âPure maths is a place of dreams,â writes Eugenia Cheng in her new book, łæâ+ây: AÂ Mathematicianâs Manifesto for Rethinking Gender. âItâs about dreaming up new concepts and new structures.â
Such dreams, as her subtitle suggests, are not just intellectual games but can help us address complex and intractable real-world issues. And she draws on the story of her own career to illustrate how.
Scientist-in-residence at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago since 2013, Cheng was previously senior lecturer in pure mathematics at the University of Sheffield. Her first two books â How to Bake Pi: Easy Recipes for Understanding Complex Maths and Beyond Infinity: An Expedition to the Outer Limits of Mathematics â provided wonderfully accessible introductions to some pretty challenging ideas.
The first, which includes recipes for custard, chocolate brownies and fruit crumble, was strongly influenced by her teaching experience. âWhen IÂ was in Sheffield,â Cheng tells Times Higher Education, âthe thing which perked my students up the most was talking about food. And so IÂ used it more and more.â
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When she moved to Chicago, however, many of her art students had âeither failed previous levels of maths or ran away from it because they hated itâ. She knew she would have to adjust her teaching style but made the remarkable decision to bring into her classes her own research field of higher-dimension category theory, normally taught only to maths specialists at postgraduate level.
âIâm now teaching more advanced maths in a slightly less rigorous way,â she says, âwhereas at Sheffield I was teaching less advanced maths slightly more rigorouslyâŠ[The art students] are not so interested in that level of rigour but the thought processes and the ideas behind it.â
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Such an approach challenges the conventional idea that maths is basically âcumulativeâ and consists of âincreasingly high hurdles, where you are tested to see if you can pass this hurdle and then are allowed to progress to the nextâ. Unfortunately, this only serves to âkeep people outâ. As someone committed to overcoming âmaths phobiaâ, she is always looking to break down such barriers.
What Cheng has also discovered at the Art Institute is that discussions of food âdidnât make [students there] perk up in the same wayâ. Instead, âit was questions of social justice and political issues which really motivated themâŠI had been very wary of talking about politics out loud up until then because, like most mathematicians, I had thought maths was supposed to be very neutral â and then [with the 2016 US presidential election] it became too importantâŠIf I ask my students to stop thinking about politics when they walk into the classroom, they are not going to be interested in anything Iâm saying.â
Chengâs third book, The Art of Logic: How to Make Sense in a World that Doesnât, published in 2018, already drew on her new, more politically engaged style of teaching, illustrating logical points with examples about white privilege, sexual harassment and fat shaming. She has now taken this several steps further. łæâ+ây is a book very much designed to change the world.
So where does gender come in?
In parallel with her teaching, research and public engagement work, Cheng â as a prominent female mathematician â is often asked to take part in discussions about getting more women into maths and science. Yet she often finds herself at odds with the consensus view.
âThe other women on those panelsâ, she reports, âtypically exhort everyone: âYou have to step out of your comfort zone! You have to take risks! You have to be OK with failure!â But IÂ know there are many young women, and men as well, who donât feel they want to do those things, and so they will be put off and decide they are just not cut out for [certain disciplines].â A more productive approach, she suggests, relies on âbuilding safety nets, having a network of supporters around you and defining failure out of existence by saying everything is a learning process. It is just a shift in psychology.â
Similarly, łæâ+ây cites a study from the 1990s into why men did better than women in Oxbridge exams. In subjects such as history, it turned out, one important factor was that âmen tended to write essays that took a strong position and argued it fiercely, and that this was highly valued. A balanced position argued from all points of view was valued less.â
One possible response, of course, is to âtrain women to make more one-sided argumentsâ. But this is an example of what łæâ+ây describes as âpseudo-feminismâŠin which women are exhorted to become more like men in order to be successfulâ.
A central problem, Cheng writes, is that debates about gender often turn into âan argument about what we should be arguing aboutâ. It is easy to get lost in endless, dizzying disputes about whether a particular piece of research really demonstrates that men are statistically âbetter at systematising than empathisingâ and, if so, whether this is innate and whether it is a reliable proxy for âbetter at mathsâ.
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What this fails to address is that certain characteristics â such as taking a strong but perhaps simplistic position in an essay â may be associated with men (for whatever reason) and favoured by society, which then leads to men being more successful. Yet we also need to ask whether such attributes are actually desirable. In the case of the Oxbridge exams, as Cheng points out, we might consider the impact on our political culture: should âpoliticians be judged by how well they make a speechâ or âhow well they listen to other peopleâs concerns and respond to themâ?
If we decide such characteristics are not desirable and we therefore work to promote other values, that will not only benefit society in itself but also help alter the gender balance of power without the need for quotas, âleaning inâ, assertiveness training for women or many other familiar forms of intervention.
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It is here that Cheng adopts the mathematicianâs privilege of inventing âa new dimensionâ and terminology. She uses the word âcongressiveâ to refer to forms of education, research, discussion and behaviour that âfocus on society and community over selfâ, âtak[e] others into account more than impos[e] on themâ and âemphasis[e] interdependence and interconnectednessâ. âIngressivenessâ, by contrast, means âfocusing on oneself over society and communityâ, and, among other things, involves a âtendency towards selective or single-track thought processesâ.
Having this bold new conceptual framework, in Chengâs view, has helped her analyse everything from teaching methods to voting systems without bringing in the baggage (and gendered assumptions) of words such as âcompetitiveâ and âcooperativeâ. In teaching maths the way she now does in Chicago, we read, she has been able to âdevelop a little utopia of a congressive society in my classroomâ. And to create a wider climate of gender equality, while we certainly need to address overt sexism and discrimination, the real key is to make the world more congressive, she says, rather than seeking to alter women or making special allowances for them, via a process of ââreverse sexismâ, in which women are deliberately favoured to make up for past oppressionâ.

Sunset on the American Dream, by Eugenia Cheng, at the Chicago Cultural Center © Paul Crisanti
Although ranging widely across many aspects of our lives, the book also slaughters a number of specifically academic sacred cows, including journal publishing and peer review. Cheng believes she has experienced âbeing held to a different standard than my male peers in refereed reportsâ. And while she âjust quietly lament[s] in a cornerâ when she feels her work should have been cited in a paper, she often receives communications from male mathematicians who are âangry because IÂ didnât cite them. Itâs quite unpleasant, so IÂ think about who might get angry [when deciding who to cite], which means Iâm skewing my own citations.â
Further distortions arise from the fact that âpeople who are principled decline to read papers written by their friends, whereas unprincipled people are willing to review their friendsâ. It was also depressing when famous authors seemed to have little difficulty in getting substandard work published, âexactly like what happens in the pop music world, which shouldnât happen in academia because we are supposed to be rationalâ.
But despite the biases they can introduce, donât editors and reviewers also perform an important function in excluding really bad papers?
âThe usefulness of gatekeepers could be preserved while removing the problems,â Cheng replies, âby making it less of a gate and more of a slope. The all-or-nothing aspect makes it really problematic: the idea that keeping people out makes things better. Itâs a bit like false positives and false negatives. We may be keeping something out that was worth letting in â and IÂ think thatâs much more problematic than the other way round, the fear of letting something in that wasnât worth it.
âI donât object to experts evaluating other peopleâs papers, but peer review is based on something completely anachronisticâŠThe cut-offs are based on how much space there is in a journal, even though now everyone reads everything digitally.â
These are not easy times to be optimistic, particularly for those seeking more congressive forms of politics. Yet Cheng finds a sliver of hope in the way that âpeople have had to start really thinking about what is happening with exams and entry into universitiesâ. For instance, in the US, the SAT college admission test did not run this year; for Cheng, the halting of standardised testing requirements for university applications âis an amazing result. There are people who have been saying they should do that for years. Itâs a pity it took a global pandemic to drop them, but maybe [admissions tutors] will realise that there are ways they can decide who should go to university without [making applicants sit] through epic multiple-choice, completely pointless tests.â
Looking further forward, does Cheng foresee a utopian world dominated by congressive behaviour and institutions â or will congressive and ingressive forces always have to battle it out against each other?
âIÂ personally donât feel any need to be ingressive any more,â she reflects. âIÂ canât think of any reasons why ingressive behaviour is important. Itâs inevitable that there will always be some, just as there will always be morons. But we can try to get people to be less moronic and more congressive.â
Eugenia Chengâs łæâ+ây: A Mathematicianâs Manifesto for Rethinking Gender has just been published by Profile Books.
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