Acknowledgments The following
three-volume answer to Gil Kalai's MathOverflow question
“A Book You Would Like to Write” is chiefly inspired by
Tim Gowers' thoughtful comments on Gödel's Lost Letter
and P=NP, which he wrote in response to Dick Lipton's question “Make your own
world: what would you do if you could do anything?”
Prologue Here is an excerpt from Gowers'
comment on Gödel's Lost Letter:
Gowers' choice “If on the other hand P!=NP, then the price I ask …
is that we come to understand far better the subclass of
mathematical statements and proofs we are actually interested
in. … I would like a world where exactly one of the
statements ‘P=NP’ and ‘mathematical
creativity can be automated’ is true.”
Let us regard Gowers' choice (as we will call it) not as a wish, but as an
engineering directive whose fulfillment requires a bespoke
mathematical toolset such that “creativity can be automated.” Specifically, we regard Gowers' choice as a path toward Bill Thurston's goal:
Thurston's goal “The goal of mathematics is to develop enhanced ways for humans to see and think about the world. Mathematics is a transforming journey, and progress in it can better be measured by changes in how we think than by the external truths we discover.
To associate Gowers' choice to Thurston's goal, we embrace
Abraham Lincoln's view that our broad objective should be:
Lincoln's objective “To make mutual exchange [of] discovery, information, and knowledge; so that, at the end, all may know every thing, which may have been known to but one, or to but a few [and] to stimulate that discovery and invention into extraordinary activity.”
Balancing these various ideas, we design the mathematical formalisms of the Gowers-Thurston world with a view toward providing “enhanced ways for
humans to see and think about” their individual participatory roles in the emerging “extraordinary activities” of the 21st century.
To concretely specify this world's mathematical toolset, we apply
a template that physicist Julian Schwinger's
students affectionately
distilled from his lectures:
Schwinger's template “Although ‘1’ is not perfectly
‘0’ we can effectively regard …”
Applying Schwinger's template, we “effectively regard” the mathematical
toolset of Gowers' choice and Thurston's goal as arising from this ansatz:
The Gowers-Thurston-Schwinger (GTS) Ansatz “Although ‘NP’ is not known to be formally
separable from ‘P’ we can effectively regard it as
such whenever our main purpose is mathematical understanding.
Similarly, although ‘Hilbert space’ is not known to
be perfectly a ‘low-dimension secant variety of a Segre variety’
we can effectively regard it as such whenever our main purpose
is dynamical understanding.”
The first part of the GTS ansatz restricts NP (and thus P) to those algorithms whose runtime attributes are
decidable and whose outputs (including random samples) are verifiable; Juris Hartmanis has suggested that this restriction (suitably formalized) might render P and NP provably separable. In effect, the ansatz restricts P and NP to those algorithms that are humanly understandable in the Gowers-Thurston sense. The second
part of the GTS ansatz focuses upon systems (both classical and quantum) whose trajectories are dynamically compressed onto low-dimension algebraic manifolds. In effect, the ansatz restricts computational simulations to the noisy and/or low-energy and/or highly symmetric dynamical trajectories that are commonly encountered in nature, in technology, and in the laboratory.
These considerations lead us to envision the Gowers-Thurston-Schwinger world as becoming a concrete
21st century reality via a 10-year path that (if we are lucky) will be described retrospectively by the following three MathSTEMnet reviews. In answer to Gil Kalai's question, the math of Volume I exists today; the math of
Volume II foreseeably will exist within the next 36 months
or so; the math of Volume III will be the
work of many decades.
Needless to say, the MathSTEMnet reviews are entirely imaginary; in particular, the review of Volume III seeks to retell a classic Robert Heinlein medical narrative from 1958 in the dryly arch mathematical voice of Joseph Doob's 1948 review of Claude Shannon's Mathematical theory of communication (MR0026286).
MR2739833
Lane, Alice; Lane, Bob
Elements of Naturality in Simulation and Sensing
Volume I of
Surveys of Engineering for Enterprise
Constancy Press, Seattle, 2015.
xviii+475
pp.
58-01 (53-01 57-01)
This volume aims to provide solid foundations for classical
and quantum simulation. In the first of its three parts students
learn the basics of differential and algebraic geometry at the
same time that they learn the basics of Hamiltonian dynamics,
first in the context of classical molecular dynamics, then in the
context of classical interacting spins. From the beginning all
state-spaces are treated as algebraic varieties (specifically,
secant varieties of Segre varieties) that are endowed with
symplectic and metric structure. The second of three parts treats
(classical) thermostats and (quantum) Lindbladian
processes within a mathematically natural Hamiltonian/Stratonovich
formalism. In the final
part, classical and quantum tools are merged in the practical
context of quantum spin biomicroscopy, viewed both as a Shannon
communication channel and as a target for simulation and sensing
in synthetic biology.
The resulting volume reads as though Saunders Mac Lane,
Vladimir Arnold, and Joe Harris teamed up to cover in one volume
the dynamical elements of three classic texts: (1) Charlie
Slichter's Principles of Magnetic Resonance,
(2) Nielsen and Chuang's Quantum Computation and Quantum
Information and (3) Frenkel and Smit's
Understanding Molecular Simulation: from Algorithms
to Applications — all in the flowing
example-filled style of Jack Lee's Introduction to Smooth
Manifolds. It is suitable for a senior undergraduate or
first-year graduate course (that requires students
to unlearn some of what they previously have been
taught).
• reviewed by Caradoc Dearborn
MR2739833
Lane, Carla; Lane, David
Elements of Naturality in Surveys and Enterprises
Volume II of
Surveys of Engineering for Enterprise
Constancy Press, Seattle, 2020.
xxi+560 pp.
58-01 (53-01 57-01)
Volume II in this series takes up where Volume I leaves off:
with the description of the molecular dynamics and quantum spin
imaging of biological molecules. The first of three parts
surveys the quantum theory of spin polarization transport,
with an emphasis on transport-based techniques for
generating order-unity dynamic nuclear polarization (T-DNP). Substantial
emphasis is placed on efficient iterative evaluation of
“musical” isomorphisms in trajectory integrations.
The second part discusses 3D imaging methods that are enabled by
the coherent polarization so achieved. The third part discusses
the “crossover region”of imaging at 0.5 nm
resolution, below which molecular dynamical simulations carry
more information than direct imaging. Each chapter is accompanied
by two-part design exercises, the first consisting of a
pencil-and-paper (or SymPy) symbolic analysis, the second
consisting of a large-scale (SAGE/PyQSE) numerical simulation;
working code is provided for most exercises.
The concluding chapter requires students to design an
enterprise for spin-imaging the entire nucleus of a eukaryotic
cell (via quantum spin microscopy) at 0.5 nm resolution, then
refining that imaging information (via molecular simulation) to
sub-Angstrom scales. Present rapid developments in quantum
spin microscopy, sample hyperpolarization, and molecular dynamic
simulation ensure that this section
will be outdated within a very few years …and yet no
book better conveys the mathematical toolset that is so greatly
in-demand to support the burgeoning global enterprise of observational
synthetic biology.
• reviewed by Dilys Derwent
MR2739833
Pomfrey, Ella; Longbottom, Finn
Elements of Naturality in Healing and Regeneration
Volume III of
Surveys of Engineering for Enterprise
Constancy Press, Seattle, 2025.
xxix+870
pp.
58-01 (53-01 57-01)
It is now ten years since Volume I of this series appeared,
heralding a new era of comprehensive quantum spin imaging of
biomolecular structure, and comprehensive simulation of the the
molecular dynamics of these structures. It is now five years
since Volume II heralded a new era of synoptic information
regarding the workings of “every atom in its place”,
very much as von Neumann and Feynman foresaw last century. Now
Volume III has appeared, and the authors promise to provide a
mathematical “natural” toolset for applying these
capabilities in healing and regeneration.
Authors Ella Pomfrey and Finn Longbotton are members of the
new breed of physician that are comfortable with symplectic
structure and with bone structure, with individual molecules and
with individual patients, with genetic and epigenetic variation,
with complexity theory and with the
evolving cognition of healing brains. They have mastered, both
abstractly and in practice, the geometrically, algebraically,
combinatorically, and informatically natural tools that previous
generation of mathematicians brought to bear in the microscopic
theory of healing and regeneration. Now in this volume, Pomfrey
and Longbottom seek to bring this same natural toolset to bear on
macroscopic healing processes. The emphasis throughout is upon
practical clinical verification and validation procedures that
ensure that bone, nerves, and minds all cleave to a path that
leads to a satisfactory healing.
This reviewer entertains some doubt as to whether our
understanding of healing and regeneration, in particular
their epigenetic aspects, can ever match the naturality of our
microscopic understanding … but no-one is better
qualified than the authors, who have a distinguished record
in the regenerative treatment of battle trauma, to meet the
21st century's grand challenge of healing, by evolving a
mathematically natural understanding of it.
• reviewed by Mungo Bonham