Trusting thought to be its own light
Remarkable courage, persistence of blind academic overcomes disability, inspires thousands of students
'Mathematical beauty'
Where vision falls away, memory, structure, and persistence take over — quietly reassembling the world, one idea at a time. It is a world governed by physical truth — one that reveals itself most clearly through what Zhou, like many before him, understands as mathematical beauty.
Zhou considers himself fortunate to have glimpsed "the tip of the iceberg of that beauty".
"Mathematics is the language of nature, and physics its poetry," he reflected. "Their relationship is the great romance at the heart of theoretical physics: a testament to how the human mind's most abstract constructions can illuminate the deepest secrets of the cosmos."
One figure he often has in mind is physicist Albert Einstein, who immersed himself deeply in advanced mathematics to carry his ideas forward.
"At my best, I'm what Einstein called a lighthouse keeper," Zhou said, adding that a full understanding of Einstein's general theory of relativity still lies far beyond his reach. Einstein suggested that the solitary life of a lighthouse keeper would be an ideal job to allow a young theoretical physicist to think deeply.
Yet for Xing and others, Zhou is the lighthouse itself: fixed, enduring and illuminating the path ahead.
"Passion sustained through learning, dignity of a life devoted to understanding — if there are lessons more important than these, let me know," Xing said.
"In fact, his interests reach far beyond mathematics and physics. He loves history and music, and when he talks with us about photography, he does so with the same excitement as someone who can see."






















