tea.mathoverflow.net - Discussion Feed (Shortest Ph.D. thesis?) 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/ Lussumo Vanilla & Feed Publisher Asaf Karagila comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (22783) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=22783#Comment_22783 2014-08-25T21:06:59-07:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Asaf Karagila http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/600/ Joel, using a small font doesn't count. The entire bible was inscribed onto pinhead. Surely a 100 pages long thesis could be inscribed on a fraction of that pinhead using similar font settings.
using a small font doesn't count. The entire bible was inscribed onto pinhead.
Surely a 100 pages long thesis could be inscribed on a fraction of that pinhead using similar font settings.]]>
Joel Reyes Noche comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (22782) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=22782#Comment_22782 2014-08-22T21:47:16-07:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Joel Reyes Noche http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/601/ Use a smaller font, then, and put the math in the text, not separately. Asaf Karagila comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (22781) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=22781#Comment_22781 2014-08-22T12:34:35-07:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Asaf Karagila http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/600/ Gerry, the displayed formula turns this into three lines. I'd rewrite it so the part after the displayed formula appears before it, and that would reduce the thesis into two lines. But we already had ... Gerry Myerson comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (22780) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=22780#Comment_22780 2014-08-21T22:25:12-07:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Gerry Myerson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/370/ In one of the earlier posts in this discussion, I noted Littlewood's demonstration that a mathematics dissertation could be two lines long. In the August-September 2014 Monthly, page 618, Don Zagier ... Andrew Stacey comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13187) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13187#Comment_13187 2011-02-09T05:13:20-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Andrew Stacey http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/4/ ... as has my vote to close. (I tend to check meta before MO and as there wasn't a comment here saying that the question had been posted then I assumed that it hadn't yet appeared on MO and so left ... ... as has my vote to close.

(I tend to check meta before MO and as there wasn't a comment here saying that the question had been posted then I assumed that it hadn't yet appeared on MO and so left my comment. I do think that if a question that has been discussed in advance on meta is posted then a link should be given here. As no one else did so, here it is.)

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WillieWong comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13181) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13181#Comment_13181 2011-02-09T04:04:58-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 WillieWong http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/288/ @Andrew Stacey: the question has already appeared on MO. @Andrew Stacey: the question has already appeared on MO.

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Andrew Stacey comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13174) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13174#Comment_13174 2011-02-09T01:51:55-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Andrew Stacey http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/4/ To bring the conversation back to the original purpose: I don't think that this is a suitable MO question. The Milnor legend is not a suitable case to base an argument on, and even if that was ... To bring the conversation back to the original purpose: I don't think that this is a suitable MO question. The Milnor legend is not a suitable case to base an argument on, and even if that was considered passable (I didn't see it until the matter had actually been resolved so please don't read anything into my not voting to close) then it was barely so. This question is considerably looser, considerably more pointless, and considerably harder to verify an answer to.

If this question appears on MO, I will vote to close.

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Kevin Ventullo comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13172) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13172#Comment_13172 2011-02-08T23:09:02-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Kevin Ventullo http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/270/ @David: Regarding your question about the longest thesis, wasn't Jacob Lurie's somewhere in the neighborhood of 1000? @David: Regarding your question about the longest thesis, wasn't Jacob Lurie's somewhere in the neighborhood of 1000?

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Kevin Walker comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13164) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13164#Comment_13164 2011-02-08T12:12:15-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Kevin Walker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/36/ I had no idea that a ~30 page thesis is considered short enough to be noteworthy. I was under the (perhaps mistaken) impression that a decent research paper makes a decent thesis, and many good ...
For what it's worth, my thesis was 29 pages (according to http://disexpress.umi.com/dxweb ; I don't have a copy of it). The published version was either 13 pages or 131 pages, depending on how you count it. The official thesis corresponds to Chapter 5 (13 pages) of the monograph (131 pages) that was eventually published. Since that chapter was largely independent of the rest of the work, I thought it would be less hassle to just turn that section in as my thesis.]]>
thierryzell comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13163) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13163#Comment_13163 2011-02-08T12:02:57-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 thierryzell http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/457/ *Sigh*... How did this META discussion end up being a discussion of the question itself?Anyway, my rationale for saying that this question is appropriate for MO is that it's part of mathematical ...
Anyway, my rationale for saying that this question is appropriate for MO is that it's part of mathematical culture.
Mathematics dissertations tend to run short even on average, and I have trouble coming up with other disciplines in which
such low outliers might even happen. If you've ever had to deal with academics in other fields, you may end up having
to explain why this is so; not an easy task.

Having a specific reference to a record of conciseness can help there, and, as Timothy Chow rightly points out,
we've all heard stories, but verifiable claims are hard to come by.]]>
Noah Snyder comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13159) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13159#Comment_13159 2011-02-08T09:36:11-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Noah Snyder http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/59/ John Nash comes in at 27 landsburg comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13155) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13155#Comment_13155 2011-02-08T08:04:56-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 landsburg http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/503/ I have heard that the substantive portion of Pete Tomas's thesis at Princeton (circa 1979 or so) was shorter than a (spectacularly good) page, but I'm not sure how "substantive ... Ryan Budney comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13154) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13154#Comment_13154 2011-02-08T07:53:06-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ IMO the thread should probably have the soft-question tag, as it's not an actual mathematics question. Tyler Lawson comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13153) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13153#Comment_13153 2011-02-08T05:32:57-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Tyler Lawson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/146/ I'd always heard that David Rector's thesis (at MIT) was remarkably short, but I can't seem to access it from the web. The publication based on it (Rector, David L. An unstable Adams spectral ... I'd always heard that David Rector's thesis (at MIT) was remarkably short, but I can't seem to access it from the web. The publication based on it (Rector, David L. An unstable Adams spectral sequence. Topology 5 1966 343–346) could only be called 4 pages if one was generous.

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Philip Brooker comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13151) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13151#Comment_13151 2011-02-08T04:51:15-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Philip Brooker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/373/ @Voloch: I think that you are right about the document that I linked not being the thesis after all. Besides the fact that it actually says that it is a report (which I obviously didn't look at ... @Voloch: I think that you are right about the document that I linked not being the thesis after all. Besides the fact that it actually says that it is a report (which I obviously didn't look at closely enough the first time!), it is lacking other things that one might expect to find in a dissertation (acknowledgements, declaration of originality, etc).

I apologize for any confusion brought about by my earlier claim that it was Martens' thesis.

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dan petersen comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13144) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13144#Comment_13144 2011-02-08T01:04:48-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 dan petersen http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/157/ I would like to know the answer to this question. voloch comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13143) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13143#Comment_13143 2011-02-08T00:17:47-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 voloch http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/211/ @Philip: Thanks for the link. I downloaded the document you found and I am puzzled. It's possible that this is not the thesis but a longer document. It's an Air Force grant research report. I am not ... Philip Brooker comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13142) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13142#Comment_13142 2011-02-07T22:04:01-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Philip Brooker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/373/ @Voloch: When I look at Martens' thesis (it is freely available online), it seems longer than 12 pages to me... 32 leaves seems to be about right to me based on the scanned pdf I downloaded (this ... @Voloch: When I look at Martens' thesis (it is freely available online), it seems longer than 12 pages to me... 32 leaves seems to be about right to me based on the scanned pdf I downloaded (this includes introduction, appendix, bibliography, etc). I downloaded it from http://www.archive.org/details/newproofoftorell00mart

Regarding the OP's query, I find this question to be very interesting. Having said that, I generally prefer fewer such questions (i.e., nontechnical) on MO. So I will sit on the fence.

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David Hansen comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13141) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13141#Comment_13141 2011-02-07T21:15:16-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 David Hansen http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/184/ @Voloch: I did indeed mean Richard Taylor. Ahh, I believe I mistook your meaning: were you suggesting the existence of theses free of any publishable results? voloch comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13140) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13140#Comment_13140 2011-02-07T20:42:31-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 voloch http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/211/ @David. Taylor is a very common surname. I could perhaps find an example with that surname. If you meant Richard Taylor, I don't think that's the kind of example I had in mind. Pete L. Clark comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13139) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13139#Comment_13139 2011-02-07T20:35:32-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Pete L. Clark http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/64/ I think the question is fine. It is soft, but it is closely linked to the culture of mathematics, and I think it will be of interest to many. (It is certainly at least as good as a previous ... I think the question is fine. It is soft, but it is closely linked to the culture of mathematics, and I think it will be of interest to many.

(It is certainly at least as good as a previous question of mine, "Which pair of mathematicians has the most joint papers?")

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David Hansen comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13138) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13138#Comment_13138 2011-02-07T19:58:30-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 David Hansen http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/184/ @Voloch: Taylor never published his thesis. voloch comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13137) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13137#Comment_13137 2011-02-07T18:25:37-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 voloch http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/211/ I guess Elkies was a bit more verbose when he wrote his thesis:SUPERSINGULAR PRIMES OF A GIVEN ELLIPTIC CURVE OVER A NUMBER FIELDby ELKIES, NOAM DAVID Ph.D., Harvard University, 1987, 41 pages; AAT ...
SUPERSINGULAR PRIMES OF A GIVEN ELLIPTIC CURVE OVER A NUMBER FIELD
by ELKIES, NOAM DAVID Ph.D., Harvard University, 1987, 41 pages; AAT 8800772

Info from: http://disexpress.umi.com/dxweb

The question of what is the shortest PhD thesis is different from the question of what is the shortest paper originating from a PhD thesis. I think I could (but won't) find examples where the latter is the empty set.]]>
Noah Snyder comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13136) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13136#Comment_13136 2011-02-07T18:00:14-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Noah Snyder http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/59/ I can't seem to find the actual thesis version, but MR0903384 (Elkies, Noam D. "The existence of infinitely many supersingular primes for every elliptic curve over Q." Invent. Math. ... voloch comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13135) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13135#Comment_13135 2011-02-07T17:49:19-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 voloch http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/211/ Here is a strong contender (info from MathSciNet, but I had heard of it before):MR2615548Martens, Henrik Herman BuvikA NEW PROOF OF TORELLI'S THEOREM.Thesis (Ph.D.)–New York University. 1962. 12 ...
MR2615548
Martens, Henrik Herman Buvik
A NEW PROOF OF TORELLI'S THEOREM.
Thesis (Ph.D.)–New York University. 1962. 12 pp.

The problem with the question is that we can always give examples but, unless someone presents us with an empty thesis, we can't guarantee it is an absolute minimum. Maybe someone with strong mathscinet-webscraping-fu (how about that for a neologism!) can find the minimum among the theses listed there.]]>
Ryan Budney comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13134) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13134#Comment_13134 2011-02-07T17:28:38-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ I'm also not convinced that the possibility of an interesting answer is enough to make a question suitable for MO. For example, if the answer is a 1-line dissertation from the University of New ...
For example, if the answer is a 1-line dissertation from the University of New Sarepta, Alberta, what would we have gained from that?]]>
Noah Snyder comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13133) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13133#Comment_13133 2011-02-07T17:24:35-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Noah Snyder http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/59/ I like it more than most soft questions. I like that it has the potential of a definite answer. Ryan Budney comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13132) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13132#Comment_13132 2011-02-07T16:36:02-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ I'm not terribly opinionated on this. But I am skeptical of the topic and figured I'd express a clear opinion rather that give you a lot of the dithering, internal dialogue in my brain... Timothy Chow comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13130) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13130#Comment_13130 2011-02-07T16:07:21-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Timothy Chow http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/244/ @Ryan: Questions like that are unlikely to appear on MO because they are readily answerable via the Mathematics Genealogy Project or MathSciNet. The short Ph.D. thesis question is not so easy to ... @Ryan: Questions like that are unlikely to appear on MO because they are readily answerable via the Mathematics Genealogy Project or MathSciNet. The short Ph.D. thesis question is not so easy to answer reliably.

I'm also not sure that I agree with you that a short dissertation is not interesting. It's true that it isn't necessarily interesting. However, provided that the dissertation was produced in good faith (as opposed to being a publicity stunt or a mere formality or something), it is about as interesting as a "short proof" is. And don't most of us feel that short proofs are interesting? For example, the short papers listed here (search for "Nelson" to get to the list) are all pretty interesting in my mind. (By the way, note that the "shortest paper" question doesn't have the same urban-legend tendencies because it's much easier to verify the facts.)

But let me state explicitly my main reason for wanting to ask this question on MO: I'm kind of sick of hearing this question asked yet again and having no rebuttal to urban-legendy responses of the form, "So-and-so's dissertation was only epsilon pages long!" where epsilon is a positive real much less than 1. It would be nice to put this question to rest.

Having said all that, I'll refrain from posing the question if a couple other people say they don't like it.

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Gerry Myerson comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13129) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13129#Comment_13129 2011-02-07T15:38:43-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Gerry Myerson http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/370/ On the question of how short a math dissertation could, theoretically, be, we have Littlewood, pages 39-40 of the Miscellany: The question recently arose in conversation whether a dissertation of 2 ...
The question recently arose in conversation whether a dissertation of 2 lines could deserve and get a Fellowship. I had answered this for myself long before; in mathematics the answer is yes.

Cayley's projective definition of length is a clear case if we may interpret "2 lines" with reasonable latitude. With Picard's Theorem it could be literally 2, one of statement, one of proof.

(Theorem.) An integral function never 0 or 1 is constant.

(Proof.) exp{i Omega(f(z))} is a bounded integral function.

(tau = Omega(w) inverse to w = k^2(tau)).

The last bracket is needed solely because of the trivial accident that the function Omega, unlike its inverse k^2(tau), happens to have no unmistakable name.

Littlewood goes on to explain the k^2(tau) is the modular function etc., etc.]]>
Ryan Budney comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13128) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13128#Comment_13128 2011-02-07T15:15:47-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ My preference is for this question not to appear on MO. Advertising a short dissertation could appear like a bit of a publicity stunt. Moreover, this appears like a slippery slope: eventually we'll ...
Moreover, although a short dissertation is kind of a novelty, it's not really all that interesting. The Fary-Milnor theorem is an interesting bit of mathematics and its history is significant. A short dissertation is not.]]>
David Hansen comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13127) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13127#Comment_13127 2011-02-07T14:55:41-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 David Hansen http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/184/ Whoops, Eva Kallin's thesis is 14 pages. Maybe this was one of your dubious leads... David Hansen comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13126) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13126#Comment_13126 2011-02-07T14:39:43-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 David Hansen http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/184/ One recent Harvard Ph.D. thesis is 36 pages long. By the way, are there any serious contenders for longest thesis besides Kai-wen Lan's (which clocks in at a face-melting 1027 pages)?
By the way, are there any serious contenders for longest thesis besides Kai-wen Lan's (which clocks in at a face-melting 1027 pages)?]]>
Timothy Chow comments on "Shortest Ph.D. thesis?" (13125) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/946/shortest-phd-thesis/?Focus=13125#Comment_13125 2011-02-07T13:16:04-08:00 2018-11-04T12:56:52-08:00 Timothy Chow http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/244/ Recently I was asked what the shortest mathematics Ph.D. thesis on record is. This is not the first time I have encountered this question—it seems to be perennially fascinating to research ... Recently I was asked what the shortest mathematics Ph.D. thesis on record is. This is not the first time I have encountered this question—it seems to be perennially fascinating to research mathematicians—but as you can imagine, finding the answer to such an urban-legendy question is not easy. Googling around produces a lot of dubious leads that are sometimes difficult to confirm or disconfirm, since Ph.D. theses are often not published.

MO seems like a good place to answer such a question definitively. It is similar in genre to a question recently asked by Greg Kuperberg that tries to straighten out the facts about a particular widely circulated urban legend.

However, after seeing several discussions here on meta about non-technical questions, I get the impression that a sizable number of regular participants don't want questions like this on MO. Should I pose it or not?

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