simply an instance of practicality, for the work this man and his peers did, is intelligible to a small handful of people. Even while reading the book, unless your math skills are somewhat extraordinary, the lexicon of pure math will be completely new, and the concepts these men and women developed are fascinating, however they are almost unimaginably complex.

To those who have read material that may have touched on Game Theory, The Prisoner's Dilemma, and The Mobius Band, the book will allow for moments when the inquisitive can participate. In most cases the concepts are mind bending, and in some cases they could not even be verbalized by some of the brilliant minds that Dr. Nash worked amongst. Ms. Sylvia Nasar does an excellent job of explaining why Dr. Nash was so different from his peers, and how he approached complex issues in fundamentally different manners than others.

The remarkable story is of this brilliant man who was considered one of the greatest thinkers of his time who fell gradually, though fairly quickly, into a mental state that caused his family to commit him more than once. The decades he spent living under the most bizarre and destructive delusions, his moments of clarity, and then his highly unusual recovery makes for an incredible tale. This is one of those stories that had it been written as fiction, it would not have been taken seriously.

The other parts of the book were very revealing as they pertained to Dr. Nash and his peers at Princeton, MIT, and elsewhere. The fields they work in are intensely competitive, however when he began his decline, and then continued to have false starts at normality, for the most part he was not abandoned. The author touches on why his peers may have felt the need to help a man who routinely demonstrated the most hurtful personal behavior to anyone he came in contact with. There were exceptions, but they are very few in number, and not for the people you might suppose. All of these great minds share at least one commonality, and that is their ability to think at extremely high levels that few can even imagine. Many of these people seem to constantly fear the loss of whatever unique gifts they have. They also tend to be people that have been marginalized until they find their place in the academic world, for what they think of, and the eccentricities they often have, single them out for ridicule not praise.

A very readable biography, a profession that is understood by few.

Customer Reviews

1.The next John Nash, 15 Oct 2005

Reviewer: Anon (Europe)

This is information that I believe ought to be know: I am an African American, who received a doctorate in mathematics in 1974. For many years, I have been stalked and black-balled by the CIA, similarly to Prof. Nash in the film. For instance, there are 271 forum visitors online now as I compose this. What really bothers me is that the topic of my Master's thesis was mentioned in the dialogue of the movie drama, without giving me a credit and without indication that the problem had been solved by someone. The movie screenwriter had no right to drag me into the story by referring to my Master's thesis, which was never published. The only good thing I can say is that I became acquainted with some of the work of Prof. Nash, after viewing the film, and discovered.it to be quite interesting.

2.The Hubris of Genius, 9 Jul 2004

Reviewer: C.B.Liddell (Tokyo, Japan)

This biography of the Nobel Prize winner and schizophrenic mathematical genius John Forbes Nash surprisingly brings to mind the main character in Dostoyevsky's great novel, "Crime and Punishment." Like the intense, reclusive student, Raskolnikov, Nash in this biography comes across as an extremely anti-social and arrogant young man, convinced that his genius gives him certain rights and freedoms beyond the petty restrictions, rules, and manners that govern normal human conduct.

But whereas Dostoyevsky's character commits a murder, Nash's main offense is merely to be an arrogant and boorish lout, forever trying to show off to his fellow students at Princeton. When he is later struck down by mental illness after achieving so much so young, we can't help feeling there is an element of hubris involved.

Nash also fits into the popular paradigm of the lop-sided genius, the person of incredible talents who can't deal with the simpler aspects of daily life. As in the case of the notoriously absent-minded Albert Einstein -- whom Nash meets in the book -- or the equally eccentric Isaac Newton, we somehow feel reassured that these supreme geniuses have their weaknesses. For all these reasons, this is a story that resonates on a mythic and psychological level. We keep rooting for Nash, but also secretly look forward to him tripping up. This reflects the ambivalent attitude to the sciences that most people have -- we are both intrigued by new discoveries but afraid of their ramifications.

Around the age of 30, Nash's quest to find greater meaning in the Universe sparked off his insanity as he started to discern complex codes implanted by extra-terrestrials in the random occurrence of certain letters of the alphabet in daily life. But, although this is essentially a tragedy of a brilliant mind struck down by schizophrenia, it is nevertheless one with a happy ending. After paying his dues for his genius and arrogance, Nash gradually recovers and receives his apotheosis in the 1994 Nobel Prize for economics.

Movies and books are radically different media, so don't expect this to read like the recent Oscar-winning movie that it inspired. The expansiveness of the written word allows for much more detail to emerge as well as countless digressions and forays into the worlds of science and mathematics that the movie had no space for. So, if you saw the movie and loved it, this biography still has plenty to offer.

内容简介

Stories of famously eccentric Princetonians abound--such as that of chemist Hubert Alyea, the model for The Absent-Minded Professor, or Ralph Nader, said to have had his own key to the library as an undergraduate. Or the "Phantom of Fine Hall," a figure many students had seen shuffling around the corridors of the math and physics building wearing purple sneakers and writing numerology treatises on the blackboards. The Phantom was John Nash, one of the most brilliant mathematicians of his generation, who had spiraled into schizophrenia in the 1950s. His most important work had been in game theory, which by the 1980s was underpinning a large part of economics. When the Nobel Prize committee began debating a prize for game theory, Nash's name inevitably came up--only to be dismissed, since the prize clearly could not go to a madman. But in 1994 Nash, in remission from schizophrenia, shared the Nobel Prize in economics for work done some 45 years previously.

Economist and journalist Sylvia Nasar has written a biography of Nash that looks at all sides of his life. She gives an intelligent, understandable exposition of his mathematical ideas and a picture of schizophrenia that is evocative but decidedly unromantic. Her story of the machinations behind Nash's Nobel is fascinating and one of very few such accounts available in print (the CIA could learn a thing or two from the Nobel committees). This highly recommended book is indeed "a story about the mystery of the human mind, in three acts: genius, madness, reawakening." --Mary Ellen Curtin --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Nasar has written a notable biography of mathematical genius John Forbes Nash (b. 1928), a founder of game theory, a RAND Cold War strategist and winner of a 1994 Nobel Prize in economics. She charts his plunge into paranoid schizophrenia beginning at age 30 and his spontaneous recovery in the early 1990s after decades of torment. He attributes his remission to will power; he stopped taking antipsychotic drugs in 1970 but underwent a half-dozen involuntary hospitalizations. Born in West Virginia, the flamboyant mathematical wizard rubbed elbows at Princeton and MIT with Einstein, John von Neumann and Norbert Wiener. He compartmentalized his secret personal life, shows Nasar, hiding his homosexual affairs with colleagues from his mistress, a nurse who bore him a son out of wedlock, while he also courted Alicia Larde, an MIT physics student whom he married in 1957. Their son, John, born in 1959, became a mathematician and suffers from episodic schizophrenia. Alicia divorced Nash in 1963, but they began living together again as a couple around 1970. Today Nash, whose mathematical contributions span cosmology, geometry, computer architecture and international trade, devotes himself to caring for his son. Nasar, an economics correspondent for the New York Times, is equally adept at probing the puzzle of schizophrenia and giving a nontechnical context for Nash's mathematical and scientific ideas.

作者简介:

Sylvia Nasar,Sylvia Nasar(born 1947 in Bavaria) is an American journalist and writer. A former economics reporter for the New York Times, she was recently named the Knight Chair in Business Journalism at Columbia University.

She described the life of John Forbes Nash in A Beautiful Mind (Simon & Schuster), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1998 and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. The book was adapted for the screen in 2001. She is currently writing a book entitled Grand Pursuit.

In 2006, she became embroiled in a controversy over her New Yorker article (co-written with David Gruber), Manifold Destiny.

目录

Prologue

Part One:A Beautiful Mind

1 Bluefield(1928—45)

2 Carnegie Institute of Technology(June 1945一June 1948)

3 The Center ofthe Universe(Princeton,Fall 1948)

4 School of Genius (Princcton,Fall 1948)

5 Genius(Princeton,1948—49)

6 Games fPrinceton,Spring 1949)

7 John von Neumann(Princeton.1948-49)

8 The Theory of Games

9 The Bargaining Problem (Princeton,Spring 1 949)

10 Nash’S Rival Idea(Princeton.1949-50)

11 Lloyd fPrinccton,1950)

12 The Wlar of Wits(RAND,Summer 1950)

13 Game Theory at RAND

14 The Draft(Princeton,1950-51)

15 A Beautiful Theorem(Princeton,1950-51)

16 MIT

17 Bad Boys

18 Experiments(RAND,Summer 1952)

19 Reds(Spring 1953)

20 Geometry

Part Two:Separate Lives

21 Singularity

22 A Special Friendship(Santa Monica,Summer 1952)

23 Eleanor

24 Jack

25 The Arrest(RAND,Summer,1954)

26 Alicia

27 The Courtship

28 Seattle(Summer 1956)

29 Death and Marriage fl 956-57)

Part Three:A Slow Fire Burning

30 Olden Lane and Washington Square(1 956-57)

31 The Bomb Factory

32 Secrets(Summer 1958)

33 Schemes fFali 1958)

34 The Emperor of Antarctica

35 In the Eye ofthe Storm(Spring 1959)

36 Day Breaks in Bowditch Hall

(McLean Hospital April-May 1959)

37 Mad Hatter's Tea(May-June 1959)

Part Four:The Lost Years

38 Citoyen du Monde fPansandGeneva,1959-60)

39 AbsoluteZero(Princeton.1960)

40 Tower of Silence(Trenton State Hospital 1961)

41 An Interlude of Enforced Rationality (July 1961-April 1963)

42 The“Blowing Up”Problem

(Princeton and Carrier Clinic,1963—65)

43 Solitude(Boston,1965-67)

44 A Man All Alone in a Strange World(Roanoke,1967--70)

45 Phantom of Fine Hall(Princeton,1970s)

46 A Quiet Life (Princeton,1970—90)

Part Five:The Most Worthy

47 Remission

48 The Prize

49 The Greatest Auction Ever

(Washington,D.C,ecember 1994)

50 Reawakening (Princeton,1995-97)

Epilogue

Notes

Select Bibliography

Acknowledgments

Index

 
 
免责声明:本文为网络用户发布,其观点仅代表作者个人观点,与本站无关,本站仅提供信息存储服务。文中陈述内容未经本站证实,其真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
2023年上半年GDP全球前十五强
 百态   2023-10-24
美众议院议长启动对拜登的弹劾调查
 百态   2023-09-13
上海、济南、武汉等多地出现不明坠落物
 探索   2023-09-06
印度或要将国名改为“巴拉特”
 百态   2023-09-06
男子为女友送行,买票不登机被捕
 百态   2023-08-20
手机地震预警功能怎么开?
 干货   2023-08-06
女子4年卖2套房花700多万做美容:不但没变美脸,面部还出现变形
 百态   2023-08-04
住户一楼被水淹 还冲来8头猪
 百态   2023-07-31
女子体内爬出大量瓜子状活虫
 百态   2023-07-25
地球连续35年收到神秘规律性信号,网友:不要回答!
 探索   2023-07-21
全球镓价格本周大涨27%
 探索   2023-07-09
钱都流向了那些不缺钱的人,苦都留给了能吃苦的人
 探索   2023-07-02
倩女手游刀客魅者强控制(强混乱强眩晕强睡眠)和对应控制抗性的关系
 百态   2020-08-20
美国5月9日最新疫情:美国确诊人数突破131万
 百态   2020-05-09
荷兰政府宣布将集体辞职
 干货   2020-04-30
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案逍遥观:鹏程万里
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案神机营:射石饮羽
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案昆仑山:拔刀相助
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案天工阁:鬼斧神工
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案丝路古道:单枪匹马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:与虎谋皮
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:李代桃僵
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:指鹿为马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:小鸟依人
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:千金买邻
 干货   2019-11-12
 
推荐阅读
 
 
>>返回首頁<<
 
 
靜靜地坐在廢墟上,四周的荒凉一望無際,忽然覺得,淒涼也很美
© 2005- 王朝網路 版權所有