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What is your favorite example of a celebrated mathematical fact that had a hard time to become accepted by the community, but after overcoming some initial "resistance" quickly took on?

It can be a theorem, a proof method, an algorithm or a definition, that is

  • widely known and
  • very useful in the present day,
  • less than 99 years old; this is in order to avoid examples from the very distant past, such the difficulties Grassmann's work had being accepted

but which at the time of its inception was not appreciated, misunderstood or ignored by the mathematical community, before it became mainstream or inspired other research which in turn became mainstream. This is a partial converse question to this one that asks for mathematical facts that were quickly accepted but then discarded by the community. This and this question are somewhat related, but former focuses on people (resp. their entire works, see Grassmann) not being accepted, rather then individual results, whereas the latter solely on famous articles rejected by journal; also, the results that are being mentioned in these links are often rather old and do not fit this question.


Example. Numerical optimization: The first quasi-Newton algorithm was discovered in 1959 and "was not accepted for publication; it remained as a technical report for more than thirty years until it appeared in the first issue of the SIAM Journal on Optimization in 1991" (Nocedal & Wright, Numerical Optimization).
But the algorithm inspired a slew of other variants, has been cited over 2000 times to this day and quasi-Newton type algorithms are still state-of-the-art in for certain optimization problems.

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    $\begingroup$ Do you want to count results that were ignored, not for any real fault of the mathematical community, but because they were published in an unusual way, like the Selberg integral? $\endgroup$
    – Will Sawin
    Feb 5, 2022 at 20:26
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    $\begingroup$ @WillSawin Being published in an unusual form makes it easy for the mathematical community to misunderstand or ignore the result (even if the mathematical community is not at fault here), so yes, I would like to count those results $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 5, 2022 at 20:49
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    $\begingroup$ The work of Heegner is mentioned elsewhere on similar MO questions, but I believe it fits here too. $\endgroup$ Feb 5, 2022 at 21:49
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    $\begingroup$ Another possibility of an "ignored" result is "eigenvectors from eigenvalues": arxiv.org/abs/1908.03795. $\endgroup$ Feb 5, 2022 at 22:21
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    $\begingroup$ Proof of Gaussian correlation inequality. $\endgroup$ Feb 6, 2022 at 1:48

14 Answers 14

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The Selberg integral was proved in a 1944 paper of Selberg, after being stated without proof in a 1941 paper. The paper was in Norwegian, and was also in a journal that would have been of little interest to the research community:

This paper was published with some hesitation, and in Norwegian, since I was rather doubtful that the results were new. The journal is one which is read by mathematics-teachers in the gymnasium

This result was little-used, being used in one paper in 1953.

A closely related integral then appeared in random matrix theory. Mehta and Dyson gave a conjectural value for this integral, publicizing this conjecture as an open problem in a paper in 1963, a textbook in 1967, and the SIAM Review in 1974. However, no one remembered Selberg's work and thought to apply it.

Finally in 1976 Bombieri came across another similar integral when studying a different topic (prime numbers). He went to discuss his overall work on the distribution of prime numbers with Selberg, because of Selberg's expertise in number theory, and Selberg then mentioned his integral, which Bombieri used to solve his problem.

This was after Bombieri was informed by Spencer about the relationship of his integral to a third topic (the Coulomb gas), motivating him to ask Dyson about it, at which point Dyson explained the connection to random matrices, and thus Bombieri was able to prove the conjecture in random matrix theory as well.

Since then, the result has found further use and development, and is now widely-known.

My source for all these details is the paper The importance of the Selberg integral by Peter J. Forrester and S. Ole Warnaar

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    $\begingroup$ I guess this story goes to show (among other things) how hard it can be in an age without math sci net or other scientific search engines to actually find what the state of the art is. $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 5, 2022 at 21:50
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    $\begingroup$ @alhal How much would math sci net help with this? What would you search for? $\endgroup$
    – Will Sawin
    Feb 5, 2022 at 22:12
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    $\begingroup$ If your choice is between going to the library skimming books and papers vs. sitting at your desk and typing in keywords in search form and they again using keywords to search through a pdf - well, in the latter case you are orders of magnitudes faster (and therefore more likely) to discover what other might have published that is similar to your own stuff. Heck, even mathoverflow does a decent job highlight similar questions ... $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 6, 2022 at 10:26
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    $\begingroup$ @alhal That is not what the choice is. People did not just randomly skim books and papers before the internet came along... You would go and say your keywords to a librarian, and a skilled librarian is worth their weight in gold. $\endgroup$ Feb 6, 2022 at 14:04
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    $\begingroup$ @Carl-FredrikNybergBrodda You make unreasonable assumptions: 1) First and foremost: Few people have access to such librarians (Selberg certainly hadn't) 2) With the flood of information any single person will have a hard time to stay on top of cutting edge in more than a few subfields 3) A librarian (also) isn't a mathematical semantic search engine that can easily parse highly specialized literature for you, you still have to do that $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 8, 2022 at 12:08
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The classification theorem for three-dimensional convex polyhedra known as Steinitz's theorem first appeared in a 1922 publication of Ernst Steinitz. Because it did not use the language of graphs it remained obscure until it was given a graph-theoretic formulation in the 1960's.

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    $\begingroup$ That's 100 years ago, so according to the OP it doesn't count... (upvoted, btw). $\endgroup$ Feb 5, 2022 at 21:30
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    $\begingroup$ Even if it violates my own requirement, I do like it (+1 from me too). It is something different and refreshin than the typical story about Cantor, Grassmann, Galois etc. we usually read about :) $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 5, 2022 at 21:47
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    $\begingroup$ @AlessandroDellaCorte I guess we're at the cusp where it matters what month in 1922 it was published (assuming you age results from publication dates). $\endgroup$
    – Kimball
    Feb 6, 2022 at 14:00
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    $\begingroup$ Many people at varying stages of aging grimace at the thought of 1922 being a full 100 years ago now :) $\endgroup$ Feb 6, 2022 at 17:37
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Does acceptance of conjectures before they became theorems count?

Example 1. The Artin reciprocity law. When Artin went around to other people describing what he was trying to show, nobody else believed it and they laughed at him for thinking it might be true. See here. This period of non-belief was only 3 years (the time it took Artin from formulation to proof).

Example 2. Modularity of elliptic curves over $\mathbf Q$. The original version by Taniyama in 1955 was expressed too broadly, but after that was fixed up it still took a bit of time for the idea to be generally accepted as plausible. For over 10 years, Shimura believed the conjecture but Weil, Serre, and others did not. See Lang's account of the history of the conjecture here.

Weil's identification of the conductor of an elliptic curve over $\mathbf Q$ with the level of the hypothetical associated modular form, in 1967, finally made the conjecture falsifiable and would explain some numerical observations if it were true, e.g., the smallest conductor of an elliptic curve over $\mathbf Q$ is $11$ and the modularity conjecture would explain this because the modular curve $X_0(N)$ has genus $0$ for all $N < 11$, so no elliptic curve over $\mathbf Q$ could be the image of a morphism from $X_0(N)$ for $N < 11$.

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The umbral calculus. Even after Gian-Carlo Rota revived it, its significance was misunderstood by many. No less a mathematician than Ira Gessel admitted this publicly, in his paper, Applications of the classical umbral calculus (arXiv version).

When I first encountered umbral notation it seemed to me that this was all there was to it; it was simply a notation for dealing with exponential generating functions, or to put it bluntly, it was a method for avoiding the use of exponential generating functions when they really ought to be used. The point of this paper is that my first impression was wrong: none of the results proved here (with the exception of Theorem 7.1, and perhaps a few other results in section 7) can be easily proved by straightforward manipulation of exponential generating functions. The sequences that we consider here are defined by exponential generating functions, and their most fundamental properties can be proved in a straightforward way using these exponential generating functions. What is surprising is that these sequences satisfy additional relations whose proofs require other methods. The classical umbral calculus is a powerful but specialized tool that can be used to prove these more esoteric formulas.

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This one technically doesn't fit your stated criteria, but I think it's a good example in the same spirit. Dan Shechtman's work on quasicrystals was initially strongly resisted, most famously by Linus Pauling, who snidely remarked, "There is no such thing as quasicrystals, only quasi-scientists." Earlier, similar discoveries by other scientists were similarly ignored or dismissed fairly quickly.

In this case, it seems that the mathematical work on aperiodic tilings, though well known and accepted in the mathematical community, was poorly understood or ignored or rejected as irrelevant by most scientists studying crystallography.

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  • $\begingroup$ I do like this, even if it falls, as you said, slightly outside of the criteria. :) $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 7, 2022 at 8:15
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J. Howard Redfield anticipated many of the results in "Pólya enumeration" in his 1927 paper in the American Journal of Mathematics (https://doi.org/10.2307/2370675). But this work was largely forgotten until much later (the 1960s): see "The rediscovery of Redfield's papers" by Harary and Robinson (https://doi.org/10.1002/jgt.3190080202).

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My favorite example is Lu Jiaxi's work on large sets of disjoint Steiner triple systems and the generalization of Kirkman's schoolgirl problem. Although they might not fit well in the "widely known" criteria. But the story is fascinating anyway.

His paper on solving the generalized Kirkman's schoolgirl problem was ultimately rejected five years after he wrote them in 1961 and tried to publish them. In April 1979, in some journal issues of 1974 and 1975 that he managed to borrow from Beijing, he unexpectedly learned from a paper of Haim Hanani that the problem which he solved in his 1965 paper had been solved and first published in 1971 by Ray-Chaudhuri and R. M. Wilson, which was a big blow to him.

He went on to tackle the problem of large sets of disjoint Steiner triple systems. Zhu Lie, a professor of mathematics at Soochow University, realized the importance of his work and suggested that he submit it to the Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A. He wrote to its editorial board that he had essentially solved the problem, and the editors replied to him that if what he said was true, it would be a major achievement.

The Wikipedia article is a bit long and unpolished, with too many unnecessary details. But the overall read was remarkable.

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Grothendieck's inequality, now a fundamental result in functional analysis, with connections to computer science and quantum physics, had a difficult birth.

It was proved by Grothendieck in the paper Résumé de la théorie métrique des produits tensoriels topologiques, published in French in 1953 in an obscure Brazilian journal, only in very few copies, making it almost impossible to find.

The paper was almost completely ignored by the community, until it was rediscovered in 1968 by Lindenstrauss and Pelczynski who realized that in particular it contained answers to questions raised after its publication.

The story is explained in the first pages of the survey article by Gilles Pisier, Grothendieck's Theorem, past and present

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  • $\begingroup$ This is awesome!! +1 $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 9, 2022 at 8:50
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Although more than 100 years old, this is my absolute favourite: Schlaefli's classification of regular polytopes in all dimensions using the Schlafli symbol, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schl%C3%A4fli_symbol. It was probably not understood at his time, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_Schl%C3%A4fli.

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Heegner's published (1952) solution of Gauss class one problem (stating that there are only 9 imaginary quadratic number fields with class number=1) was not accepted until 1967. Only after Birch, Stark, and Baker (independently) found alternative solutions in 1967, Stark investigated Heegner's work and concluded that it was essentially correct.

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Sharkovsky's theorem on the coexistence of periodic cycles for continuous interval maps is a quite obvious example, I think, as the history section of the Scholarpedia entry explains.

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  • $\begingroup$ I have read the Scholarpedia entry, but other than some fiddling about what to put in the abstract at some conference, not too much seem to point to the fact that there was resistance towards this results. Once it was published in English, about 10 years later it seems to already have been popularized (acc. to the History section from the link). $\endgroup$
    – alhal
    Feb 5, 2022 at 21:56
  • $\begingroup$ Yes, it took some 10 years or so for it to generate widespread interest. Looks like you want something more spectacular... $\endgroup$ Feb 5, 2022 at 22:01
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I would guess that any great mathematical discovery made by physicists is at first met with great skepticism by mathematicians until being set on rigorous grounds and then considered with the uttermost respect. From the top of my mind, the Dirac delta function, the Verlinde formula, any mathematical concept with the word quantum, mirror or Feynman in it etc.

The following quote may hint at the problems encountered by mathematicians when it comes to asserting a truth coming from theoretical physics.

An absence of proof is a challenge; an absence of definition is deadly.

                                                          Deligne

The question asks for examples less than 99 years old but I can't resist mentioning the memoir of Fourier which competed without success for the prize of Academie des sciences, or simply the numerous controversies about infinitesimals at the dawn of modern analysis.

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  • $\begingroup$ could you add sources to the claim that any of the things you mentioned were "first met with great skepticism by mathematicians"? $\endgroup$
    – Kostya_I
    Feb 7, 2022 at 8:15
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    $\begingroup$ In my experience, mathematicians are not skeptical of physical research, and don't doubt that these discoveries can be made rigorous. We live in awe of these discoveries. But we also recognize that useful ideas arise from finding rigorous mathematical models of physical discoveries: Hilbert spaces, Lie groups, topological spaces with a precise notion of continuity, Sobolev spaces in which the precise estimates needed to ensure physically realistic behaviour of pde solutions can sometimes be made explicit. It is because we love physics so much that we try to see it so clearly. $\endgroup$
    – Ben McKay
    Feb 7, 2022 at 8:58
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    $\begingroup$ @coudy, I found nothing about mathematicians criticizing Verlinde in the linked article, it only quotes other physicists doing so (and not Verlinde formula anyway). Googling "skepticism quantum" produced, for me, mostly links on quantum computing skepticism, which is not a debate about a mathematical concept and hardly a mainstream point of view anyway. $\endgroup$
    – Kostya_I
    Feb 7, 2022 at 12:44
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    $\begingroup$ @McKay I wish I can share your optimism. Searching for "skepticism quantum" on mathoverflow leads for example to mathoverflow.net/questions/302492/… which should give explicit examples of mathematicians skeptical about physical (and computer science) research. $\endgroup$
    – coudy
    Feb 7, 2022 at 14:27
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    $\begingroup$ @coudy I basically agree with what you say, but the question has the word "known" in the title, which to a mathematician means "rigorously proved." So I don't think this answers the question being asked. It answers a slightly different question, which is what conjectures were initially greeted with skepticism but which were later rigorously proved? $\endgroup$ Feb 10, 2022 at 13:06
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A controversial method was Appel & Haken's use of computers in their 1977 proof of the Four Color Theorem that had bested Kempe, Tait, and generations of graph theorists. There's been a move to formal proof and, with improved computational power, memory, and techniques, results like Heule's determination in 2018 that 161 is the fifth Schur number. The Computer-assisted proof Wikipedia page is pretty good, and there's a new StackExchange site on this topic on the way.

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  • $\begingroup$ I hadn't seen the related discussion between lhf, alhal, and Timothy Chow in the OP comments when I posted this. The interested reader may want to look at those. $\endgroup$ Feb 7, 2022 at 19:14
  • $\begingroup$ My summary of that conversation: alhal questioned whether the four-color theorem is "very useful in the present day." I responded that the proof gave rise to a quadratic-time algorithm that is guaranteed to find a four-coloring of a planar graph. The four-color theorem is also fundamental to current research on Hadwiger's conjecture. $\endgroup$ Feb 10, 2022 at 12:56
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Although strictly meanwhile more than 99 years old, a well-known example here are the Julia- and Fatou sets. -- These sets were first investigated by Gaston Julia and Pierre Fatou in 1917/18, but this work was more-or-less ignored until the invention of computers made it possible to explore the beauties of these sets, and -- following the works of Benoit Mandelbrot -- they became widely popularized in the 1980's.

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    $\begingroup$ Disagree. First, there was significant work building on Fatou-Julia theory between 1920 and 1980, by Joseph Fels Ritt, Kiyoshi Oka, Hubert Cremer, Carl Ludwig Siegel, Irvine Noel Baker and many others (see Alexander, D.S.; Iavernaro, F.; Rosa, A.: Early days in complex dynamics. A history of complex dynamics in one variable during 1906–1942. History of Mathematics, 38. AMS, Providence, RI; LMS, London, 2012.). Second, Fatou and Julia were not there first; see mathoverflow.net/questions/121565/… $\endgroup$ Feb 7, 2022 at 22:43
  • $\begingroup$ @MargaretFriedland Interesting ... ! -- I heard people mentioning this as such example. -- But I am not working on the topic. $\endgroup$
    – Stefan Kohl
    Feb 8, 2022 at 18:01

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