Math genius daniel tammet biography
Biography
Daniel Tammet FRSA was born in a working-class suburb of London, England, on 31 January , the eldest of nine children.
Imagine if, when looking at a piece of art, you saw a numerical code. Or a rainbow when reading a book. Author and mathematician Tammet was born with autistic savant syndrome, a developmental condition which affects around one person in The connections in his mind have evolved differently, which has always allowed him to observe the world differently from the norm.His mother had worked as a secretarial assistant; his father was employed at a sheet metal factory. Both became full-time parents.
Despite early childhood epileptic seizures and atypical behaviour, Tammet received a standard education at local schools.
His learning was enriched by an early desire for reading. He won the town's 'Eager Reader' prize at the age of eleven. At secondary school he was twice named Student of the Year.
Daniel Paul Tammet born 31 January is a British high-functioning autistic savant gifted with a facility for mathematical and organic language learning. He was born Daniel Corney later deciding to change his surname to Tammetthe first of nine children, to working-class parents in London. Experiencing numbers as colours or sensations is a well-documented form of synaesthesiabut the detail and specificity of Tammet's mental imagery of numbers is unusual. In his mind, he says, each integer up to 10, has its own unique shape, colour, texture and feel.He matriculated in and completed his Advanced level studies (in French, German, and History) two years later.
In Tammet took up a volunteer English teaching post in Kaunas, Lithuania, returning to London the obeying year.
In he launched the online language learning company Optimnem. It was named a member of the UK's 'National Grid for Learning' in
In , Tammet was finally able to put a name to his difference when he was diagnosed with high-functioning autistic savant syndrome by Professor Simon Baron-Cohen at Cambridge University's Autism Research Centre.
The same year, on March 14, Tammet came to public attention when he recited the mathematical constant Pi () from memory to 22, decimal places in 5 hours, 9 minutes, without error.
The recitation, at the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford, set a European record.
Tammet began writing in His first book, Born On A Blue Day, subtitled 'A Memoir of Asperger's and an Extraordinary Mind', was first published in the UK in and became a Sunday Times bestseller.
Daniel Tammet, a British autistic savant, is a man of extraordinary talents. He can multiply three-digit numbers in his leader with ease, speaks at least 10 foreign languages and created his owneffortlessly extracts cube roots, and "feels" prime and composite numbers. Yet, Tammet is also autistic, which means that alongside his highly developed abilities, he struggles with simple everyday tasks such as distinguishing left from right. Born in in London under the name Daniel Paul Corney which he later changed, finding it ill-suitedTammet's prodigious memory was evident from childhood.The US edition, published in , spent 8 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. In , the American Library Association named it a 'Best Book for Young Adults'. It was also a Booklist Editors' Choice. It has sold over , copies worldwide, and been translated into more than 20 languages.
In , Tammet published Embracing the Wide Sky, a personal survey of current neuroscience.
The French edition (co-translated by Tammet himself) became one of the country's best-selling non-fiction books of the year.
A genius explains - Centre for the Mind: Daniel “Danny” Tammet (born Daniel Paul Corney; 31 January ) is an English writer and savant. His memoir, Born on a Blue Day (), is about his early life with Asperger syndrome and savant syndrome, and was named a "Best Book for Young Adults" in by the American Library Association 's Young Adult Library Services magazine. [1].It also appeared on bestseller lists in the UK, Canada, and Germany, and has been translated into numerous languages.
Thinking in Numbers, Tammet's first collection of essays,was also a multi-translated international bestseller.
It was praised by authors as diverse as J. M. Coetzee, Amy Tan, Billy Collins, Oliver Sacks, Rosa Montero, Kurt Andersen and David Eagleman.
Tammet's translation into French of a collection of poetry by the Nobel Prize Candidate Les Murray, C'est une chose sérieuse que d'être parmi les hommes, came out in
Mishenka (), a debut novel, was published in France, Belgium, Switzerland and Québec.
Tammet's second collection of essays, Every Word is A Bird We Teach to Sing, appeared in the UK, USA and France in
Portraits, a bilingual first poetry collection was published in
How to be ‘Normal’ was published by Quercus in
In Tammet emigrated to France.
He lives in Paris.
He is a graduate of the Open University (B.A. in the Humanities, First Class Honours), and was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA) in
Portrait
© Jérôme Tabet