Tuesday, May 14, 2013

The Appliance of Science


What would you like to with your life? Would you like to be an internationally renowned physicist, an accomplished musician, a fine Draughtsman, an inspirational educator, a rebel against authority or a beloved Pater Familias? 'The Fantastic Mr Feynman' (BBC2) looked back on the incredible life of Nobel Laureate Richard Feynman, a man who managed to do all these things, as well as being one of the designers of the Atom Bomb as part of the Manhattan Project, a role of which he would feel great remorse once the Bomb was dropped. Feynman packed so much into one lifetime that it is hard to see how someone could be as much a polymath in today's era of specialisation and information overload - he was, perhaps, the last Renaissance Man. Science was baffling to 'thetvreviewguy' when he was a lad, and Feynman, with his sense of the poetic, the aesthetic and his belief that creativity, not data, is at the heart of all our endeavours, would inspire anyone with his enthusiasm, his style and his love of life. Instrumental in unearthing the root cause of the Challenger disaster, Feynman's distrust of authority came from his father who cautioned him not to respect rank or 'epaulettes' (as he called it) for their own sake. While the mathematical genius manifested in the man is something most of us can only admire from afar and maybe try to understand, it was the humanity in the life of the fantastic Dr Feynman itself that stands as his legacy, as much as his work.

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