TIME

Mailman Turned Math-Whiz Is the Chinese Equivalent of Good Will Hunting

It's a real-life Good Will Hunting

A migrant worker who works as a mailman in China has found a simple way to solve complex math problems, just like Matt Damon’s character from Good Will Hunting — and it’s earn him a job offer from a private investment group.

Yu Jianchun discovered new a way to find Carmichaels, also known as “pseudoprimes,” which are large numbers that appear to be prime, but in fact are not. He has no college degree or formal advanced mathematics training, but relies mostly on his intuition to solve the problems, he said.

“I made my discoveries through intuition,” Yu said in an interview with China Daily. “I would write down what I thought when inspiration struck about the Carmichael.”

Carmichaels have real-world applications and are commonly used for credit card encryptions and online shopping.

While his discoveries have not been verified, Yu’s achievement gained him international recognition and has stunned math experts.

After giving a demonstration of his discoveries at Zhejiang University, using only what he recalled from pure memory as his notes, he has been offered a statistics position at Silk Road Holding Group, an investment company in China.

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