Early life Shinichi Mochizuki was born to parents Kiichi and Anne Mochizuki. When he was five years old, Shinichi Mochizuki and his family left Japan to live in the United States. His father was Fellow of the Center for International Affairs and Center for Middle Eastern Studies at
Harvard University (1974–76). Mochizuki attended
Phillips Exeter Academy and graduated in 1985. Mochizuki entered
Princeton University as an undergraduate student at the age of 16 and graduated as
salutatorian with an A.B. in mathematics in 1988. He remained at Princeton for graduate studies and received his Ph.D. in mathematics in 1992 after completing his doctoral dissertation, titled "The geometry of the compactification of the
Hurwitz scheme," also under the supervision of Faltings. After his graduate studies, Mochizuki spent two years at Harvard University and then in 1994 moved back to Japan to join the
Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences (RIMS) at
Kyoto University, and was promoted to professor in 2002. In 2000–2008, he discovered several new theories including the theory of
frobenioids, mono-anabelian geometry and the etale theta theory for line bundles over tempered covers of the
Tate curve. On August 30, 2012, Mochizuki released four preprints, whose total size was about 500 pages, that developed
inter-universal Teichmüller theory and applied it in an attempt to prove several very famous problems in
Diophantine geometry. These include the strong
Szpiro conjecture, the hyperbolic
Vojta conjecture and the
abc conjecture over every number field. In September 2018, Mochizuki posted a report on his work by
Peter Scholze and
Jakob Stix, which asserted that the third preprint contains an irreparable flaw; he also posted several documents containing his rebuttal of their criticism. The majority of number theorists have found Mochizuki's preprints very difficult to follow and have not accepted the conjectures as settled, although there are a few prominent exceptions, including Go Yamashita,
Ivan Fesenko, and Yuichiro Hoshi, who vouch for the work and have written expositions of the theory. On April 3, 2020, two Japanese mathematicians,
Masaki Kashiwara and Akio Tamagawa, announced that Mochizuki's claimed proof of the
abc conjecture would be published in
Publications of the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, a journal of which Mochizuki is chief editor. The announcement was received with skepticism by
Kiran Kedlaya and
Edward Frenkel, as well as being described by
Nature as "unlikely to move many researchers over to Mochizuki's camp". The special issue containing Mochizuki's articles was published on March 5, 2021. ==Awards==