Whose Honeymoon Story Is Misattributed in Mathematics?

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The discussion centers on a story about a mathematician who humorously described his honeymoon as unproductive because he only wrote one paper. The original poster initially thought the mathematician was Paul Erdős, but later learned it was Carl Friedrich Gauss, as confirmed by a teacher. There is skepticism about the authenticity of the story, with some suggesting it may not be based on a true event. The poster expresses gratitude for the clarification and considers including the anecdote in their grad school personal statement. The conversation highlights the blend of humor and historical anecdotes in mathematics.
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I remember hearing a story about a mathematician who was legendarily prolific; so much so that he described his honeymoon as being one of the most unproductive times in this life because he only wrote one paper.

I wanted to include this story in my personal statement for grad school applications, but I can't remember for the life of me who the story was about.

My first thought was Erdos, but he was never married, so I guess its not him.

Please help me remember!
 
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my teacher sad, he is Gauss.
 
Office_Shredder said:
http://books.google.com/books?id=Cn...EwAg#v=onepage&q=dickson would often&f=false"

I highly doubt this story originated as a true story based on a mathematician, at which point you might as well just plug in whoever's name you want

Thank you very much! You also solved the mystery of where I read that...that is the book I first learned abstract algebra from! We'll see if the anecdote actually makes it into my personal statement. Figured it was something funny without trying to be too funny.
 
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