From: rec.humor.funny

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Subject: Quotes from lecturers at Cambridge University, England
This is a list of quotes from people in mathematical or scientific circles
at Cambridge University, England (hehehe, never miss a chance to put the
Cambridge people down, especially if you study at Oxford).
From: sweh@ecs.oxford.ac.uk (Stephen Harris)
[original author unknown]
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1985:

Overheard at a supervision:
Supervisor: Do you think you understand the basic ideas of Quantum
            Mechanics ?
Supervisee: Ah! Well, what do we mean by "to understand" in the context
            of Quantum Mechanics?
Supervisor: You mean "No", don't you?
Supervisee: Yes.

The Tautology prize goes to the lecturer who uttered the gem:
 "If we complicate things they get less simple."

This year's modesty award is given for a phrase spoken by a lecturer after
a rather difficult concept had just been introduced.
 "You may feel that this is a little unclear but in fact I am lecturing it
  extremely well."

Overheard at last year's Archimedeans' Garden Party :
 "Quantum Mechanics is a lovely introduction to Hilbert Spaces !"

A Senior mathematician was asked which language he used for some of his
computing. He replied that he used a very high level language:
RESEARCH STUDENT.

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1986

From an algebra lecture:
 "A real gentleman never takes bases unless he really has to."

From the same lecturer:
 "This book fills a well-needed gap in the literature."

And another encouraging book review:
 "This book is only for the serious enthusiast; I haven't read it myself."

Two quotes from an electrical engineer (but former mathematician):
 "...but the four-colour theorem was sufficiently true at the time."
 "The whole point of mathematics is to solve differential equations!"

And,as a contrast,a quote from a well known mathematician/physicist:
 "Trying to solve [differential] equations is a youthful aberration that you
   will soon grow out of."

While on the subject how about this fundamental law of physics heard in
General Relativity this year:
 "Nature abhors second-order differential equations."

A perplexing quote from a theoretical chemist:
 "...but it might be a quasi-infinite set."
 What is a "quasi-infinite set"?
 Answers on a strictly finite postcard, please.

An engineer actually gave an answer to the question of "quasi-infinite"
sets: "It's one with more than ten elements."
And they wonder why buildings fall over...

This year's Modesty Prize is awarded to the lecturer who said :
 "Of course,this isn't really the best way to do it. But seeing as you're 
   not quite as clever as I am - in fact none of you are anywhere near as 
   clever as I am - we'll do it this way."

From the same lecturer :
 "Now we'll prove the theorem.In fact I'll prove it all by myself."

And from a particle physics course :
 "This course will contain a lot of charm and beauty but very little truth."

A comparison between the programming languages BCPL and BSPL :
 "Like BCPL you can omit semicolons almost anywhere."

At the beginning of a course it is important to reassure the audience
about how straight-forward the course is and about how good the lectures
are going to be. But what about this quote from the beginning of the
Galois Theory course:
 "This is going to be an adventure for you...and for me."
Or this one from Statistical Physics:
 "At the meeting in August I put my name down for this course because 
   I knew nothing about it."

In the middle of the Stochastic Systems course the lecturer offered
this piece of careers advice:
 "If you haven't enjoyed the material in the last few lectures then a
   career in chartered accountancy beckons."

A lecturer of Linear Systems found the following on his board when he
arrived one morning:
           "Roses are red,
            Violets are blue,
            Greens' functions are boring
            And so are Fourier transforms."

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1987:

From a supervisor :
 "Any theorem in Analysis can be fitted onto an arbitrarily small piece of
   paper if you are sufficiently obscure."

No matter how elegant a course is there will always be occasions when a
certain amount of arithmetic is called for:
 "I just want you to have a brief boggle at the belly-busting complexity 
   of evaluating this."

A lecturer recently started to use RUNES in his course! His justification:
 "I need an immediately distinguishable character... so I'll use something
   that no one will recognise."

From a Special Relativity lecture:
 "...and you find you get masses of energy."

It's nice to see  the general-purpose 'nobbling constant' making a welcome
return to Cambridge lectures:
 "This must be wrong by a factor that oughtn't to be too different
   from unity."

A flattering comment by a student for his GR supervisor:
 "She's the only person in DAMTP who's a real person rather than an 
   abstract machine for doing tripos questions. "

A worrying thought from the same student:
 "Sex and drugs? They're nothing compared with a good proof!"

A description of a lecturer:
 "G----'s a maniacal pixie!!!"

A less polite description of a famous (and notorious) mathematician:
 "I personally think he's the greatest fraud since Cyril Burt!!"
 - any guesses ?

Renormalisation holds no fears for this lecturer of Plasma Physics:
 "...and divergent integrals need really sleazy cutoffs."

In the true style of Cambridge Maths Tripos we have the following:
 "Proof of Thm. 6.2 is trivial from Thm. 6.9"

Can anybody guess the context in which the following is correct ?
 "This theorem is obviously proved as 13 equals 15."

Why do mathematicians insist on using words that already have another 
meaning?
 "It is the complex case that is easier to deal with."

And from various seminars in the King's College Research Centre:
 "...the non-uniqueness is exponentially small."
 "I'm not going to say exactly what I mean because I'm not absolutely
   certain myself."
 "It's dangerous to name your children until you know how many you are
   going to have."
 "You don't want to prove theorems that are false."
And that last one wins the Sybil Fawlty Prize for "Stating the Bleeding
Obvious".

A slightly more honest version of "The student can easily see that..." :
 "If you play around with your fingers for a while, you'll see that's true."

Suggestions are welcome on the meaning of this:
 "If it doesn't happen at a corner, but at an edge, it nonetheless happens
   at a corner."
 - Eh ?

In a Complex Variables course a long, long, LONG time ago a lecturer wanted
to swap the order of an integral and an infinite sum...
 "To do this we use a special theorem... the theorem that says that 
   secretly this is an applied maths course."
I never name my lecturers but he's now head of the Universities Grant
Commission.  And a lot of universities would like to swap him for an
infinite sum.

From an Algebra III lecturer :
 "If you want to prove it the simplest thing is to prove it."

This year's Honesty Prize goes to the natural sciences supervisor, who
replied to a question with
 "Don't ask me. I'm not a mathmo."

And from Oxford...
 "This does have physical applications.  In fact it's all tied up with
   strings."
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1988:

Good heavens, do I see a lecturer actually noticing the existence of his
audience!
"Was that clear enough? Put up your hand if that wasn't clear enough.
  Ah, I thought not."

Snobbery or what?
"In the sort of parrot-like way you use to teach stats to biologists,
  this is expected minus observed."
Also from statistics:
"I too would like to know what a statistician actually does."
"We're not doing mathematics; this is statistics."

"You could define the subspace topology this way, if you were 
 sufficiently malicious."

"You mustn't be too rigid when doing Fluid mechanics."

Talk about ulterior motives...
"This handout is not produced for your erudition but merely so I can
  practice the TeX word-processor."

From 1A NatSci "Cells" course:
"There are two proteins involved in DNA synthesis, they are called
  DNAsynthase 1 and DNAsynthase 3"

From a Part 2 Quantum Mechanics lecture:
"Just because they are called 'forbidden' transitions does not
  mean that they are forbidden. They are less allowed than allowed
  transitions, if you see what I mean."

From an IBM Assembler lecture:
"If you find bear droppings around your tent, it's fairly likely that
  there are bears in the area."

A Biochemistry paper included an analysis of a previously undiscovered
sugar named by the researchers "godnose" .

From a 1B Electrical Engineering lecture:
"This isn't true in practice - what we've missed out is Stradivarius's
  constant."
And then the aside:
"For those of you who don't know, that's been called by others the fiddle
  factor..."

One from a 1A Engineering maths lecture :
"Graphs of higher degree polynomials have this habit of doing unwanted
  wiggly things."

"Apart from the extra line that's a one line proof."
"This is a one line proof...if we start sufficiently far to the left."

A slight difficulty occured with geometry in an Engineering lecture one
day:
"This is the maximum power triangle." said a lecturer,
  pointing to a rectangle.

This year the Computer Scientists seem to be in the running for the Honesty
Award:
"Sorry, I should have made that completely clear. This is a shambles."

From a Computer Sciences Protection lecture:
"Who should be going to this lecture? Everyone...apart from the third
  year of the two-year CompSci course."
  
"I don't want to go into this in detail, but I would like to illustrate
  some of the tedium."

Oh those poor CompScis....
"I'm not going to get anything more useful done in this lecture,
  so I might as well talk."
later followed by ...
"Well, there you are, one lecture with no useful content."

Three from a NatSci Physics lecturer:
"You don't have to copy that down -- there's no wisdom in it -- it 
 only repeats what I said. "
"We now wish to show that they are not merely equal but _the same thing_."
"And before I leave this subject, I would like to tell you something
  interesting."

From a first year chemistry lecture some personal problems of the lecturer:
"Before I started this morning's lecture I was going to tell you about my
  third divorce but on reflection I thought I'd better tell my wife first."

From a single research seminar at the King's College Research Centre:
"I'm sure it's right whether it's valid or not."
"WARNING: There is no reason to believe this will work."

Back to the Gödel, Escher, Bach page.   John Lawler