From June 1945-June 1948 Nash studied
at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh (now Carnegie Mellon
University), intending to become an engineer like his father. Instead,
he developed a deep love for mathematics and what became a lifelong interest
in subjects such as number theory, Diophantine equations, quantum mechanics
and relativity theory.
He loved solving problems. At Carnegie
he became interested in the 'negotiation problem', which John von
Neumann had left unsolved in his book The Theory of Games and Economic
Behavior (1944), and participated in the game theory group there.
His theory, now called the Nash equilibrium, is a corollary of the
minimax theorem stated earlier by John Von Neumann in 1928. From
Pittsburgh he went to Princeton University where he worked on his
equilibrium theory. He received a Ph.D. in 1950 with a dissertation
on non-cooperative games. The thesis, which was written under
the supervision of Albert Tucker, contained the definition and properties
of what would later be called the Nash equilibrium. |
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John Nash was born
in the small Appalachian town of Bluefield, West Virginia, the son of
John Nash Sr., an electrical engineer, and Virginia Martin, a teacher.
By the time he was about twelve years old he was showing great interest
in carrying out scientific experiments in his room at home. Martha, his
sister, seems to have been a remarkably normal child while Johnny seemed
different from other children. She wrote later in life, "Johnny was
always different. My parents knew he was different. And they knew he was
bright. He always wanted to do things his way. Mother insisted I do things
for him, that I include him in my friendships. ... but I wasn't too keen
on showing off my somewhat odd brother".
At Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he met Alicia
Lopez-Harrison de Lardé, a math student from El Salvador,
whom he married in February 1957. Their son, John Charles Martin (b. 1959),
remained nameless for a year because Alicia, having just committed Nash
to a mental hospital, felt that he should have a say in what to name the
baby. John became a mathematician, but, like his father, he was diagnosed
a paranoid schizophrenic. Nash had another son, John David (b. June 19,
1953), by Eleanor Stier, but refused to have anything to do with them.
Sylvia Nasar, Nash's biographer, cites evidence that Nash was bisexual.
However, John and Alicia denied such on 60 Minutes in 2002.
Although she divorced him in 1963, Alicia took him back in 1970. According
to Sylvia Nasar's biography of Nash, Alicia referred to him as her "boarder,"
and they lived "like two distantly related individuals under one
roof" until he won the Nobel Prize in 1994, when they renewed their
relationship. They remarried on June 1, 2001.
In 1958, Nash began to show the first signs of his mental
illness. He became paranoid and was admitted into the McLean Hospital,
April-May 1959, where he was diagnosed with 'paranoid schizophrenia'.
After a problematic stay in Paris and Geneva, Nash returned to Princeton
in 1960. He remained in and out of mental hospitals until 1970, undergoing
various treatments including insulin (a.k.a. hypoglycemic) coma therapy.
Some of his treatments may have worsened his condition
because his doctors did not realize the centrality of work and community
to curing mental illness, and the most successful "treatment"
seems to have been administrative decisions at Princeton's mathematics
department and computer center to allow Nash to use university facilities
for his researches during this period, although the researches were initially
delusional.
In student and on-campus legend, Nash became "The
Phantom of Fine Hall" (Fine Hall is Princeton's mathematics
center), a shadowy figure who would scribble arcane equations on blackboards
in the middle of the night. The legend appears in a work of fiction based
on Princeton life, "The Mind-Body Problem", by Rebecca Goldstein.
However, encouraged
by his wife Alicia, Nash persisted in working in a communitarian setting
where his eccentricities were unremarked and developed, among other interests,
an interest in the calculation of exact values of large numbers, researches
which drove him to Princeton's Information Centers, where he developed
computer programs (of high quality) for his work. Here he had
more contact with Princetonians and also, in the late 1980s, began to
use electronic mail to gradually link with working mathematicians who
realized that he was "John Nash" and his new work had value.
They formed part of the nucleus of a group that contacted the
Nobel
committee and was able to vouch for Nash's ability to receive
the award in recognition of his early work.
The 1990s brought a return of his genius, and Nash
has taken care to manage the symptoms of his mental illness. He
is still hoping to score substantial scientific results. His recent
work involves some very interesting ventures in advanced game theory
including partial agency which show that as in early career, he
prefers to select his own path and problems.
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In the summer of 1950 he worked at the RAND Corporation
in Santa Monica, California, where he returned for shorter periods
in 1952 and 1954. From 1950-1951 he taught calculus courses at Princeton,
studied and managed to stay out of military service. During this time,
he proved the Nash embedding theorem, an important result in differential
geometry about manifolds.
He was at MIT from 1951 until the spring of 1959, which included a sabbatical
year at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He held a research
position at Brandeis University from 1965-1967, but there was a 30-year
gap between then and 1996 which was void of any scientific publications.
He currently holds an appointment in mathematics at Princeton. While cautious
with people he does not know, insiders cite a dry sense of humor.
The contribution of his wife Alicia was quite significant. She supported
him during his delusional phase and saw how membership, no matter how
humble, in the Princeton community helped Nash get better. Alicia also
worked, rather courageously, as a computer programmer in male-dominated
companies to support herself, John, and their son.
In 1978 he was awarded the John Von Neumann Theory Prize
for his invention of non-cooperative equilibriums, now called Nash equilibria.
In 1994 he received the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory
of Alfred Nobel as a result of his game theory work at Princeton as a
graduate student.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Forbes_Nash
Autobiography:
http://nobelprize.org/economics/laureates/1994/nash-autobio.html
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