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712818 digits long memory

A memory I’d like to share. On 13 Aug 2007, 1:42:08 UTC, PrimeGrid’s Woodall Prime Search found the 32nd and largest known to date (712818 digits long) Woodall prime:

2367906*22367906-1

 

Isn’t it amazing? I came across it yesterday by a chance, and recognized it should be a number of a big importance indeed. This number really hit me, I still can’t get it out of my mind, and that’s why I publish this post. If you wonder what is Woodall prime anyway, as I did, you can check a link here. I didn’t really understood it’s practical use, but was hooked by this numbers beauty. 712818 digits of this number and the value their represent are beyond my imagination, as a vast Universe, and yet so compact …  like Einstein’s E=mc2, it’s simple and powerful.

This number, the last of 32 in total being discovered, comes under a name of gigantic twin prime, reminding me a name of a monster character from a trash sci fi movie, or a new discovered underwater species… A giant octopus took over my mind, and invaded it by numbers. Another detail that draw more attention was the precise, up to second timing of the discovery ( Aug 2007, 1:42:08 UTC). I haven’t seen anything like that before. Not in sports, in science for sure.  It looked like from that moment on the world will never be the same.

Thinking about I copied and pasted it onto a blank page, and looked at it for a while mesmerized. I remember it by heart now, without taking any efforts to remember it.

On the contrary, I can’t remember my mobile number though it has 9 digits only and I have it for over a year… probably it’s not that important anyway.

Boris Kislitsin 

 

Other posts by boris kislitsin

Socrates unsatisfied, or a pig satisfied.

As with the previous post, this one too is not a memory per se, at least not in terms of a recollected story. Rather I’m writing down the awareness of having changed, of really -seeing- the world in a different way. Any state of mind at a certain moment in time could be considered a memory; since that’s what memory is: stored experience.

So today I write about the memory of being a staunch anti-intellectualist. A sentiment fed into by years of unhappiness in education. I remember almost vowing to myself that one day, if given the means, I would plead and fight for childrens’ freedom. From a young age they were taken away from their parents, from their home, from safety and all that is good in life.  It may sound overcharged, but this is literally how I experienced the first day of school, and many mornings after it. As if being put on a daily train to Auswitz for day-camp (back when it wasn’t yet a tourist attraction, of course). The teachers were  cruel sadists, venting their frustrations and lust for power on children who only wanted to be children. Children that like play, explore the world and retain their innocence. Instead, you were cornered between a pack of 30 other little wolves (children are indeed savages to one another) on the one side, and parental/educational pressure perform on the other side; made to counter-intuively think and cram al sorts of facts into your mind. The result of which was a hampering in respectively moral development and mental stability.

Then came university with its pretentions. I saw pretentious professors who placed their self-esteem in the study and reverance of other, dead intellectuals. Pretentious students,  having gained the right to study by forsaking their childhood, ready to find a guru, embrace a philsophy and look down . This is the problem with intellectuals; they condemned themselves to an unnatural life, hunched over in chairs, skulking in libraries, destroying their eyesight. And what do they do? They praise and other iuntellectuals, who similarly gave up their life, or had none in the first place (being perhaps debilitated or just plain anti-social). A vicious circle of people who dare not bite the hand that feeds them.

Needless to say, anti-intellectualism is not a very popular view among intellectuals. I felt priviliged to be the lone ranger that saw through this facade.

Continue reading ‘Socrates unsatisfied, or a pig satisfied.’

Other posts by David van Ofwegen