PERSON
Srinivasa Ramanujan
The self-taught Indian mathematical genius (1887–1920) who filled notebooks with thousands of true results he could not always prove—and whose life marks, with uncanny precision, the exact border where finding a pattern ends and understanding a truth begins.
Srinivasa Ramanujan is the wrong hero for the age of artificial intelligence, and that is exactly why we need him. Working largely alone in colonial Madras with minimal formal training and a single secondhand Victorian textbook, he produced an astonishing flood of mathematical results—strange identities, infinite series, partition formulas, continued fractions of bewildering depth—that the world is still proving a century later. He did almost none of what
our machines are trained to do: he did not derive step by step; he saw answers, and the answers arrived, he said, as thoughts of
God. We have built machines that are, in a precise sense, his inverse: trained on more mathematics than he could have read in a hundred lifetimes, capable of producing the
form of mathematical reasoning fluently, yet sometimes confident and wrong where Ramanujan was intuitive and right. The comparison is not a competition. It is a measuring instrument, telling us what
pattern-finding at scale can