Math and Cherry Blossoms

Before I knew it, time had passed, and it is now cherry blossom season in Japan. However, it was cold today.

Today, I was watching Lex Fridman’s podcast on YouTube.

Since I am interested in mathematics, I watched an interview with Joel David Hamkins that was posted two months ago.

I only watched a few minutes, and it was difficult for me to understand everything. But I found the part I watched very interesting.

Joel said that every number is interesting, and that he can prove it.

His idea is that if there were any boring numbers, there would only be a few of them. And that, in itself, would make those numbers interesting.

Then I thought I could apply the same idea to people. I think every person is interesting. So even if there are “boring” people, they must be rare—and that makes them interesting too.

I also thought about this: if there is a God, perhaps he or she would think the same way. There may not be a single uninteresting person.

I’m not sure if I understood Joel correctly. But when I look at cherry blossoms, no two flowers are exactly the same.

Math, numbers, humans, nature, God—I was thinking about all of these things today.

English edited by ChatGPT

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