John Littlewood

John Edensor Littlewood was a British mathematician.

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  • It was Mr. Littlewood (I believe) who remarked that "every positive integer was one of his personal friends."
    • (about Ramanujan) p. lvii of

      Littlewood's Miscellany (1986)

      Littlewood's Miscellany is a revised and expanded version of A Mathematician's Miscellany, published 1953.
      • 'The surprising thing about this paper is that a man who could write it--would.'
        • Note quotation marks: Littlewood is repeating a joke without attribution. "Cross-purposes, Unconscious Assumptions, Howlers, Misprints, etc.", p. 59

      • I recall once saying that when I had given the same lecture several times I couldn't help feeling that they really ought to know it by now.
        • "Academic Life", p. 135

      • A good mathematical joke is better, and better mathematics, than a dozen mediocre papers.
        • "Introduction to A Mathematician's Miscellany", p. 24

      • I read in the proof-sheets of Hardy on Ramanujan: 'As someone said, each of the positive integers was one of his personal friends.' My reaction was, 'I wonder who said that; I wish I had.' In the next proof-sheets I read (what now stands): 'It was Littlewood who said...' (What had happened was that Hardy had received the remark in silence and with a poker face, and I wrote it off as a dud....)
        • "Cross-purposes, Unconscious Assumptions, Howlers, Misprints, etc.", p. 61

      About

      • To illustrate to what extent Hardy and Littlewood in the course of the years came to be considered as the leaders of recent English mathematical research, I may report what an excellent colleague once jokingly said: 'Nowadays, there are only three really great English mathematicians: Hardy, Littlewood, and Hardy-Littlewood.'
        • Harald Bohr, , p. xxvii
 
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