0%

This is the speech I gave in my sophomore year for the college speech contest. I found it when I was going back to my stuff last mid-autumn. I’ve tidied it up a bit and am posting it here. The article is based on two articles from the Phoenix website at the time. The competition at that time was also after the Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day. I remember that on that National Day, the Phoenix Legend held a symphonic concert, and the symphonic version of “Above the Moon” was very good. Unfortunately, it was too close to the competition to change the soundtrack. Here’s an addendum.

Recently, media reports of 89-year-old Sir Michael Francis Atiyah publishing a paper claiming to prove the Riemann conjecture reminded me of this novel I saw on Sci-Fi King in junior high. The in-depth math, physics concepts and descriptions of observing the ultimate truth that triggers the end of the world are impressive. Through this article, I was first exposed to classic public cases such as the Riemann Conjecture, Schrödinger’s Cat, and the Principle of Human Selection. It’s kind of enlightening. At the end of the novel, the protagonist abandons the publication of the results in order to save the world, choosing to commit suicide and destroy the manuscript. And while in reality Sir Attia’s twilight challenge was awe-inspiring, multiple sources claim the proof is likely to be wrong (can’t even call it proof), lamenting the fact that perhaps the world avoided a crisis of destruction [smile].

This article is an activity posting that originally participated in the 360 Forum Tenth Anniversary community event. At the time, this post was also recommended to the forum home page. Received a commemorative badge. With time passing by, the original post was already sinking, and the links to some of the pictures were also broken. Taking advantage of some of the content on the Internet, the article was sorted out and brought to my blog. Thought to commemorate.

I got the 360th Anniversary Badge

Twenty light-years from earth, there is a star named Gliese581 by humans. At this moment, a moon-sized starship is proudly moored in its core that glows with red blood.