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I just read about Grigori Perelman and honestly, this guy is from another planet. He was born in Leningrad in 1966 and basically solved one of the seven Millennium Prize Problems that no one had been able to solve in nearly 100 years. We're talking about the Poincaré Conjecture, which sounds complicated but is quite interesting if you understand it well.
Here's the thing: imagine a closed three-dimensional space without holes. The conjecture states that this is topologically equivalent to a sphere. Easier: if it has no holes, it's a SPHERE; if it has a hole, it's a BALL or RING. In abstract mathematics, what matters is not how it looks on the outside, but the topological shape itself. Perelman proved this using Ricci flow methods and geometric topology.
But the craziest part isn't the proof itself. The crazy part is how Grigori Perelman chose to present it. No noisy conferences, no press releases, none of that. Between 2002 and 2003, he simply published his work on arXiv, an open server for mathematicians. Directly accessible to everyone. The global scientific community took years to verify the proof because it was incredibly complex, but eventually they confirmed it was correct.
In 2006, he was awarded the Fields Medal. In 2010, he was offered the Clay Mathematics Institute Prize. And do you know what Grigori Perelman did? He rejected both. All of them. He said something like, "What do I need awards and money for if I know how to handle the world?"
Since then, he has practically disappeared from academic life. He finished his career around 2005-2006 and distanced himself from the scientific community. Today, he lives a very private life in Saint Petersburg with his mother, in a modest apartment. He's been seen in supermarkets choosing cheap products and paying in cash. He doesn't give interviews, avoids journalists, and publishes nothing new. His rejection of awards was also a critique of how the mathematical community is structured.
Perelman represents something rare in the academic world: someone who truly doesn't care about fame or money. He solved one of the most important problems in modern mathematics and simply left. Most scientists would do exactly the opposite.