The Accidental Apprentice Huh was born in 1983 in California, where his parents were attending graduate school. They moved back to Seoul, South Korea, when he was two. There, his father taught statistics and his mother became one of the first professors of Russian literature in South Korea since the onset of the Cold War.
After that bad math test in elementary school, Huh says he adopted a defensive attitude toward the subject: He didnt think he was good at math, so he decided to regard it as a barren pursuit of one logically necessary statement piled atop another. As a teenager he took to poetry instead, viewing it as a realm of true creative expression. I knew I was smart, but I couldnt demonstrate that with my grades, so I started to write poetry, Huh said.
Huh wrote many poems and a couple of novellas, mostly about his own experiences as a teenager. None were ever published. By the time he enrolled at Seoul National University in 2002, he had concluded that he couldnt make a living as a poet, so he decided to become a science journalist instead. He majored in astronomy and physics, in perhaps an unconscious nod to his latent analytic abilities.
When Huh was 24 and in his last year of college, the famed Japanese mathematician Heisuke Hironaka came to Seoul National as a visiting professor. Hironaka was in his mid-70s at the time and was a full-fledged celebrity in Japan and South Korea. Hed won the Fields Medal in 1970 and later wrote a best-selling memoir called The Joy of Learning, which a generation of Korean and Japanese parents had given their kids in the hope of nurturing the next great mathematician. At Seoul National, he taught a yearlong lecture course in a broad area of mathematics called algebraic geometry. Huh attended, thinking Hironaka might become his first subject as a journalist.
Initially Huh was among more than 100 students, including many math majors, but within a few weeks enrollment had dwindled to a handful. Huh imagines other students quit because they found Hironakas lectures incomprehensible. He says he persisted because he had different expectations about what he might get out of the course.
The math students dropped out because they could not understand anything. Of course, I didnt understand anything either, but non-math students have a different standard of what it means to understand something, Huh said. I did understand some of the simple examples he showed in classes, and that was good enough for me.
After class Huh would make a point of talking to Hironaka, and the two soon began having lunch together. Hironaka remembers Huhs initiative. I didnt reject students, but I didnt always look for students, and he was just coming to me, Hironaka recalled.
Huh tried to use these lunches to ask Hironaka questions about himself, but the conversation kept coming back to math. When it did, Huh tried not to give away how little he knew. Somehow I was very good at pretending to understand what he was saying, Huh said. Indeed, Hironaka doesnt remember ever being aware of his would-be pupils lack of formal training. Its not anything I have a strong memory of. He was quite impressive to me, he said.
cont'd at source
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Poster Comment:
Nice story, interesting math, well written.