Promenade Through a Life's Work
4.The Novel of Manners
In speaking of my mathematical past, and in the course of doing
so uncovering (as if it were a matter of rescuing my own body) the mysterious
turns taken by the colossal Burial of my life's work I have been led, without
having intended it, to draw up a portrait of a certain milieu in a certain time
in history - a time marked by the disintegration of certain timeless values
which give meaning to all human endeavor. This is the aspect of the 'novel of
manners', developing around a historical event which in no doubt unique in the "
Annals of "ScienceÓ. What has already been stated must make it clear that one
shouldn't expect to find in Récoltes et Semailles, the "police report" or
"dossier" of some celebrated "affair", written solely for the purpose of
bringing one up to date. Any friend looking for such a report will go through it
with his eyes closed, having seen nothing of any of the flesh and blood
substance of Récoltes et Semailles.
As I explain, in much greater detail, in The Letter, the "police
investigation" ( or the "novel of manners") is to be found principally in Parts
II and IV: "The Burial (1)-or the Robe of the Emperor of ChinaÓ, and: "The
Burial (3) -or the Four Operations". In the course of writing these pages I have
stubbornly brought to light a multitude of "juicy" findings, ( to say the
least), which I've attempted, for better or for worse, to "spruce up". Bit by
bit I've found a coherent picture slowly emerging from the mists, one whose
colors grow in intensity, one whose contours are becoming progressively sharper.
In the notes that I've made on a daily basis, the "raw facts" which surface are
inextricably mixed with personal reminiscences, comments and reflections on
psychology, philosophy and even mathematics. That's the way it is and I can't do
anything about it!
On the basis of the work already done, which has absorbed me for over a year,
anyone wishing to extract a "dossier", in the mode of an investigative
"wrap-up", will have to spend many additional hours, if not days, depending on
the interest or curiosity of the reader, in working it out. At one point I
myself tried to extract such a dossier. This when I began the long footnote now
known as "The Four Operations"(*)
(*) What was intended as a footnote exploded into all of Part IV (with the same
title of "The Four Operations"), comprising 70 notes stretching over 400 pages.
Ultimately it wasn't possible. I failed totally! It's not my style, certainly
not in my elderly years. In my present estimation, I've done enough, with the
production of Récoltes et Semailles, for the benefit of the mathematics
community to be able, without regrets, to leave for others (who may perhaps be
found among my colleagues) the work of putting together the dossier it contains.
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