He said his dabbling in mathematics led him to study the universal constant briefly—and then calculate the answer: 42.
He said he only dabbled in time travel, yet he ended up creating the Time Shuttle Machine directly.
Truly.
The passive skill of geniuses—is it just Versailles-like modesty?
In an instant.
Lin Xian thought of old jokes like "Peking University is alright" and "Nothing to my name."
Perhaps.
When the mathematical Prince, Gauss, shocked the entire mathematical community back then, what was he thinking? Maybe it was just "Doesn't this just require a pair of hands?"
Emperor Gao Wen once wrote in a letter.
After Du Yao, the neural field had no further breakthroughs—not due to a lack of effort, experience, or accumulation, but rather due to the lack of something incredibly precious—a flash of inspiration.
In science, breakthroughs depend greatly on effort, of course, but flashes of inspiration and luck are evidently much more crucial.