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Albert Einstein
When Albert was five, his father showed him a pocket compass.
Albert realized that something in empty space was moving the needle and
later stated that this experience made "a deep and lasting impression".
As he grew, Albert built models and mechanical devices for fun, and
began to show a talent for mathematics.
In 1889, a family friend named Max Talmud, introduced
the ten-year-old Albert to key science and philosophy texts,
including Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and Euclid's Elements
(Einstein called it the "holy little geometry book").
From Euclid, Albert began to understand deductive reasoning (integral to
theoretical physics), and by the age of twelve, he learned Euclidean geometry
from a school booklet. He soon began to investigate calculus.
Albert later wrote that the spirit of learning and creative thought
were lost in strict rote learning.
Rote learning is a learning technique which avoids understanding the inner complexities and
inferences of the subject that is being learned and instead focuses on memorizing the material
so that it can be recalled by the learner exactly the way it was read or heard.
In other words, it is learning "just for the test". The major practice involved in rote learning
techniques is learning by repetition, based on the idea that one will be able to quickly recall
the meaning of the material the more they repeat it rather than reasoning.
Subramaniya Bharathiyar
Bharathi was educated at a local high school. His talents as a poet were recognized
even at the young age of 11 and was conferred the title of Bharathi (Goddess of learning).
Rabindranath Tagore
At 16 age, Rabindranath Tagore, in 1877, he arose to notability when he composed several works,
including a long poem set in the Maithili style pioneered by Vidyapati. He also wrote "Bhikharini"
(1877; "The Beggar Woman"the Bangla language's first short story)[4][5] and Sandhya Sangit (1882)
including the famous poem "Nirjharer Swapnabhanga" ("The Rousing of the Waterfall").
Srinivasa Ramanujan
Ramanujan was born in 1887 in Erode. His mother is believed
to have been well-educated in Indian mathematics.
In 1898, at age 10, he entered the town high school, THSS in Kumbakonam,
where he may have encountered formal mathematics for the first time.
By the age of 11 he had devoured the mathematical knowledge of two lodgers
at his home, both students at the Government College, and was lent books on
advanced trigonometry written by S.L. Loney , which he mastered by age 13.
His biographer reports that by 14 his true genius was beginning to become discernible.
However, Ramanujan could not concentrate on other subjects and failed his high school exams.
By age 17, he calculated Euler's constant to 15 decimal places.
He began to study what he thought was a new class of numbers, but instead
he had independently developed and investigated the Bernoulli numbers.
At this time in his life, he was quite poor and was often near the point of starvation.
M.S.Subbulakhsmi
M.S.Subbulakhsmi was born to a musical family, in the temple town of Madurai.
M.S. started learning Carnatic music from a very early age and released her first recording at the age of 10.
She then began her Carnatic classical music training under Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer and then
Hindustani classical training under Pandit Narayan Rao Vyas.
At 17, the child prodigy made her debut at the Madras Music Academy. Since then,
she performed countless musical forms in different languages such as Hindi, Bengali,
Gujarati, Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Sanskrit and Kannada.
Kalignar Karunanidhi
Karunanidhi entered politics at the age of 14 inspired listening to a speech by Alagiriswami of the Justice Party
by whom he was greatly influenced in 1932 and participated in Anti-Hindi agitations.
He founded an organisation for the local youth of his locality. He circulated a hand written newspaper
called Manavar Nesan to its members. Later he founded a student organisation called
Tamil Nadu Tamil Manavar Manram which was the first student wing of the Dravidan Movement.
Sivaji Ganesan
At the age of 9, Sivaji Ganesan was so interested in stage plays that he ran away from home
to pursue a career in theatre. His mother helped him get into a famous drama troupe.
Kamal Hasan
Kamal entered the film world as a child actor at the tender age of 6 in the film
Kalathur Kannamma and has been associated with the film world since then.
Ilaiyaraaja
Ilaiyaraaja's formative contact with music-making and performance came at the age of 14,
when he joined a travelling musical troupe headed by his elder brother, Pavalar Varadarajan
Viswanathan Anand
Anand's rise in the Indian chess world was meteoric. National level success came early for him
when he won the National Sub-Junior Chess Championship with a score of 9/9 in 1983 at the age of fourteen.
He became the youngest Indian to win the International Master Title at the age of fifteen, in 1984.
At the age of sixteen he became the National Champion and won that title two more times.
In 1988, at the age of eighteen, he became India's first Grandmaster.
A.R.Rehman
At the age of 11, he joined the troupe of Indian composer Ilaiyaraaja as a keyboardist.
He later played on the orchestra of M. S. Viswanathan and Ramesh Naidu, and accompanied
Zakir Hussain and Kunnakudi Vaidyanathan on world tours.
Vairamuthu
Vairamuthu could compose poems even at the young age of twelve. The speeches of Periyar & Anna,
the writings of Karunanidhi and the works of eminent poets like Bharathi, Bharathidasan and
Kannadasan and the life in the countryside shaped the young poet's thinking.
While he was fourteen, he acquired the ability to write Yappu type of Venba poetry.
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