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my writing / support me: https://michtopi.substack.com/subscribe socials: https://linktr.ee/octopichael John von Neumann is one of the smartest people who ever lived. History is livid with anecdotes about his intelligence, often told by the most eminent physicists and mathematicians of the 20th century. Einstein once called him a 'true thinking animal.' Eugene Wigner mused that von Neumann was quicker and more acute than Einstein, Dirac, Teller, and numerous others. But where did the patterns of his brilliance begin? We might be able to find some useful insights from his childhood. The document I am referencing throughout can be found at: https://gwern.net/doc/math/1987-vonne... Chapters: 0:00 The smartest man who ever lived (introduction) 0:38 Rich intellectual milieu 2:54 Stoking of interests 4:44 Tutelage & excellence amplification 6:20 Elegance, the impossible, and Goethe 7:25 John von Neumann's message to future scientists (conclusion) Music used: Vivaldi - Four seasons (Winter) J.S. Bach, Goldberg variations - Arias Tchaikovsky - Serenade, second movement Beethoven - Egmont Overture Edward Elgar - Chanson de Matin Aleph One - Glacial Nobonoko - Strawberry Cake Boy 200 - Zero Mr Big B - Spike's Interlude Jeremy Blake - Missing Persons National anthem of the German empire