The article covers so much -- and it doesn't even mention the "Wald estimator," which is part of the foundation of the modern (causal-inference-oriented) view of the method of instrumental variables.
He made major contributions to statistics. The Wald test in statistics is named after him (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wald_test). I think he was also a forerunner of decision theory and invented an early form of the minimax principle:
Wald, A. (1939). Contributions to the theory of statistical estimation and testing hypotheses. The Annals of Mathematics, 10(4), 299-326.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 21.6 ms ] threadPerhaps being homeschooled helped acquire such skill.
Add to other mathematicians who would have been even more prominent if they hadn't died before their time: Galois, Ramanujan, Turing...
Wald, A. (1939). Contributions to the theory of statistical estimation and testing hypotheses. The Annals of Mathematics, 10(4), 299-326.
This is a nice riddle:
Is summing the series:
1, -1, 1, 1,....
0 = (1-1)+(1-1)+(1-1)....=0+0+0...
or
1 = 1+(-1+1)+(-1+1)+(-1+1)....=1+0+0+0...