"In modern mathematics there is a strong tendency towards formulations of concepts that minimise the number and significance of arbitrary choices. This crispness tends to emphasise the naturality of the construction or definition, at the expense sometimes of accessibility. Our mathematics is more conceptual today – more beautiful perhaps – but the cost of less explicitness is the compartmentalism that curses our discipline." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Like moonlight itself, Monstrous Moonshine is an indirect phenomenon. Just as in the theory of moonlight one must introduce the sun, so in the theory of Moonshine one must go well beyond the Monster. Much as a book discussing moonlight may include paragraphs on sunsets or comet tails, so do we discuss fusion rings, Galois actions and knot invariants." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Moonshine concerns the occurrence of modular forms in algebra and physics, and care is taken to avoid analytic complications as much as possible. But spaces here are unavoidably infinite-dimensional, and through this arise subtle but significant points of contact with analysis." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Moonshine forms a way of explaining the mysterious connection between the monster finite group and modular functions from classical number theory. The theory has evolved to describe the relationship between finite groups, modular forms and vertex operator algebras." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Moonshine is interested in the correlation functions of a class of extremely symmetrical and well-behaved quantum field theories called rational conformal field theories - these theories are so special that their correlation functions can be computed exactly and perturbation is not required." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Moonshine is profoundly connected with physics (namely conformal field theory and string theory). String theory proposes that the elementary particles (electrons, photons, quarks, etc.) are vibrational modes on a string of length about 10^−33 cm. These strings can interact only by splitting apart or joining together – as they evolve through time, these (classical) strings will trace out a surface called the world-sheet. Quantum field theory tells us that the quantum quantities of interest (amplitudes) can be perturbatively computed as weighted averages taken over spaces of these world-sheets. Conformally equivalent world-sheets should be identified, so we are led to interpret amplitudes as certain integrals over moduli spaces of surfaces. This approach to string theory leads to a conformally invariant quantum field theory on two-dimensional space-time, called conformal field theory (CFT). The various modular forms and functions arising in Moonshine appear as integrands in some of these genus-1 (‘1-loop’) amplitudes: hence their modularity is manifest." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"Physics reduces Moonshine to a duality between two different pictures of quantum field theory: the Hamiltonian one, which concretely gives us from representation theory the graded vector spaces, and another, due to Feynman, which manifestly gives us modularity. In particular, physics tells us that this modularity is a topological effect, and the group SL2(Z) directly arises in its familiar role as the modular group of the torus." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)
"The appeal of Monstrous Moonshine lies in its mysteriousness: it unexpectedly associates various special modular functions with the Monster, even though modular functions and elements of Mare conceptually incommensurable. Now, ‘understanding’ something means to embed it naturally into a broader context. Why is the sky blue? Because of the way light scatters in gases. Why does light scatter in gases the way it does? Because of Maxwell’s equations. In order to understand Monstrous Moonshine, to resolve the mystery, we should search for similar phenomena, and fit them all into the same story." (Terry Gannon, "Moonshine Beyond the Monster: The Bridge Connecting Algebra, Modular Forms and Physics", 2006)