"Von Neumann was a true genius, the only one I’ve ever known. I’ve met Einstein and Oppenheimer and Teller and—who’s the mad genius from MIT? I don’t mean McCulloch, but a mathematician. Any-way, a whole bunch of those other guys. Von Neumann was the only genius I ever met. The others were supersmart .... And great prima donnas. But von Neumann’s mind was all-encompassing. He could solve problems in any domain. . . . And his mind was always working, always restless. He walked into my living room one night and a half dozen people were already having cocktails, and he disappeared into a corner and stood with his back to us, hands behind him, and after about two minutes turned to me and said, “About two thirds of a liter a week, Leon.” And I had to think about it for three or four minutes, and finally I said, “Yeah, Johnny, that’s just about right.” He’d walked up to the nine-gallon tropical fish aquarium that stood on a table in the corner, had noted the temperature of the water, had made an estimate of the surface area, had seen the gap that existed between the overhead light and the glass to keep the fish from jumping out, made an estimate of the particular escape velocity of the water molecules, integrated and found out how much added water was needed each week for that aquarium. And he was right within a few percent. That’s the kind of thing he did all the time. Another thing that he isn’t known well for was his sense of humor. He really enjoyed dirty limericks. And though we never said anything to each other deliberately, it sort of evolved that whenever we came together, whether it was an hour or a month later, the name of the game was to see who could rush up the fastest and unload the largest number of new limericks. It turned out to be a delightful game. He had oodles of them; I was hard put to keep up with him. His memory was just beyond conception, a photograph for everything he ever learned or saw. Lightning calculator and head screwed on to boot—he put all of those together with a huge creative talent."
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PolymathsAcademics from the United StatesMathematicians from the United StatesAcademics from HungaryMathematicians from Hungary
Original Language: English
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Sources
Leon Harmon, as quoted in Machines Who Think: A Personal Inquiry into the History and Prospects of Artificial Intelligence (2004) by Pamela McCorduck, pp. 81–82
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_von_Neumann
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John von Neumann
John von Neumann (28 December 1903 – 8 February 1957) was a Hungarian-American-Jewish mathematician, physicist, inventor, computer scientist, and polymath. He made major contributions to a number of fields, including mathematics (foundations of mathematics, functional analysis, ergodic theory, geometry, set theory, topology, and numerical analysis), physics (quantum mechanics, hydrodynamics and quantum statistical mechanics), economics (game theory), computing (Von Neumann architecture, linear p
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