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My goal is to find the general form for the asymptotic cardinality of a compound arithmetic progression. I'm not affiliated with a university and I certainly don't have any obligation to continue my research. However, it is very fulfilling to me. I spend my time in the library; I study through the books on the shelves and I don't really have anyone to tell me that my efforts are not good enough.

The problem comes in when I realized that if I was stronger in Analytic Number Theory, then I could start to look for the general estimate for the asymptotic cardinality of any compound arithmetic progression, and I'm terribly curious about how it works out. I am jealous of professional students with academic affiliations, access to reviewers, and journals; terribly. I admit that and it's a big obstacle. And I'm envious that they had the opportunity to enjoy more prestigious settings. I wish I could get a foot hold like that too. But at the same time I just don't think it's going to be possible for me to be published or be respected on the same level, no matter what I do.

Is it healthy for me to behave like this? Or am I being too optimistic in thinking that I have something to contribute that could blossom into graduate level, age appropriate research and/or a funded project?

The point is that I've given up looking for a degree or trying to participate in the research projects of others; it places the burden on them to find a place for me in their work and I'd rather be sharpening my own offering instead of going on a wild goose chase. Math doesn't require the same kind of budgetary overhead, or anywhere near the same level of oversight as the life sciences. I don't need a lab. I don't need dangerous chemicals or expensive equipment, and I don't need a workshop, either.

The other question (of which this was marked as a duplicate) was asked by a much more established individual that already finished a Master's degree and wanted to collaborate on somebody else's research; putting together a CV to apply for a research spot is much easier when there's something to anchor it.

user56983
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  • Can you elaborate on why you can't become a "professional student" and do this in an academic setting? Or are you asking if your idea is good enough to be able to get admitted to a university? – deckeresq Jun 23 '17 at 19:07
  • I'll be honest. I don't have a degree and I've struggled with mental illness my entire life. The last thing I want to do is walk around muttering to myself about some obscure math problem that only makes sense to me and I can easily see that happening. – user56983 Jun 23 '17 at 19:14
  • I went to university out of high school, but I wasn't emotionally stable. I had suffered some personal tragedies and it didn't work out. Then I tried university again a few years later and I went through the same sort of burn out. – user56983 Jun 23 '17 at 19:15
  • All those years, I always had curiosity and wanted to do independent research and I'm tired of the excuses; I want to get something done. – user56983 Jun 23 '17 at 19:20
  • Have you found any professional researchers who may be working on something similar? Perhaps you could reach out to one of them and tell them that you've taken some steps towards solving this problem and would be interested in co-authoring a paper. – deckeresq Jun 23 '17 at 19:58
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    " muttering to myself about some obscure math problem that only makes sense to me and I can easily see that happening." Isn't this what research is like? – Marko Karbevski Jun 23 '17 at 20:57
  • @tonysdg While the linked question comes from a similar perspective, I believe that the differences are quite relevant for the answers. In particular, the OP here is interested in a particular area, whereas the OP in the other question was interested in just doing some kind of research. The accepted answer there would not make sense as an answer to this question. – Arno Jun 23 '17 at 22:23
  • As another fact, in order to access pay-walled journals, there is a way that I've heard of, which is mentioned, for example, here: https://academia.stackexchange.com/questions/79013/is-sci-hub-also-used-in-places-having-institutional-access/79022#79022 ;) – Marko Karbevski Jun 23 '17 at 22:30
  • Thanks @MarkoKarbevski, but I really just want to know what I should tell my family when they want to know what I've been doing lately. – user56983 Jun 24 '17 at 01:07
  • @deckeresq Again, the problem with ignores and rejections are that they're a big time waster, when you don't use a form letter (Don't tell anybody I do that.) – user56983 Jun 24 '17 at 01:25
  • It isn't directly related to your question, but see: https://academia.stackexchange.com/questions/18491/i-believe-i-have-solved-a-famous-open-problem-how-do-i-convince-people-in-the-f - There is a lot of good advice there that indirectly highlights why it's important and helpful to have some affiliation with others while you work on a problem. – Bryan Krause Jun 24 '17 at 04:19

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If I understand you correctly, then you long for the access to journals and fellow researchers coming with a university affiliation, but the intensity and committment of being a graduate student has turned out to be bad for you.

It is uncommon, but not entirely unusual, for individuals to be associated with a research group at a university on such level. This might come in some formalized arrangement, eg with a title like "Honorary Research Fellow", or just be handeled by some informal arrangements. Common perks would include access to mathematical journals via the university and being on the mailing list for the local seminars. You may or may not be permitted to claim the university as affiliation when submitting papers, but I believe that this is a very minor aspect anyway.

If you can find a research group, ideally in your geographical area, that is interested in your kind of questions, then it would not be unreasonable to contact them and ask whether this is a possibility. Do brace for the potential of rejection (or being ignored) though.

Whether you personally have a change to produce publishable research in such an environment, or whether this would be benificial or detrimental to your mental health is something we cannot judge here.

Arno
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