But 1960′s Lisp was as bare-bones as it was high-level; you still had to wrote almost everything yourself from scratch.
Computerized math is the same today. No one wants to write everything they need from scratch, unless they’re working in a genuinely self-contained (i.e. ‘synthetic’) subfield where the prereqs are inherently manageable. See programming languages (with their POPLmark challenge) and homotopy-type-theory as examples of such where computerization is indeed making quick progress.
Computerized math is the same today. No one wants to write everything they need from scratch, unless they’re working in a genuinely self-contained (i.e. ‘synthetic’) subfield where the prereqs are inherently manageable. See programming languages (with their POPLmark challenge) and homotopy-type-theory as examples of such where computerization is indeed making quick progress.