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INTERVIEW
The enigma of Ramanujan
R. RAMACHANDRAN
An interview with Professor Robert Kanigel, biographer of the Indian mathematician Srinivasa
Ramanujan.
PROFESSOR Robert Kanigel, the acclaimed author ofThe Man Who Knew Infinity: The Life of the
Genius Ramanujan, a biography of the enigmatic Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan, visited
India recently on an invitation from the Indian Academy of Sciences on the occasion of the 125th
anniversary of Ramanujan, which was celebrated in Chennai on December 26. Kanigel wrote the
biography, which the dust jacket of one of its editions says has all the drama, the richness and cultural
sweep of a fine historical novel, in 1991.
A mechanical engineer by training, he graduated from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New
York, in 1966. He later moved to Baltimore, where he held engineering jobs for three years. In 1970,
he began a career in journalism writing forBaltimore Magazine and the Sunday magazine ofThe
Baltimore Sun. On the strength of that experience, he decided to be a writer, and has been writing
books ever since. In the early 1970s, he wrote City Sunrise: Waking Up from the Suburban Dream
about cities and city living. In his own words, though the title was very good, the book was bad. It
was never published. He began writing for the magazine of Johns Hopkins University as well. Over the
years, he has written about 400 articles, essays and book reviews.
In 1986, he wrote Apprentice to Genius about the powerful role of mentor relationships among elite
scientists. Beginning in the 1980s, he taught writing at Johns Hopkins University and at the University
of Baltimore's Yale Gordon College of Liberal Arts. In 1999, he became professor of science writing at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he helped start its Graduate Programme in
Science Writing. He retired from MIT in August 2011 and has returned to writing full time. Kanigel
spoke to Science Correspondent R. Ramachandran in Mumbai on December 23. Excerpts from the
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interview:
In the Preface to your book The Man Who Knew Infinity, you have said that the publisher
suggested that you write about Ramanujan even though you had not heard of him. What caughtyour fascination or propelled you to get down to producing the book?
When the editor first approached my agent, and the agent first approached me, my first reaction was
that this was not going to work. I didn't know about [G.H.] Hardy [the English mathematician]. I had
some background in mathematics, not a lot, but some. But I didn't close my mind to the idea. I starteddoing a little initial research at Johns Hopkins University. Then I got hold of a BBC documentary on
Ramanujan. Until then I hadn't known anything about Hardy. And somehow in there, it was the idea of
it not being only about Ramanujan but about the kind of tension between Ramanujan and Hardy the
friendship, the mentoring, and the relationship between two men working at the very highest levels
that attracted me more. At that time I knew very little about Ramanujan, about South Indian culture,
about anything. But at that very, very early stage of my interest it was that idea of friendship and
collaboration at the very highest level that really intrigued me.
You have dwelt at length on the psychology of Ramanujan the way his character was built, thetemple-town atmosphere in which he grew up, his religiosity to understand his mathematics,
which seems to give an impression that his spiritual bent of mind had an impact on the kind ofmathematics he did. Do you believe that?
I don't think that had an influence on the mathematics per se. None. Zero. I tried to describe the world
from which Ramanujan came. If somebody wishes to trace a connection between any of that and the
mathematics, they can try, but I don't think they are going to get anywhere. Nonetheless, if we try to
understand his personality and his character, and the way he lived, we would want to know about his
upbringing, about his religious influences, about South India, and his relationship with his parents as
best as we can. So, I would deny any relationship between that and the mathematics itself. There is
much more to Ramanujan than his mathematics. He is a human being.
What I meant was that the title of your book, your reference to the fact that Ramanujan relatedzero and infinity to something divine and, for instance, your example of values that 2n 1 took asan equation that Ramanujan talked of representing the thought of God
That is one story, one anecdote. The fact is it is not me but some South Indians in the world that he
grew up in who saw some direct connection between his religiosity and his mathematics. I am telling
that story. I am giving it a place in the book. But that is different from saying that there is a direct,
intimate connection between his religiosity and his mathematics. If you are writing a biography or
reading a biography, it's a mistake to be too quick to make direct one-to-one correspondences between
A and B. I think in something like a biography you can't say that A caused B. You can say that it has
influences on his personality, on his life, on his character.
You do not say that in so many words, but your emphasis on his religious upbringing and thereligiosity in him gives the impression that it is perhaps that which drove him to explore the kind
of extraordinary mathematics that he did, which was beyond any ordinary mathematician and
was inexplicable.
V. GANESAN
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ROBERT KANIGEL: "I tried to describe the world from which Ramanujan came."
I wouldn't say so. I would say that that is part of his life and part of his personality. Many of his
friends, many of his associates and some of these anecdotal accounts are by people who themselves
may have been very pious, very religious, and very devout Hindus may have been quicker to make
[these] connections than I or you. But it is part of the story and it is part of the mystery too.
Everybody seems to agree that someone [who] is a level of genius beyond what we encounter is
almost automatically propelled into the region of the mysterious. Once having been propelled into the
region of great mystery at the highest level of human intellect, you find yourself scratching your head
as to what could possibly explain it. So I did the best I could.
Do we understand Ramanujan now or does he still remain mysterious?
I think he does. I think you could say the same thing about literature, the arts. What is the genius of
Picasso? People will try to explain it in easy ways, but I think they are unjustified in doing so. I thinksome people really are a few steps beyond where the rest of us live. We are forced to view those
intellects, those artistic sensibilities to whatever it is, as a little bit mysterious or a little beyond what is
the common realm.
There is a second aspect though. There are many people out there, very smart, brilliant, and they don't
do anything with their lives. They are just stuck there. There are personal characteristics that propel
people to do what they do, that is beyond the actual work that they are doing a kind of an ambition,
a kind of a drive, a kind of a pushing force [for them to say] I am going to make something of
myself and nothing is going to get in my way. And I think that's part of an understanding of how a
Picasso or a Ramanujan come into the world.
Did that push in his case come from...
It came from his mother.
You think it was the mother alone or was it also his religiosity?
I don't know but his mother seems to have been a dynamic character.
You come back to this towards the end of the book when you refer to Jaques Hadamard's
statement on creativity, where again there is this implication of a kind of a divine intervention in
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creativity and you place it against Hardy's own rejection of any such linkage, which again givesthe same impression.
That perhaps is an interpretation that you are bringing to it, and I am not going to deny it. I would just
posit a connection certainly but maybe a loose and tenuous one, between one side of his life and the
other, and exactly what that link is is quite in the realms of neurobiology, what happens in the brain
more than anything else. We are going to have a tough time figuring that one out. This is something
that I obviously struggled with in the course of writing the book. Who am I, an American, coming from
a very different culture trying to make sense of this? Of course, you always encounter this sort ofproblem. I write about many different kinds of subjects, not just about mathematics, and you are
always up against the edge of what you know. You have to be a little bit respectful of what you don't
know as well as what you know. So probably it is built into my personality not to make claims that I
am not 100 per cent certain about.
Did you have a preconceived plan about how you were going to go about things when you camedown here to explore? Or did you let the information come to you as you went around andstructure the book accordingly?
I had done a fair amount of reading before I came here, and I had spent two or three weeks, I think, in
Cambridge. Basically, I structured my time to go to the places that figured in Ramanujan's life. I didmy best to observe something of Ramanujan's world by visiting those places, making allowances all the
time that this was 1988 and Ramanujan had lived in the early years of the 20th century. So things
change, but I had to start somewhere, and that was my approach to visit those places that he had
visited.
Your description of places and events almost seem as if you were there in that period and youhad met Ramanujan. For example, you describe how Ramanujan walked. How would anybodyknow how Ramanujan had walked when you came and talked to people?
Other people had written about Ramanujan and there were stories. [S. R.] Ranganathan, [P.V.] Seshu
Iyer, Ramachandra Rao, [E.H.] Neville, Hardy himself, and there were other people. These people had
taken little snippets of Ramanujan, and I absorbed all these snippets and I tried to put them together.
Always looking for areas where they agreed and areas where they didn't and tried to make sense of
that. So I know how Ramanujan waddled down the street. I have been doing this for a long time. I
have been a professional writer for 40 years and this is what I do for a living. Trying to somehow
create worlds out of disparate material and trying to make it vivid for my reader all the while having
respect for what is true and not going beyond that slippery line between non-fiction and fiction.
In that sense it is certainly different from other biographies that are dry accounts of life andevents
There has been a movement at least in the U.S. I don't know whether there is one in India or
elsewhere in the past 30 years. It gets called new journalism, immersion journalism, or narrativenon-fiction, all of which represent an attempt to move away from what you just described boring,
tedious, simple statement of facts to blow true stories out of what we know from facts, and I
consider myself something like that, in that tradition.
May be that is why people are trying to turn your book into a film now. What is happening to the
film proposal?
For six or seven years now a screenwriter has purchased something called an option where he has
access to use my book and the title and the information there to make a film. He has written the
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screenplay through many versions, through many iterations, and the efforts of the past six years have
been to secure financing. It is now very, very close to signing on the dotted line, and my understanding
is that the Indian actor Madhavan has agreed to play Ramanujan in this film, and the screenwriter and
the producer, Edward Pressman, have been negotiating with possible financiers.
Before you get to describing Ramanujan's life in Cambridge, you devote a lot of pages to
describing Hardy himself his world, the Cambridge life, even the Apostles Society to which hebelonged, and his personal life. Why did you feel it was necessary to dwell on Hardy at such
length and in so much of detail to understand the relationship between the two mathematicians?
In some respect I consider this almost a dual biography, of Ramanujan and Hardy. Let's say you have
other authors writing the biography. All of them would have included Hardy as a major character in the
book. The question is how much. For me, Hardy played such an important role that their chemistry,
their tension, their friendship, their relationship played a central role mathematically and personally in
Ramanujan's life, and I felt that it was really important for the reader to come to understand Hardy as
well as Ramanujan.
V. GANESAN
A PHOTOGRAPH OF the English mathematician G.H. Hardy, displayed at the RamanujanMuseum and Math Education Centre at Royapuram in Chennai.
However, towards the end you do say that while Hardy was interested in the mathematics ofRamanujan, there was no emotional attachment between the two even as friendship, in the sense
that Hardy did not care so much personally for Ramanujan. He treated him more for hismathematics as a kind of a master, and Ramanujan wanted to obey him.
I agree with everything you said up until the end. I don't know about the master and obey. ButHardy's relationship with Ramanujan was a little bit problematic for me. I think it does come across in
the book. And I think I was more explicit in that case than in some other areas. As much as Hardy did
for Ramanujan, and as good a person that he basically was and he cared in his own way. Nonetheless, I
don't think Hardy was the best friend that Ramanujan could have had in England and that somebody
more emotionally compatible might have been better for Ramanujan those days.
Do you think the absence of a real friendship affected the mathematics that Ramanujan wasproducing there?
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I don't know. Certainly, we all have problematic relationships of one kind or another with our parents.
A tension is in there. Some parents are more distant and separate and not involved and have very high
expectations from their children, and the children, maybe they don't feel that close to their parents but
respond to their expectations. I think it might have been a little bit like that between Ramanujan and
Hardy. I am just making a vague connection, not a one-to-one. I don't think Hardy was the ideal friend
that Ramanujan could have had. Maybe he was the ideal taskmaster to extract the mathematics out of
him. I don't know. But I think Ramanujan certainly felt that he had to produce, at least he wanted to.
And he was the man in all of Europe maybe that he was closest to mathematically, and it would benatural that he wanted to please him.
Are there still some pieces in your story that remain unexplored for you to understand thembetter, both together and individually?
Sometimes book reviews churn out phrases like This is the definitive biography of and I don't
believe in that idea. I think there is always another approach to take, more research avenues to pursue,
other directions, other things to look at, other aspects just as when you take a photograph, by the
very act of framing, you exclude other things that are not in your frame. It is like that in any kind of
ambitious writing also. You may do a very good job of what you are doing but by the very nature of it
you cannot do everything. And I expect that some day some other biographer will come around andtake another approach to the story of Ramanujan and Hardy and bring new insights.
That is what I meant. Did you come across other things that you had missed that could have lenta different perspective to the whole thing?
After the book came out, there was new theorising about what Ramanujan actually died from. That
would have been interesting to bring to light. Other than that I don't know whether [any] new material
has been brought to light. But I expect it will come to light.
Have you been in touch with people in India who knew about his life closely?
Not since the book has come out. V. Viswanathan, Narayana Iyer's grandson, has written and [BruceC.] Berndt has that about the relationship between Narayana Iyer and Ramanujan at the Port Trust.
That is another little area. If I were going back 25 years later and writing a sequel to this, I would bring
in that sort of material.
RAMANUJAN'S MANUSCRIPT DISPLAYED at the University of Madras.
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Did you ever actually get down to looking at those notebooks and papers? What kind ofimpression did those give you as the writer of a biography rather than as a mathematician? The
manner in which he wrote, the scribblings, the physical look, and so on. Did the feel of it give yousome insight into the man?
The closest I came in there was when I started working on the notebooks early on; that what you see
in the notebooks is his coming back to it again and again and again, and I think I compared [that] with
playing scales for a musician and making sketches for an artist. To me as a writer, I like words, I like
language, and it's never hard for me to go back and revise and revise and revise. It's not painful. I likeit. I think it must have been something like that for Ramanujan. I think that was the closest I could
come to saying what I saw in those notebooks. That this was a landscape he enjoyed inhabiting. What
does it mean to know infinity. Obviously, you cannot know infinity. The way I pictured it when it first
came to me was imagine somebody in the Himalayas who knows the area around where he grew up
and has this kind of intimacy with it which you and I certainly don't [know] because they are with it all
the time. In that sense he knew infinity. That's what I meant.
I interpreted it somewhat differently. I felt you referred to his spiritual leanings and God and
things like that.
Well, that's fine. One of the things about language is that it does have many different ways ofresponding to it, and that was part of my intent that there was this layer on top of the mathematical
symbol of infinity that does call for the suggestion of God, religion and spiritual connection.
Absolutely.
When you met people here in India, their recall factor must have coloured what they told you
and what you understood of the man. Where did you find contradictions and inconsistencies?
There is always some degree of inconsistency. Certainly, on the religious issue that you started out
with. Some people thinking that it had nothing to do with him and some people viewing him as a highly
devout and pious person. That was less with people I was talking to and more with anecdotes and
documents that had come through Ranganathan's and Seshu Iyer's work. There is some discrepancy
between all of those accounts, and that's one of the reasons why there is always going to be some
uncertainty. You have to be very careful about what you say because of exactly what you are saying.
Did you find that you were really missing something in understanding the man when you came
here so many years later. That there were pieces that required a lot more filling up than whatyou were presented with at that point of time?
When you come away from writing a book like this, you obviously feel a sense of satisfaction, but you
also become acutely aware of everything that you don't know as well as you do know. I would have
loved to have spent some time in Ramanujan's company, to have actually seen him in flesh, instead of
hearing second or third hand about him. I would have liked to see some more letters. I would have
liked to be inside Ramanujan's head when he was dealing with Hardy. I would have liked to be inLondon and then in Cambridge when Ramanujan stepped out onto the docks, into an altogether
different culture, after spending a whole life in South India. Yes, I would have liked to have known in
much more detail about all these aspects of his life.
How much time did you spend moving around in India for your research?
About a month and a half.
Was that sufficient? Your book seems to give the impression that perhaps you would have spent alot more time than that.
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Well, lot of people said that. I had a limited budget. My on-site research was supplemented by a whole
lot of documentary resources. You have got that going as well as your personal responses to what you
see.
You came here in 1988, but when did you start on the project itself?
I think about three or four months before that.
Is that all! I thought it would have been much more than that to do the kind of research you didon the man.
I don't recollect exactly how much, but it was certainly less than a year.
You have probably written other biographies. How do you compare this effort with the othersyou have essayed?
The book that I wrote before Apprentice to Genius was a kind of an ensemble biography. It was not
really a biography. It had biographical elements. For the book that I wrote on the first efficiency expert
[ The One Best Way: Frederick Winslaw Taylor and the Enigma of Efficiency], there was a whole
room devoted to him at the Taylor Archives in New Jersey. Next, I am probably going to write a
biography of Jane Jacobs, who is an extremely influential urban visionary, somebody who has
refashioned ideas about city living. So every subject presents its own problems. In the case of Taylor,
one of the problems was that he was not such a nice, friendly personality. He was a complicated
character, but there are plenty of resources on him.
In the case of Ramanujan, I was facing a three-part problem. India, England and mathematics.
Mathematics is hard, an American coming to India is presented with difficulties. It's all across a
75-year historical gap. And England, too. People think that for an American that should be easy. It's
not. So, all of these were part of the complications in writing this particular biography. But every
biography presents its own problems. In the case of Ramanujan, what I wrote was the first Western
biography [on him]. Some people write biographies of people like Charles Dickens or Isaac Newton,
where 20 biographies have come before and their problem is to find something new to write. But Ididn't have that problem, but I had these other problems. So it's always different. If you ask if it was a
more difficult biography than the others, I wouldn't say so. Each presents different problems.
Would you say that the barriers that this presented were more challenging than the others?
I guess I will have to say that. The fact that the mathematics is so difficult. The fact of trying
obviously, with not much success to penetrate South Indian culture, plus the English culture.
If you started out today, how different would it be?
That's a great question. Well, I will start with The Man Who Knew Infinity. Of course, it will bedifferent. No question about that. Twenty-five years have elapsed. I am a much older person. I might
see things differently. Frankly, it depends in part on your financial resources; whether you can spend
more time. I don't know. I would be interested in laying my hands on the letters that Neville might have
written about Ramanujan to various people. It would be interesting to track down his children or
something. But I don't think he had any children and that may have been the problem [that they don't
figure in the book]. I still think I would devote so much on Hardy. Berndt has made it his life's work
and he has published several books in English that contain nothing more than some of this new
material that he has located in English and some in Tamil about Ramanujan. I would probably start
with those new materials. I make a distinction in my own mind between the raw material and the final
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product itself. Some of that material is good raw material.
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