| ▲ | iLemming 4 days ago | |
You're oversimplifying the message I'm trying to convey. "you just hire them, someone already raised them" - treats mathematicians as a commodity stock rather than a flow. The conversation frames it as "mathematicians vs. RAM" - a cost comparison. But that's like comparing the cost of a GPS unit vs. a ship captain. The captain isn't expensive because they can calculate routes; they're expensive because they know when the route is wrong. AI makes the math cheaper but makes the mathematician more valuable, at least until true AGI genuinely surpasses human mathematical creativity - at which point we have much bigger economic questions than mathematician salaries. The topic on itself is quite interesting, and far complex than supply/demand norms. Even before AI, there was and both wasn't shortage of mathematicians - academic pure mathematics - there's a glut. High school teachers - people exist; but they won't work for teacher salaries. Applied math - acute shortage - quant finance, ML research, cryptography, pharmaceutical modeling - we don't have enough. NSA - always struggled to hire - private sector salaries pull people away. Interdisciplinary - mathematical biology, climate modeling, materials science - domains where math is the bottleneck but the job title isn't really "mathematician" - acute shortage. | ||