"I think in some sense much has to do with luck. If you are lucky many times, then you are a genius, of course. You may be lucky just a few times or some people might not have any great luck at all. I don't know really what is the reason for this. I think what lies behind having luck is first of all if you have a background that is a bit different from what everybody else has so that you are not encumbered with precisely the same knowledge and are not thinking exactly the same way. It also helps if you can benefit by accidents, facts that you come across quite accidentally and start thinking about and see there is something more. I would say that most of the better things I have done all came about not because I set out from the beginning to do them. Something shifted the focus of my attention completely and I ended up doing something rather different. One has to be able to see opportunities and learn to utilize them. Real, original work, I think, comes about in this way."
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as quoted by Wendy Plump,
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Atle_Selberg
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Atle Selberg
(June 14, 1917 – August 6, 2007) was a Norwegian mathematician, known for his research in and s. He was awarded the in 1950. In 1951 he was appointed to a professorship in the School of Mathematics of the .
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