Загрузка страницы

Freeman Dyson - Reflection on career (152/157)

To listen to more of Freeman Dyson’s stories, go to the playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFzDA6mtmKQEgWfcIu49J4nN

American-British physicist and mathematician, Freeman Dyson, was born in England in 1923. Aged 25, he relocated to Cornell University and has become known for his achievements in the fields of solid state physics, nuclear engineering and quantum field theory. [Listener: Sam Schweber]

TRANSCRIPT: I think you really can't tell until you're a hundred years dead what you did that was important, and so... I mean, as my son said, it might be the Origin of Life that actually is the most important scientific contribution. I never tried to create a school and I never had graduate students of the conventional sort who sort of carried on my work. Everything I've done has been scattered to the winds and you don't know whether it will sprout. So I think one just has to wait and see and I don't have any strong opinions. I think...

[SS] Can I phrase it slightly differently? What gave you the most satisfaction?

That's very different. Yes, yes. That's a question that's easy to answer because, I mean, the most satisfaction certainly came out of the mathematical beauty of the things that were successful, just on a technical level. The number theory was in a way the most satisfying of all because it was just a work of art and it was something that was perfect in itself. And it lasts. And it lasts so that's something that – as Hardy said, it's a work of art that's built with ideas and therefore lasts for ever. That was true, to some extent, of the... the work on random matrices and to lesser extent quantum electrodynamics. That's probably going to be superseded in some respects, but still it had that same quality. So I think that... from a point of view of satisfaction it was just the technical perfection of the mathematics that satisfied me the most. And... to some degree that carries over into the writing. In the things that I've found most satisfying in my writing are particular chapters in the books which became somehow works of art, like the... the chapter about Teller in Disturbing the Universe called The Prelude in E Flat Minor which somehow gave me enormous satisfaction. I mean it was... it was a problem: How do you describe Teller in a way that the public can respond to because... he's known to be an evil character and yet I want to present him sympathetically, how do you do that? And so, I... I mean the way I found to do it was the piano. The piano was the sort of the metaphor which would make Teller into a human being and... and I think it worked. So I started out with the Prelude in E flat Minor, and that's how I introduced him, so that was very satisfying to me. And there... that's the book that gave me the most satisfaction because I took longer to write it, it was written with greater care than the later ones, and... and of course the ending where I have a dream of the baby on the throne is a similar thing. I mean it may be too sentimental, but still I liked it.

[SS] If I were to pursue that particular metaphor would I be interpreting it right as it conveying a almost a William James, a Jamesian kind of conception of the deity as one that evolves with the universe?

Yes, absolutely. I mean this... it's... of course, it wasn't a conscious invention, I actually did dream this, and so it came to me unconsciously, but I think it somehow... speaks to that question: What is God? And the answer is He's a baby, that He's growing, He doesn't yet know what He is. And so that was, I think, a poetic way of saying that.

Видео Freeman Dyson - Reflection on career (152/157) канала Web of Stories - Life Stories of Remarkable People
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Введите заголовок:

Введите адрес ссылки:

Введите адрес видео с YouTube:

Зарегистрируйтесь или войдите с
Информация о видео
27 июля 2016 г. 19:20:13
00:04:24
Яндекс.Метрика