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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

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Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions


The Princeton mathemagician, who died in April, left an engaging legacy of numerical gamesmanship.

By Siobhan Roberts
Published May 16, 2020 Updated May 18, 2020

When John Horton Conway, the Princeton “mathemagician” who died in April at age 82, first found fame in the late 1960s and early ’70s,
he joined the academic equivalent of the jet set. Then at the University of Cambridge, he would fly to Montreal or New York, deliver a
lecture on his Conway group — an entity in the realm of mathematical symmetry that inhabits 24 dimensions — and return home all
within the space of a day.

Occasionally, he made a detour to visit Martin Gardner, the mathematical games columnist for Scientific American, at his house in
Hastings-on-Hudson, just north of New York. Mr. Gardner taught him magic tricks: Try tying a knot while holding onto both ends of the
string, without ever letting go. Dr. Conway, in turn, regaled Mr. Gardner with puzzles and games — Sprouts, for instance, a pencil-and-
paper game he had invented with Michael Paterson, a grad student, and which quickly charmed the entire math department,
administrative staff included.

John Conway sent this diagram of Sprouts to Martin Gardner in 1967, with the following instructions: “We start with n spots on a piece of paper. The move is to join two of
these spots — which are allowed to be the same spot — by a curve, and then to create a new spot on this curve. The curve must not pass through old spots, nor may it cross
old curves, and at no time may any spot have more than three arcs emanating from it. In normal sprouts a player who cannot make a move loses, so that the object is to
move last — in misère sprouts, the last player loses.” via James Gardner, Martin Gardner Papers, Special Collections, Stanford University Libraries

Later, Mr. Gardner marveled at the fireworks that Dr. Conway displayed “in such bewildering profusion,” he said in a letter. “I still have my
head spinning.”

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

Writing Dr. Conway’s biography, I spent many mind-bending hours trying to keep up. His office at Princeton University was a perpetual
mess, so he had relocated to a hallway adjacent to the math department common room. The corridor was lined with window alcoves, each
furnished with two armchairs and a chalkboard. In Dr. Conway’s alcove, loose-leaf works in progress were filed beneath a seat cushion.

From there, he delivered a master class, to a parade of visitors, on how to spend all of one’s time — as he would boast — doing nothing,
being lazy and playing games. His syllabus might include a riff on the science of rainbows (primary, secondary, tertiary), or “chemical π”
(memorizing pi using a mnemonic based on the periodic table of elements), or his Doomsday rule for speedily calculating the day of the
week for any given date.

Sometimes we ventured out. Once, we took the train to Poughkeepsie to meet George Odom, an accomplished amateur geometer and an
inpatient at the Hudson River Psychiatric Center. Mr. Odom had made a few discoveries pertaining to the golden ratio — a ratio describing
aesthetically pleasing proportions of certain shapes, usually rectangular. Mr. Odom’s discoveries intrigued Dr. Conway because they
related the golden ratio specifically to the cube. “I’ve always felt the primacy of the cube,” Mr. Odom told him.

Dr. Conway was partial to the triangle, for which he discovered the Conway circle theorem: If you extend the sides of any triangle beyond
each vertex, at a distance equal to the length of the opposite side, the resulting six points lie on a circle. (A “proof without words” was
recently featured in “The Big Lock-Down Math-Off.”)

Dr. Conway in his Princeton office in 1993. Dith Pran/The New York Times

We went to Kashiwa, near Tokyo, to the Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe. Dr. Conway was the keynote
speaker at a workshop about the Monster group, a collection of symmetries of an object that lives most accessibly in 196,883 dimensions —
that’s the “smallest nontrivial” place that the Monster lives, Dr. Conway clarified. There is another representation in 21,296,876
dimensions, and a larger one still in 27-digit-number-dimensional space: 258,823,477,531,055,064,045,234,375.

And Dr. Conway correctly predicted that this behemoth possesses symmetries numbering roughly 808 sexdecillion, or exactly:

808,017,424,794,512,875,886,459,904,961,710,757,005,754,368,000,000,000

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

“These things are so beautiful,” he told me. “I mean, it’s a kind of beauty that exists in the abstract, but we poor mortals will never see it.
We can just get vague glimmerings.” (For example, see the 248-dimensional group E8.)

Dr. Conway believed that the Monster couldn’t exist without a reason. “But I don’t have any idea what that reason is,” he told the audience
in Kashiwa. “Before I die, I really want to understand why the Monster exists. But I’m almost certain I won’t.”

From Phutball to the Game of Life

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

At Cambridge, Dr. Conway’s students tested him with the “Look-and-Say Sequence.” The challenge: determine the next line in the sequence. John Horton Conway

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

A young John Conway in 1957 with his water computer, WINNIE, for Water Initiated Numerical Number Integrating Engine. Peter Evennett

In September 2009, with his son Gareth, then 8, we traveled to Liverpool, England, Dr. Conway’s hometown, and Cambridge, his alma
mater, to clear up some counterfactuals. (He was a notoriously unreliable narrator of his own life.)

During our visit with his daughters from his first marriage — Annie, Ellie, Rosie and Susie — we played his One Bit Word Game: Try
conversing using words containing only one syllable or “bit.” (When an opponent slips up, shout “Bang!”) Dr. Conway once challenged
himself to deliver a number theory class in one-bit words, no small feat given the word “number” itself: “Those things you count with —
you know, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or more….”

Cambridge was peak Conway, especially with regard to games. With his collaborators, Elwyn Berlekamp and Richard Guy (who died in
March at 103), he purportedly invented or reinvented 10 games a day, assisted by a regular rotation of students: Simon Norton devised the
game Tribulations; Mike Guy countered with Fibulations. (Both are Nim-like games based on triangle numbers and Fibonacci numbers.)
The group amassed folders of “games without names” and “names without games.” In 1981, after 15 years, they published the multivolume,
best-selling book “Winning Ways for Your Mathematical Plays.”

Chapter 22 contained Phutball, short for Philosopher’s Football, a two-player board game with stones, driven by negative feedback.
“Every move is bad,” Dr. Conway warned. Chapter 25 covered Dr. Conway’s Game of Life, prefaced by Oscar Wilde’s advice that “Life is
too important to be taken seriously.”

First published in Mr. Gardner’s October 1970 column, the Game of Life is a “no-player, never-ending” game, as Dr. Conway liked to say,
and it is considered one of the earliest, most remarkable and most popular examples of a cellular automaton — according to only a few
simple rules, cells on the screen evolve from iteration to iteration to produce an astoundingly complex bestiary of “Life-forms.”

“LIFE IS UNIVERSAL,” Dr. Conway wrote to Mr. Gardner in December 1970, in all caps. That is, the Game of Life could be programmed to
do any calculation; it was a metaphor for, and contained, all of mathematics. “The Game of Life has contributed to the public perception of
mathematics in a way that few mathematical discoveries in modern history have,” said Manjul Bhargava, a mathematician and a
colleague of Dr. Conway’s at Princeton.

All of this gaming could be classified as serious research, of course; as both player and spectator, Dr. Conway was analyzing games,
observing strategy and classifying the moves available to each player. He noticed that games behaved like numbers, and numbers like
games. This led to his theory of surreal numbers — a huge new number system containing not only all the real numbers, but also a
boggling collection of infinites and infinitesimals, like π minus 1 divided by the cube root of infinity.

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

Dr. Conway, third from right, playing Backgammon at Cambridge circa 1978. Pelham Wilson

To explain his theory, Dr. Conway wrote a book, “On Numbers and Games,” and two papers, “All Games Bright and Beautiful” and “All
Numbers Great and Small.” He told me, “You know the hymn: ‘All things bright and beautiful, all creatures great and small.’ But in the
case of this theory, it’s all games bright and beautiful that come first. The games are logically prior to the numbers.”

He viewed this discovery as so fundamental that he named it simply “No,” in bold, meaning all numbers, capital N. Donald Knuth, the
Stanford computer scientist and author of “The Art of Computer Programming,” came up with the more enduring name while writing the
novelette “Surreal Numbers: How Two Ex-Students Turned On to Pure Mathematics and Found Total Happiness.”

On hearing of his friend’s death, Dr. Knuth said that Dr. Conway was his second favorite mathematician, outshone only by the 18th-century
Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler. “John gave pleasure to connoisseurs who appreciate deep thinking. That’s real beauty, for me, and
touches off deep emotions.” He noted that Dr. Conway has been mentioned more than 25 times so far in “The Art of Computer
Programming,” for different contributions: “I expect the citings to continue long after his death (as happened to Elvis).”

How to beat children at their own games


In March of 2010, we set out for “G4G9,” the ninth biennial gathering honoring Mr. Gardner, in Atlanta. Over five days, 10-minute
presentations followed one after another. Dr. Conway offered an “Untitled Talk,” in which he lectured (during a special 25-minute session)
on “The Lexicode Theorem — Or Is It?”

“I’ll cast some doubt on this theorem, to say the very least, but all turns out well in the end,” he told the audience, and proceeded to
convert his work with sphere-packing into game theory (drawing from a paper written with Neil Sloane, “Lexicographic Codes: Error-
Correcting Codes from Game Theory”).

“Conway is the rare sort of mathematician whose ability to connect his pet mathematical interests makes one wonder if he isn’t, at some
level, shaping mathematical reality and not just exploring it,” James Propp, a mathematician at the University of Massachusetts Lowell,
said afterward. Sphere-packing and games are two separate realms that Dr. Conway had investigated on different paths, with no obvious
intersection, said Dr. Propp. “But somehow, through the force of his personality and the intensity of his passion, he bent the mathematical
universe to his will.”

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

Our mathematical journey continued that August at Canada/USA Mathcamp, an international summer program for high-school students
keen on math, which was being held that year at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Mass. Dr. Conway was a perennial star
attraction; I first met him at Mathcamp in 2003 — he was doing his signature trick, spinning a wire hanger above his head with a penny
balanced on the hook — and every summer he bestowed and inflicted his usual bewildering repertoire.

He displayed a special fanaticism for Dots and Boxes, a 19th-century pencil-and-paper game.

Dots and Boxes, invented in the 19th century, was among Dr. Conway’s favorite games. On a
grid of dots, two players take turns making a single horizontal or vertical line between two
unjoined adjacent dots. When a player completes a box, she earns a point and marks her initial
inside the box and then must take another turn. The winner is the player who takes the most
boxes. Erik Demaine

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times
Ten finished games of Dots and Boxes between Dr. Conway and the author. Dr. Conway won nearly all. John Horton Conway

He gave a camp lecture on “How To Beat Children At Their Own Games,” and accepted a challenge to play a dozen or so campers in
parallel; if they won a single game, he would declare the campers victorious. At one point, the campers were horrified to discover that he
had borrowed a copy of his “Winning Ways” from the camp office to brush up on strategy. But, circling the table of opponents, he made
math camp history, losing three times. “Wait a minute,” he said. “What’s happened here? You seem to have won!”

For Jamin Liu, a former Mathcamper and counselor and now a bioengineering grad student at the University of California, San Francisco,
Dr. Conway’s perpetual dragooning with games was more than just fun. “They were well disguised as cool tricks that I could share without
necessarily getting into underlying mathematical ideas, which were interesting to me but not to my friends,” Ms. Liu said. She added that
she never managed to beat Dr. Conway at Dots and Boxes: “I always got too greedy in the early game!”

By contrast, Dr. Bhargava, a 2014 Fields Medalist, was victorious against Conway. “Once, by accident,” he said. Dr. Bhargava worked and
played a great deal with Dr. Conway, who served as his first-year graduate studies adviser. “His attitude affirmed my own thoughts about
math as play, though he took this attitude far beyond what I ever expected from a Princeton math professor, and I loved it,” he said.

A final trick

Dr. Conway in 2012, playing Dots and Boxes at Princeton. Siobhan Roberts

Our last trip together was in January of 2019. We headed out from Dr. Conway’s Princeton care residence — he lived there after suffering a
number of strokes — to a favorite restaurant, Tomo Sushi, with mathematicians Joseph Kohn and Simon Kochen and the New York
magician Mark Mitton. (Dick Esterle, the inventor of geometric toys like the “Icosa” fidget ball, joined by text.)

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1/1/22, 12:36 AM Travels With John Conway, in 258 Septillion Dimensions - The New York Times

While waiting for lunch, Dr. Conway recalled a visit with Mr. Gardner. During dinner at a restaurant, the waitress had dealt plates onto the
table with a clatter. Mr. Gardner responded with a sleight-of-hand gag: He dropped his cutlery straight through his plate. The waitress
screamed, and then Mr. Gardner repeated the trick around the table.

Sitting there at the sushi joint, Mr. Mitton grabbed a plate and knife and improvised an encore on the spot. Dr. Conway was appreciatively
agog; 50 years earlier, he had asked Mr. Gardner to teach him that trick. “Later,” Mr. Gardner promised. But “later” proved elusive.

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A version of this article appears in print on , Section D, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Life of Games and Infinite Awe

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