Alice is Nash's second brain

Rowan 2022-04-21 09:01:05

This is a good movie. It's a film directed by Ron Howard and Russell Corowe and starring Russell Crowe. The film tells the life of a scholar, from a doctoral student at Princeton to a senior researcher in Wheeler's lab to a Nobel Prize winner. Originally a scholar's life was ordinary: he only dealt with numbers, and only made friends with patterns. But the reason why his life has extraordinary meaning is because of the special era he lived in and his own special character. The protagonist John - Nash is indeed a person. His talent lies in his special sensitivity to numbers, patterns, and space. His happiness comes from this, and his misfortune also comes from this. This is his destiny, he can resist, but is powerless to change. He knew early on that his weakness was "human relationships," as his middle school teacher put it, two heads but one heart. But until his death, this is still his weakness, and he is powerless to change.

Nash is a scholar with real academic spirit. He despises any unoriginal theories and explanations. He wants to find out the theoretical basis of game theory, so as to re-form a theoretical framework to explain human behavior, in order to revise Adam Smith's theory. Classical Economic Theory.

In the Princeton era, before he discovered the equilibrium theory, his academic pressure was enormous: most of his classmates had published articles, but he had not, not even the topic of his doctoral dissertation. He says he has patience, and it can be seen that he has not only patience but also courage, but the price is huge. Under this huge academic pressure, he started a fantasy that he never got rid of in his life, he made up a roommate: Charles. And the fantasy at this time is beneficial to his academics and even his life. He is so lonely, he has no relatives, no close friends, he only has himself, and the beautiful illusory world he fantasizes about . . When the mentor said there might be no work, he collapsed, blood dripping from his head slamming against the window. However, under the comfort and encouragement of Charles, he gradually came out and started his great dream again. In the bar, when his classmates were talking about a beautiful girl, inspiration fell from the sky, and he found a breakthrough. Because of this important discovery, he got the opportunity to go to Wheeler's laboratory. It was in this research room, coupled with the special atmosphere of that era and his fantasy preferences, that his schizophrenia completely broke out at this time. He made up a fictional government official, Patcher, a man who managed highly state secrets. And he himself became a special agent in this game: specializing in deciphering the codes of Soviet Russia. The most exciting moment is when he fantasizes that he is being hunted. When he returned home delirious, he did not say anything to his wife in order to "protect" her. Up to this point, he has been living in a beautiful world of his own fantasy, where he is free to deal with numbers, patterns, spaces, and a major political mission: to save America. The unfortunate time came when his wife let him know that his world was completely false, that the good moments he had ever experienced were false, and so were those people. He was sent to the hospital, but with his strong will, he walked out of the hospital and started his own treatment. He spent the rest of his life healing himself: getting rid of those phantoms and living a real life. As he said later, those things were his past, and everyone was haunted by his own past, and he never completely got rid of those phantoms in his life, he just ignored them. Just like a man who is greedy for good food restrains his appetite, he restrains his imagination of numbers, spaces and dreams. His wife is the pillar of his life. Without his wife, he would have nothing to do with him. Without her encouragement and understanding, the rest of his life would be over.

The scholars in the film are all magnanimous. For example, Hansen once had a dormant with Nash, but he did not remember the previous suspicion and took him in, allowing Nash to move freely in the school. Undoubtedly, this is of great benefit to his illness. of.

A short life is full of so much suffering, how does a scholar go through his life?

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Extended Reading
  • Alexandria 2022-03-25 09:01:04

    #siff#If you know my hardship

  • Nelle 2022-03-23 09:01:05

    A touching story can really be viewed as suspense. Great people have extraordinary experiences and pains, strong will, and do not forget their original intentions. The heroine is so beautiful!

A Beautiful Mind quotes

  • Alicia: It's called "life," John. Activities available; just add meaning.

  • Parcher: Conviction, it turns out, is a luxury of those on the sidelines, Mr. Nash.