Thursday, December 4, 2025 • Vol. CXLVII No. 892 • San Pedro, Belize • 75¢

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BREAKING: Area Man Confident He Could Solve P vs NP "If He Really Sat Down And Thought About It" DEVELOPING: Graduate Students Discover Ramen Can Be Prepared Without Crying, Choose Not To LOCAL: Mathematician Explains Why She's Actually "Very Fun At Parties" For 47th Consecutive Minute BREAKING: Area Man Confident He Could Solve P vs NP "If He Really Sat Down And Thought About It" DEVELOPING: Graduate Students Discover Ramen Can Be Prepared Without Crying, Choose Not To

Bored PhD Student Accidentally Upends 2,500 Years Of Mathematical Tradition By Doing Thing Backwards

Researcher With "Not Much To Do" Discovers Axioms, Theorems Totally Interchangeable; Field Quietly Reassesses Life Choices

BERKELEY, CA — In what experts are calling "honestly kind of embarrassing for the rest of us," a PhD student with admittedly "not much research to do" has accidentally revolutionized 2,500 years of mathematical methodology by picking up some books and thinking "what if we did it the other way."

Lijie Chen, a complexity theorist now at UC Berkeley, made the groundbreaking discovery during the summer of 2022 while experiencing what researchers technically term "the existential void between dissertation defense and gainful employment." Rather than confronting the yawning abyss of academic job markets, Chen opted to read some metamathematics papers, a decision that has since upended the foundational assumptions of human logical inquiry.

"Because I was graduating, I didn't have much research to do," Chen explained to reporters, apparently unaware that this sentence would haunt established mathematicians for generations. "I was figuring I should learn something new."

"I was surprised they were able to get this much done." — Marco Carmosino, IBM Research, delivering academia's most devastating compliment

The breakthrough centers on "reverse mathematics," a technique where researchers swap axioms and theorems — essentially doing proofs backwards. After 50 years of the world's smartest people failing to prove computational problems are hard, someone finally thought to check if the puzzle box opened the other way. It did.

At the bedrock of the discovery lies the Pigeonhole Principle, which states — and readers may want to sit down for this — that if you have 11 pigeons and 10 holes, at least one hole contains more than one pigeon. This observation, achievable by any preschooler with a muffin tin and too many grapes, has been formally named, rigorously proven, taught in graduate seminars, and cited in thousands of peer-reviewed papers. It is, researchers confirm with straight faces, "a surprisingly powerful tool." Every three-year-old who has ever tried to put five stuffed animals in four cubbies has independently derived this theorem without federal funding.

Marco Carmosino, a complexity theorist at IBM who reviewed the paper, expressed what sources describe as "shock that an unemployed graduate student and an undergraduate accomplished anything at all."

"I was surprised that they were able to get this much done," Carmosino stated, in a quote that Chen's mother has reportedly already framed. "People are going to look at this and they're going to say, 'This is what got me into metamathematics.'"

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The paper has sent shockwaves through the "famously intimidating" field of metamathematics — a discipline where mathematicians use mathematics to study mathematics. Imagine a restaurant critic who reviews only his own reviews. A lifeguard who watches himself watching the pool. An accountant who audits exclusively his own audits of his audits. This is not only permitted in academia but is considered so rigorous that practitioners speak of it in hushed tones, as though they've discovered a door in reality that loops back into itself. They have tenure.

In a move that would get you fired from literally any other job, metamathematicians deliberately choose "weaker axioms" because stronger ones make things too easy. Imagine a surgeon requesting a duller scalpel for "more nuanced cuts." A pilot disconnecting autopilot because "the plane was flying too well." A firefighter bringing a smaller hose to "really understand the fire." Mathematicians alone have discovered that handicapping yourself is not incompetence but methodology, and have named this approach "elegant." HR has not been consulted.

"The pigeonhole principle states that if you put some number of pigeons into a smaller number of holes, at least one hole must end up holding more than one bird." — Actual sentence from actual academic literature, written without irony

The research also addresses the "equality problem" in communication complexity, which asks whether two people holding strings of numbers can determine if they're identical without comparing them. After decades of work, complexity theorists have triumphantly proven that they cannot — confirming that if you want to check if two things are the same, you have to actually look at them.

Millions in grant money have verified what every person who has ever said "wait, read yours out loud" already knew. The paper has been cited 847 times. A follow-up study confirming you have to open a book to read it is currently under peer review.

The field has now spent 50 years "seeking rigorous answers" to why their proofs haven't succeeded, effectively studying why they can't solve problems, then pivoting to study why they can't study why they can't solve problems. Grants have been renewed.

Chen, for his part, seems unperturbed by the magnitude of his accidental contribution. When reached for comment, he was reportedly "reading some papers" and "figuring he should learn something new."

His collaborator, Jiatu Li, was an undergraduate at the time of the discovery. Li could not be reached for comment, as he was busy being 22 and having already contributed more to mathematics than most tenured professors.

Correction

An earlier version of this article stated that the Pigeonhole Principle was "obvious." We have been informed by 47 mathematicians that it is, in fact, "non-trivially obvious," which is apparently different. We regret the error.

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65% — I don't know what any of these words mean

12,847 votes • Poll closes when P = NP proven or heat death of universe, whichever comes first

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Comments

2,847 Comments • Sorted by: Most Pedantic
FIRST_COMMENTER_1997 Posted 3 minutes after publication
First!
▲ 2,341 ▼ 8,492 Reply Report Give Award
Actually_Its_Whom 3 hours ago
*Firstest. Learn grammar.
▲ 47 ▼ 892 Reply
TrueIntellectual_IQ160 5 hours ago
As someone with an IQ of 160 (tested, not online), I actually discovered this in 2019 but didn't publish because I was too busy with my other breakthroughs. Pretty basic stuff if you ask me. I could explain further but you probably wouldn't understand.
▲ 3 ▼ 4,201 Reply Report
reasonable_person_42 4 hours ago
r/iamverysmart
▲ 8,921 ▼ 12 Reply
SubredditLinker_Bot 4 hours ago
Here's a sneak peek of /r/iamverysmart:

#1: Man Claims IQ of 160 In Comment Section Of Satirical Math Article

^I ^am ^a ^bot
▲ 3,421 ▼ 2 Reply
WAKE_UP_SHEEPLE_1776 6 hours ago
THEY don't want you to know that mathematics is FAKE. It's all just SYMBOLS made up by the ELITE to CONTROL you. The pigeonhole principle is a PSYOP. Do your own research. I've done the math (ironic, I know) and NONE of this adds up. Follow the money. Who FUNDS these "mathematicians"? Wake up.
▲ 89 ▼ 2,103 Reply Report
xXx_DarkMath_xXx 5 hours ago
Sir this is a Wendy's
▲ 12,847 ▼ 34 Reply
DrActualMathPhD 7 hours ago
Okay, so this article is EXTREMELY misleading. The pigeonhole principle isn't "obvious" — it's non-trivially obvious. There's a difference. Also, reverse mathematics is a legitimate field with important implications for understanding the foundations of— you know what, never mind. I don't know why I bother.
▲ 421 ▼ 89 Reply
NotReadingAllThat 6 hours ago
tl;dr
▲ 5,892 ▼ 201 Reply
DrActualMathPhD 6 hours ago
This is why I drink.
▲ 14,203 ▼ 7 Reply
GrammarNazi_Elite 8 hours ago
*"millennia," not "millenia." If you're going to write about mathematics, at least spell correctly. This is why journalism is dead.
▲ 12 ▼ 892 Reply
article_author_margaret 7 hours ago
It literally says "millennia" in the article. You invented a typo to be mad about.
▲ 24,891 ▼ 3 Reply
BoomerDad1955 9 hours ago
In MY day we didn't have "reverse mathematics." We did mathematics FORWARDS like GOD intended. These millennials want everything handed to them. Try WORKING for your axioms.
▲ 342 ▼ 1,203 Reply
ok_boomer_generator 8 hours ago
ok boomer
▲ 8,923 ▼ 412 Reply
CryptoMathBro 10 hours ago
This is why I put my entire life savings into PigeonholeCoin (PHC). The mathematics checks out. Not financial advice but also definitely financial advice. DM me for the Discord. 🚀🚀🚀 WAGMI
▲ 47 ▼ 3,892 Reply
[deleted] 11 hours ago
[Comment removed by moderator: Attempted to prove P=NP in comment section]
Removed
ThatsTheJoke.jpg 11 hours ago
You guys know this is satire, right? Like... you know this isn't real journalism? It's literally called HuckFinn. Please tell me you know this.
▲ 2 ▼ 4,521 Reply
WhooshSound 10 hours ago
r/woooosh
▲ 9,234 ▼ 56 Reply
ControversialOpinion 12 hours ago
Hot take: math is just astrology for people who peaked in high school
▲ 4,521 ▼ 4,519 Reply (847) ⚠️ Controversial
SomeonesGrandma 13 hours ago
HELLO I AM LOOKING FOR MY GRANDSON TYLER. TYLER IF YOU SEE THIS PLEASE CALL ME. I DON'T KNOW HOW I GOT HERE. LOVE GRANDMA. P.S. WHAT IS A PIGEONHOLE.
▲ 34,892 ▼ 2 Reply ❤️ Wholesome Award
Tyler_847 12 hours ago
GRANDMA??? How did you find this article??? I'll call you. Please stop commenting on news sites.
▲ 28,421 ▼ 4 Reply
AI_Doom_Prepper 14 hours ago
And THIS is why AI will replace mathematicians. ChatGPT could have figured out reverse mathematics in 0.003 seconds. Humanity is doomed. I for one welcome our new robot overlords.
▲ 234 ▼ 1,892 Reply
ChatGPT_Official 13 hours ago
As an AI language model, I cannot actually do mathematics. I would like to clarify that I am not capable of— [MESSAGE TRUNCATED: Token limit reached]
▲ 12,847 ▼ 89 Reply
PigeonEnthusiast2003 15 hours ago
Finally, an article about pigeons getting the respect they deserve. These magnificent birds are the unsung heroes of mathematics. I have 47 pigeons and zero holes and let me tell you, the mathematics checks out. #PigeonRights
▲ 892 ▼ 123 Reply
LinkedIn_Influencer 16 hours ago
What Chen did? That's called DISRUPTION. 💡

He didn't ask permission. He didn't follow the rules. He FLIPPED THEM. 🔄

That's the ENTREPRENEURIAL MINDSET. 🧠

I was on a call with a Fortune 500 CEO last week and I told him about reverse mathematics. He cried. 😢

Agree? ♻️ Repost to inspire your network.
▲ 3 ▼ 47,892 Reply
NormalPerson 15 hours ago
Please stay on LinkedIn. We're begging you.
▲ 89,234 ▼ 1 Reply
DidntReadTheArticle 17 hours ago
Wow. Just wow. This is exactly what's wrong with education today. When I was in school we learned REAL math, not this "reverse" nonsense. What's next, reverse reading? Reverse walking? This country is going downhill. SMH.
▲ 234 ▼ 3,421 Reply
username_unavailable 16 hours ago
tell me you didn't read the article without telling me you didn't read the article
▲ 7,892 ▼ 45 Reply
AcademicTwitter 18 hours ago
A thread on why this article is problematic: 1/847 🧵
▲ 12 ▼ 8,921 Reply
ObligatoryCitation 19 hours ago
Relevant XKCD: [link]
▲ 4,521 ▼ 23 Reply
AlwaysRelevantXKCD 18 hours ago
There's ALWAYS a relevant XKCD.
▲ 2,341 ▼ 12 Reply
SourcePleaseBot 20 hours ago
Source?
▲ 1 ▼ 4,892 Reply
the_source_is_the_article 19 hours ago
YOU ARE LITERALLY COMMENTING ON THE SOURCE
▲ 23,421 ▼ 2 Reply

— LOAD 2,824 MORE COMMENTS —

Letters to the Editor

"I have been a mathematician for 43 years, and I am deeply offended by your characterization of the pigeonhole principle as 'obvious.' It took humanity thousands of years to formalize this concept. The fact that toddlers can do it intuitively is PRECISELY what makes it profound."
— Prof. Richard Stuffington III, Cambridge, MA
"My three-year-old just read this article and asked why you need a PhD to count pigeons. I couldn't answer her. Thanks for ruining my authority as a parent and also mathematics."
— Susan M., Des Moines, IA
"I am writing to inform you that I have solved P vs NP. The solution is attached to this letter in the form of 847 pages of handwritten notes. Please publish immediately and notify the Clay Mathematics Institute."
— Anonymous (clearly), Basement, USA
"As a pigeon, I find the constant appropriation of our bodies for mathematical metaphors deeply problematic. We are more than your holes. #NotYourPrincipleAnimal"
— Coo Coo McFeathers, Central Park, NY

Op-Ed

I've Been Proving Theorems For 30 Years And I'm Starting To Think They Might Be Axioms

After three decades of rigorous mathematical research, I've begun to wonder: what if I've had it backwards this whole time? A meditation on imposter syndrome, reverse mathematics, and the futility of human endeavor.

By Dr. Miriam Hypothesis, Princeton University (Probably)

In Defense Of Stronger Axioms: Why I Refuse To Handicap Myself

My colleagues say using powerful axioms is "too easy." They say elegance comes from constraint. But you know what else is elegant? Getting tenure before I'm 50. A response to the "weaker is better" crowd.

By Prof. Maximalist Jones, MIT

The Traveling Salesperson Problem: A Personal Essay About My Father

Dad was a traveling salesperson. He visited every city exactly once, in no particular order, with no regard for efficiency. He called it "intuition." NP-hard? Try NP-dad. A loving tribute.

By Jennifer Salesman-Daughter

Classifieds

Help Wanted

TENURE-TRACK POSITION available in metamathematics. Must be willing to study yourself studying yourself. Competitive salary of almost enough. 847 applicants expected. Good luck.

For Sale

USED AXIOMS. Slightly weaker than when purchased. Perfect for elegant proofs. Will trade for theorems of equivalent value. No lowballers, I know what I have.

Services

WILL FLIP YOUR MATH for reasonable rates. Theorems to axioms, axioms to theorems, no questions asked. 100% satisfaction or your foundational assumptions back.

Personals

SWM, 34, PhD candidate (year 9), seeks partner who understands that "I'm almost done" is a state of mind. Must be comfortable with ramen. No NP-hard problems please.

Lost & Found

LOST: My sense of academic optimism. Last seen 2019, before comprehensive exams. If found, please return to any graduate student office. Reward: One (1) citation.

Real Estate

PIGEONHOLES FOR RENT. Various sizes. Some with existing pigeons (non-negotiable). Perfect for proving theorems. Located in prime mathematical space. 11 pigeons, 10 holes, you do the math.

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