Russian Jewish Mathematician Rejects $1 Million Prize

Advertisement

(JTA) — A reclusive Russian Jewish mathematician turned down a $1 million prize for solving a seemingly unsolvable math problem.

Grigory “Grisha” Perelman told the Russian Interfax news agency on July 1 that he had turned down the prize for solving the Poincare conjecture from the Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Mass. because he disagreed with the organized mathematics community and believed that an American mathematician had contributed to solving the problem.

Perelman had reported in 2003 that he had solved the problem, and by 2006 scholars worldwide had agreed. Perelman, a recluse who by then had quit his job at the Steklov Mathematical Institute and moved in with his mother, did not show up for the award ceremony.

Signup for our weekly email newsletter here.

Check out the Jewish Week’s Facebook page and become a fan! And follow the Jewish Week on Twitter: start here.

Advertisement