Norton, , his book of reminiscences based on taped conversations with Ralph Leighton, the son of his Lectures co-author Robert. The breadth of Feynman's scientific interests was brought home to me during a chance visit to the Caltech archives. They turned out to be Feynman's.
Randomly flicking through, I was struck by nearly pages of notes from the s with a peculiar, decade-long timeline marked in Feynman's unmistakable writing. As I guessed and later confirmed, these were all topics he was reading about in Scientific American. Feynman seems to have been hard at work learning anything and everything he could about biology, coloured by physical reasoning — although by then he was one of the most famous physicists in the world. Page after page is littered with Feynman's drawings, notes and questions on topics ranging from the phylogeny of plants and animals, and the structure of proteins to the beautiful membrane structures of mitochondria.
They give a feeling of his roving mind busily formulating his own version of biology. More importantly, they show once again his delight in learning about the marvels of nature and his urge to bring order to the things he knew. At the end of these notes, Feynman returns to the mysteries of the quantum world — his biological musings are replaced by lengthy calculations. Mark Twain quipped that a classic is something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read.
Feynman's classic breaks the mould. Some respondents to my 'favourite books' query speak of dog-eared copies lovingly read on long stints around the globe. Among them are a young high-school student who in Yugoslavia's Communist era tried to master Maxwell's equations; an Israeli army officer stealing time to read every page over years of duty; and a brilliant Indian undergraduate trying to breathe life into a freshman physics course designed to 'train' engineers.
One travel-bum mathematics student decided it was time to learn physics — and turned to the lectures, eventually landing a place as a graduate student in Feynman's former department at Caltech.
The book has a cult following among non-specialist readers as well. Footnote 1. The series is free at www. You can also search for this author in PubMed Google Scholar. Correspondence to Rob Phillips. Reprints and Permissions. Phillips, R. In retrospect: The Feynman Lectures on Physics. Nature , 30—31 Download citation. Published : 04 December Alan Rice for his steadfast enthusiasm for this project, and for rallying the support of Caltech's Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy.
We wish to thank Carver Mead, for his warm encouragement and generous financial support, without which this edition would have been impossible, Thomas Kelleher and Basic Books, for their open-mindedness in allowing this edition to be published free of charge, Adam Cochran, for tying up the many slippery loose ends that needed to come together in order for this edition to be realized, Alan Rice for his steadfast enthusiasm for this project, and for rallying the support of Caltech's Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy.
Volume I mainly mechanics, radiation, and heat. Volume II mainly electromagnetism and matter. Volume III quantum mechanics. Feynman's Messenger Lectures full hd videos of 7 lectures feynman gave at cornell in Lecture Recordings flp lecture recordings 4.
Lecture Photos flp lecture photos 5. Lecture Photos flp lecture photos. Feynman's Notes pages of flp lecture notes. He even developed a widely used pictorial representation scheme for the mathematical expressions explaining subatomic particles, which later became known as Feynman diagrams.
For his contributions to science, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in Feynman also worked on the development of the atomic bomb, and was a member of the panel that investigated the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. He has been credited with pioneering the field of quantum computing and introducing the concept of nanotechnology.
He led quite an amazing life! Now, if you are not a theoretical physicist, quantum electrodynamics, the physics of the superfluidity, and those other things I just talked about probably sound pretty confusing to you.
With such an amazing career, Feynman had a lot of knowledge to share with the world. As a professor, Feynman saw firsthand the parts of learning physics that his students struggled with the most. So he wrote this handy-dandy guide that anyone interested in learning about physics can comprehend.
It includes three lectures on problem-solving and a lecture on inertial guidance that were not included in his famous collection The Feynman Lectures on Physics. There are also exercises to help you practice what you learn. Not only was Feynman a brilliant scientist, he was also deeply engaged, fascinated, and delighted with the world around him.
This book is based on a previously unpublished, three-part public lecture he gave at the University of Washington in This is Feynman on science and religion, flying saucers, telepathy, faith healing, the loss of his first wife, and more, told with his characteristic wit and charm.
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