Vital lives are about action.
You can’t feel warmth unless you create it,
can’t feel delight until you play,
can’t know serendipity unless you risk.
— Joan Erikson
Off late, I have developed a lot of interest in Lebesgue Measure, thanks to the math- fin exposure over the last few years. Being a practitioner instead of a theorist/academician has its own advantage. You don’t get wedded to one concept or one theory. You take a random sample of all the techniques which have been applied to solve a problem and based on the context, you can choose one from the random sample OR create a customized method from that random sample of methods.
Any subject looked at from a historical perspective becomes interesting because the narrative becomes a story and the concepts become that much more meaningful. A subject like real analysis is a dry subject, whose importance though is seen in many branches of mathematics. When someone brings out a book on Real Analysis in a narrative format, I think it should not be missed. David Bressoud wrote the first edition of the book titled “A Radical Approach to Real Analysis” in 1994 and followed it up with a second edition in 2007.
They say that you get the face you’ve earned by the time you are forty – all those sorrowful, angry expressions, long hidden behind the makeup, become the naked truth. It mirrors who you are, who you’ve been , a kaleidoscope of endless patterns. Oh, well, for today at least I’m beginning to loosen up and like who I could be
- Joan Anderson ( A Year by the Sea)