The Best Short Works of Richard P. Feynman (Helix Books)
ByRichard P. Feynman★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | |
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Readers` Reviews
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
melissa reinke
Feynman seems to have something of a cult following, which is a shame, I think. He'd not approve of it. Reading his books, though, it's easy to understand how many people might come to almost worship the man. He was not only a remarkable scientist, he was accessible to the layman by virtue of his clear communication and clear language style. It was his accessibility, his style of communicating in the popular vernacular, and his passion for understanding and explaining things at their most basic level that gained him so much respect. While many academics were busy trying to impress their peers with 50-dollar words and technical mumbo jumbo, Feynman was explaining things with words like "jiggle."
While appreciating Feynman's dislike of cult figures, I count myself among the thousands of individuals that admire the man not only for his intelligence, but also for his earthly mannerisms. Here was a man who was not only very smart � he was, in a real sense, one of us; part of the mass of humanity. I found this book to be very engaging. In typical Feynman style it is both easy to read, and profoundly enlightening. These are the musings of a citizen scientist, curious intellectual, and genuine genius.
One of the stories I enjoyed most was Feynman's description of things his father taught him about birds. One day one of the other school kids asked Feynman to name a particular bird in the field. Feynman replied that he had no idea what the bird's name was, whereupon the kid jested that Feynman's dad had taught him nothing. But it was just the opposite. Feynman's dad had taught him lots about the bird � things about its behavior, color, etc. As Feynman recalls his father's lesson: "you know in all the languages you want to know what the name of that bird is and when you've finished with all that you'll know absolutely nothing whatsoever about the bird. You only know about humans in different places and what they call the bird." [See page 4]. This is a most profound observation that many people seem continually confused about: memorizing language-based facts (like the names of birds, lizards, planets, etc.) is not the same as studying those things, and understanding them.
Another of Feynman's beliefs was that understanding things at a mathematical and scientific level does not, and should not, destroy one's ability to appreciate the wonder of the world and universe we live in. In fact, Feynman argues just the opposite; that someone who understands science should find the world an even richer and more amazing place than someone who looks at it with unknowing eyes. This is also a theme in Richard Dawkins' book "Unweaving the Rainbow."
The book is replete with Feynman's musings about the nature of science, and a common thread is that the core of science is the freedom to doubt. He muses that he "believe[s] that one of the greatest dangers to modern society is the possible resurgence and expansion of the ideas of thought control; such as Hitler had, or Stalin in his time, or the Catholic religion in the Middle Ages, or the Chinese today." [See page 99]. He also speaks of the absolute need for full intellectual honesty in science: report all the data, and don't allow personal prejudices to filter it. Lay it all out, keep total commitment to truth, and let the chips fall where they fall.
One chapter describes his ideas regarding the conflict between science and religion. While other authors seem inclined to simply repeat the mantra "there is no fundamental problem between science and religion" Feynman points out that doubt is a foundation stone for science and a frequent taboo in religion. He also (correctly) points out that religion is composed of multiple parts, and that there is not a disagreement between the ethical parts of religion and science, but that a schism does exist between science and much of the mythological base found in religion.
It's not all about philosophy (which Feynman generally disliked). There are chapters that describe the ultimate energy use of computing machines, appeals for the development of nano technology, and Feynman's report on the Challenger disaster. There are also fun chapters, with Feynman describing some of his experiences while working at Los Alamos during development of the atomic bomb. Found throughout these stories are his contempt for figures of authority, and his ever-present need to question things, especially those things we take for granted.
In keeping with Feynman's advice, I resolved to find at least one thing in his book with which I disagreed. After all, Feynman would have wanted it that way. In the chapter that discusses science and religion, Feynman states "� it seems to me that there is no scientific evidence bearing on the Golden Rule." On the contrary, I think evolutionary pressure actually selects for "the Golden Rule," and I believe authors like Dawkins have shown convincingly that what looks like selflessness in some types of altruistic behavior is actually, from an evolutionary point of view, a selfish thing (it promotes the replication of genes responsible for that behavior).
Whether or not you agree with everything in the book is hardly the point. Feynman's point is that we should question and think about everything � including what he wrote. That's how you find things out. And if you've ever had the pleasure of finding things out, and then sitting back with hands clasped behind your head and a broad smile across your face, this book is for you.
While appreciating Feynman's dislike of cult figures, I count myself among the thousands of individuals that admire the man not only for his intelligence, but also for his earthly mannerisms. Here was a man who was not only very smart � he was, in a real sense, one of us; part of the mass of humanity. I found this book to be very engaging. In typical Feynman style it is both easy to read, and profoundly enlightening. These are the musings of a citizen scientist, curious intellectual, and genuine genius.
One of the stories I enjoyed most was Feynman's description of things his father taught him about birds. One day one of the other school kids asked Feynman to name a particular bird in the field. Feynman replied that he had no idea what the bird's name was, whereupon the kid jested that Feynman's dad had taught him nothing. But it was just the opposite. Feynman's dad had taught him lots about the bird � things about its behavior, color, etc. As Feynman recalls his father's lesson: "you know in all the languages you want to know what the name of that bird is and when you've finished with all that you'll know absolutely nothing whatsoever about the bird. You only know about humans in different places and what they call the bird." [See page 4]. This is a most profound observation that many people seem continually confused about: memorizing language-based facts (like the names of birds, lizards, planets, etc.) is not the same as studying those things, and understanding them.
Another of Feynman's beliefs was that understanding things at a mathematical and scientific level does not, and should not, destroy one's ability to appreciate the wonder of the world and universe we live in. In fact, Feynman argues just the opposite; that someone who understands science should find the world an even richer and more amazing place than someone who looks at it with unknowing eyes. This is also a theme in Richard Dawkins' book "Unweaving the Rainbow."
The book is replete with Feynman's musings about the nature of science, and a common thread is that the core of science is the freedom to doubt. He muses that he "believe[s] that one of the greatest dangers to modern society is the possible resurgence and expansion of the ideas of thought control; such as Hitler had, or Stalin in his time, or the Catholic religion in the Middle Ages, or the Chinese today." [See page 99]. He also speaks of the absolute need for full intellectual honesty in science: report all the data, and don't allow personal prejudices to filter it. Lay it all out, keep total commitment to truth, and let the chips fall where they fall.
One chapter describes his ideas regarding the conflict between science and religion. While other authors seem inclined to simply repeat the mantra "there is no fundamental problem between science and religion" Feynman points out that doubt is a foundation stone for science and a frequent taboo in religion. He also (correctly) points out that religion is composed of multiple parts, and that there is not a disagreement between the ethical parts of religion and science, but that a schism does exist between science and much of the mythological base found in religion.
It's not all about philosophy (which Feynman generally disliked). There are chapters that describe the ultimate energy use of computing machines, appeals for the development of nano technology, and Feynman's report on the Challenger disaster. There are also fun chapters, with Feynman describing some of his experiences while working at Los Alamos during development of the atomic bomb. Found throughout these stories are his contempt for figures of authority, and his ever-present need to question things, especially those things we take for granted.
In keeping with Feynman's advice, I resolved to find at least one thing in his book with which I disagreed. After all, Feynman would have wanted it that way. In the chapter that discusses science and religion, Feynman states "� it seems to me that there is no scientific evidence bearing on the Golden Rule." On the contrary, I think evolutionary pressure actually selects for "the Golden Rule," and I believe authors like Dawkins have shown convincingly that what looks like selflessness in some types of altruistic behavior is actually, from an evolutionary point of view, a selfish thing (it promotes the replication of genes responsible for that behavior).
Whether or not you agree with everything in the book is hardly the point. Feynman's point is that we should question and think about everything � including what he wrote. That's how you find things out. And if you've ever had the pleasure of finding things out, and then sitting back with hands clasped behind your head and a broad smile across your face, this book is for you.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
donald schultz
Richard Feynman's The Pleasure of Finding Things Out is a collection of interviews, lectures, and other short works written by the Nobel Prize winning physicist. The volume, wonderfully and unobtrusively edited by Jeffrey Robbins, covers a wide range of materials that gives readers a sense not only of the scientist, but of the man; in the included works the audience is treated to stories of Feynman's childhood, his experiences and hijinks while working at Los Alamos during WWII, formal lectures and speeches on various scientific subjects, and a healthy dash of humor and personality throughout.
I was intimidated to read the work, as I fully acknowledge my lack of competency in subjects like mathematics and physics, but my husband (a great admirer of Feynman) promised me I wouldn't get lost in the physics, so I gave it a try. And yes, I did get lost at time - although more so when Feynman discussed nanotechnology than anything else - but I found it very easy to pick up the narrative again if I didn't get myself worked up over understanding the specifics of the material. I wasn't reading The Pleasure of Finding Things Out to understand physics and nanotechnology; I was reading the work to understand a little more about one of my husband's heroes, and the volume accomplished just that. Even for someone with only a marginal interest in Feynman's actual work I found The Pleasure of Finding Things Out to be quite charming.
I was intimidated to read the work, as I fully acknowledge my lack of competency in subjects like mathematics and physics, but my husband (a great admirer of Feynman) promised me I wouldn't get lost in the physics, so I gave it a try. And yes, I did get lost at time - although more so when Feynman discussed nanotechnology than anything else - but I found it very easy to pick up the narrative again if I didn't get myself worked up over understanding the specifics of the material. I wasn't reading The Pleasure of Finding Things Out to understand physics and nanotechnology; I was reading the work to understand a little more about one of my husband's heroes, and the volume accomplished just that. Even for someone with only a marginal interest in Feynman's actual work I found The Pleasure of Finding Things Out to be quite charming.
Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher :: Further Adventures of a Curious Character - What Do You Care What Other People Think? :: No Place Like Home: A Novel :: Like Me: Confessions of a Heartland Country Singer :: QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
alasdair
As a physics professor in the 1970s, I tried introducing my "liberal arts physics" students to Richard Feynman, via xerox copies of some of his writings, and via the filmed Messenger Lectures of a decade before, "The Character of Physical Law"--- by the way, why aren't these available today on video tape?
Now, 25 years later, there's a modest "boom" of Feynman material in print, by no means all worthy of being in that state (which is why Feynman kept a number of lecture transcripts tucked away forgotten in file folders) and one fears, after seeing "The Meaning of it All," that even Feynman's used kleenex and desk blotters are not safe from publication!
But this collection is welcome for gathering together many transcriptions of his famous talks from this era, the 1960s and 1970s, the best of which are "Los Alamos from Below," the deservedly legendary "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom," "What is Science?" and "Cargo Cult Science."
As a physicist and as one who had the pleasure of hearing Feynman lecture in person on a number of occasions, I had some reservations about the editing of this book, however. The book unwisely starts out with an interview from late in Feynman's life, in which he tells some of his favorite stories in a quite inarticulate way, and then edits out the same stories as they appear in far more comprehensible fashion in the later material (related two decades before). The editor himself seems singularly innocent of science in all its aspects, which results in some major howlers. For example, the speed of light in glass is about 75% of its speed in vacuum, far from "a fraction of a percent" slower than its vacuum speed (p.xii) and CP Invariance (p. 101) has no connection whatsoever to conservation of charge. The operator C, "charge conjugation," changes particles to antiparticles. And so on!
Some of the material presents Feynman strugging publicly with ideas, presentations and even grammar. By comparing the actual Messenger Lectures of 1965 with their published versions, you can see how carefully Feynman himself would edit such transcripts before publication. Without the touch of the master, "The Pleaure of Finding Things Out," an interview which opens the book and "The Relation of Science and Religion," which closes it, don't make a whole lot of sense! Feynman in person, no matter how much he might struggle to get a thought or concept stated to his satisfaction, would convey the successful outcome by body language and a triumphant tone of voice--- to see a transcript in cold print is to see a lot of rambling words with no clear focus, which is no service at all to Feynman, one of the princes of clear thinking!
Recommended with some serious reservations.
Now, 25 years later, there's a modest "boom" of Feynman material in print, by no means all worthy of being in that state (which is why Feynman kept a number of lecture transcripts tucked away forgotten in file folders) and one fears, after seeing "The Meaning of it All," that even Feynman's used kleenex and desk blotters are not safe from publication!
But this collection is welcome for gathering together many transcriptions of his famous talks from this era, the 1960s and 1970s, the best of which are "Los Alamos from Below," the deservedly legendary "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom," "What is Science?" and "Cargo Cult Science."
As a physicist and as one who had the pleasure of hearing Feynman lecture in person on a number of occasions, I had some reservations about the editing of this book, however. The book unwisely starts out with an interview from late in Feynman's life, in which he tells some of his favorite stories in a quite inarticulate way, and then edits out the same stories as they appear in far more comprehensible fashion in the later material (related two decades before). The editor himself seems singularly innocent of science in all its aspects, which results in some major howlers. For example, the speed of light in glass is about 75% of its speed in vacuum, far from "a fraction of a percent" slower than its vacuum speed (p.xii) and CP Invariance (p. 101) has no connection whatsoever to conservation of charge. The operator C, "charge conjugation," changes particles to antiparticles. And so on!
Some of the material presents Feynman strugging publicly with ideas, presentations and even grammar. By comparing the actual Messenger Lectures of 1965 with their published versions, you can see how carefully Feynman himself would edit such transcripts before publication. Without the touch of the master, "The Pleaure of Finding Things Out," an interview which opens the book and "The Relation of Science and Religion," which closes it, don't make a whole lot of sense! Feynman in person, no matter how much he might struggle to get a thought or concept stated to his satisfaction, would convey the successful outcome by body language and a triumphant tone of voice--- to see a transcript in cold print is to see a lot of rambling words with no clear focus, which is no service at all to Feynman, one of the princes of clear thinking!
Recommended with some serious reservations.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
zinta
Feynman is brilliant, arrogant and emotionally cold. He was the youngest brilliant mind working on the atomic bomb in Los Alamos in the 1940's and later won the Nobel Prize in physics. This book is an unintegrated collection of essays, transcripts of speeches, interviews and memoirs. As such it gets repetitive. We hear three or four times about how his father taught him to observe and we hear three or four times the identical story about the Cargo Cults in New Guinea after WW II. His father, who was not a scientist, turned out to be an excellent teacher specializing in teaching his son to learn by observing. Feynman and his school buddies also had basement "workshops" so that helped their intellectual development. It's fun to see a mind at work, punching the envelope, too undisciplined and too powerful to be contained within a skull.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
youssef manie
Anyone who became familiar with Richard Feynman from his hugely popular memoirs What Do You Care What Other People Think, and Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman will find The Pleasure of Finding Things Out an intermediate step between those books and the dense scientific texts behind his Nobel Prize and reputation as one of the 20th century's great minds.
This book is not meant to be entertaining, but I suppose a glimpse into Mr. Feynman's mind cannot help but be entertaining, even when it is a series of lectures based entirely on science. Here he talks about what he calls the "thrill" of boldly finding out what no man knew before, on subjects ranging from the discovery of the reasons behind the crash of the space shuttle Challenger to the atomic bomb project at Los Alamos and from the role of science in society to his Nobel acceptance speech. And while it is not specifically written with the non-scientist in mind, a strong background in science is not necessary to understand and enjoy the wind-ranging collection of philosophies, musings, and remarks collected on these pages.
This book is not meant to be entertaining, but I suppose a glimpse into Mr. Feynman's mind cannot help but be entertaining, even when it is a series of lectures based entirely on science. Here he talks about what he calls the "thrill" of boldly finding out what no man knew before, on subjects ranging from the discovery of the reasons behind the crash of the space shuttle Challenger to the atomic bomb project at Los Alamos and from the role of science in society to his Nobel acceptance speech. And while it is not specifically written with the non-scientist in mind, a strong background in science is not necessary to understand and enjoy the wind-ranging collection of philosophies, musings, and remarks collected on these pages.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
matheus
Those who have read Gleick's biography of Richard P. Feynman (Genius) have probably also read this collection of Feynman's "best short works." This is indeed an odd collection. Feynman is most accessible in the interviews and speeches; least accessible in his "Minority Report to the Space Shuttle Challenger Inquiry." Gleick's biography reveals a man who exemplifies what Whitman had in mind when he observed "Do I contradict myself? Very well then, I contradict myself. I am large. I contain multitudes." Feynman was indeed large; he contained multitudes. To read this book is to share the pleasure of his company as he formally and informally shares his thoughts and feelings about himself, his life, his career, and just about everything else which attracted his attention. Chapter 1 ("The Pleasure of Finding Things Out") and Chapter 8 ("What Is Science?") are my personal favorites. The aforementioned "Minority Report" (Chapter 7) was, for me, tough going. As I worked my way through this collection, I began to think that I was in the company of someone who has Albert Einstein's intellect and Danny Kaye's personality. Feyman must have been a flamboyant (albeit demanding) classroom teacher. There can be no doubt about his intelligence. Nor his passion and compassion. Nor his playfulness. How much I regret never having known him personally. Therefore, how much I appreciate this collection which I continue to re-read with joy.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
patricia powell
Here's the problem with having high expectations: they're so often dashed.
In my years trawling the web and being a science nerd, I've heard a lot about Richard Feynman. There are legends about him, that he was the Puck of physics - brilliant, untamed, and really, really funny. When I got the book, I was expecting to read a lightning-quick volley of ideas that would set my mind alight with the wonder and infinite possibilities continued within a lifetime's pursuit of science.
Yeah, that didn't quite happen.
Don't get me wrong - Feynman is indisputably brilliant, and far from the classic mold of the physicist. He had no patience for titles or honors, and in fact couldn't give a damn about them as long as he had science to do. He would tell Nobel laureates - men whose names were bywords for scientific brilliance - that they were wrong, without hedging or worrying about their egos. He liked to play the bongos, loved a good party, and delighted in playing tricks. One of his more irritating hobbies was safe-cracking, and by the time he left Los Alamos labs after the Manhattan Project there were no places left to hide secrets from Feynman.
So Feynman was no doubt a really cool guy, the kind of scientist you would want to invite to your party without hesitation. His first interest was science, and as scientist go, he was one of the best.
That doesn't mean that reading him is entirely entertaining.
The book is, for me, not very readable for two reasons. The first is that it goes get terribly technical at times, and while I love science, I am not educated enough in it to grasp a lot of the technical details. Indeed, it broke my heart when Feynman said that, when it comes to physics, if you don't know the math, you don't know the science. True, yes. Humbling, yes. But still....
Were I editing a collection of Feynman's work, I would have started with the Big Ideas, defenses of science as an integral function of humanity's ultimate progress. Then, having made the reader comfortable with how Feynman thought, they could have gotten into what Feynman thought.
But no, the book starts of with highly technical lectures on quantum electrodynamics and the difficulties in getting parallel computers to work. If you don't know a lot about how computers work, or you don't have a detailed awareness of atomic theory, you're going to be a little lost. Or a lot lost. Even his minority opinion on the Challenger accident, something I was especially keen to read, was far too dry to be enjoyable.
The second reason why I didn't really enjoy this book is because a lot of it is transcripts of speeches and interviews. Very few people are able to speak in a readable manner, and someone with a mind like Feynman's - always moving, always active - isn't one of them. There are a lot of asides and false starts, wandering thoughts and truncated paragraphs. Even his more structured speeches aren't structured very well for the reader. Perhaps it would be different to listen to him, to sit in the audience and watch the man speak. I reckon that he had the kind of infectious energy and enthusiasm that would make it easy to gloss over structural problems and really enjoy the speech. But turning speech into print is always dangerous, and here I think it fails.
For different people - people who are deeply involved in physics or who are Feynman acolytes - this book is probably a fascinating look into the mind of one of the 20th century's greatest scientists. For the rest of us, we're going to have to find other things to enjoy from the text, and it is there. One of those is, indeed, the title of the book - the pleasure of finding things out.
For Feynman, science wasn't a rigor or a job, it was a joy. He attributes a lot of that attitude to his father, an unlikely fan of science. As a uniform salesman, Feynman's father was not a scientist and had no scientific training. But he raised his son to think about the world. Rather than tell him why, for example, a bird picked at its feathers with its beak, encouraged Richard to observe the bird, to form a hypothesis and then see if observations confirmed it. His father taught him to question everything, to form his own opinions about the world, and by doing so, made him into a scientist from an early age.
It is that attitude which should be the dominant theme of this book, rather than Feynman's technical genius. He says, over and over, to doubt everything. Ask yourself why things are the way they are, rather than just relying on what other people tell you. Observe, experiment and test, and you're doing science.
He has some disdain for social sciences, and a pretty healthy dose of misogyny in a couple of places, but if he is arrogant, then it is probably deserved. Feynman was a man fascinated with how the universe worked, all the way down to its smallest components, and that was his passion. Not awards, not titles, not praise - just the work, the discovery and the pleasure.
In my years trawling the web and being a science nerd, I've heard a lot about Richard Feynman. There are legends about him, that he was the Puck of physics - brilliant, untamed, and really, really funny. When I got the book, I was expecting to read a lightning-quick volley of ideas that would set my mind alight with the wonder and infinite possibilities continued within a lifetime's pursuit of science.
Yeah, that didn't quite happen.
Don't get me wrong - Feynman is indisputably brilliant, and far from the classic mold of the physicist. He had no patience for titles or honors, and in fact couldn't give a damn about them as long as he had science to do. He would tell Nobel laureates - men whose names were bywords for scientific brilliance - that they were wrong, without hedging or worrying about their egos. He liked to play the bongos, loved a good party, and delighted in playing tricks. One of his more irritating hobbies was safe-cracking, and by the time he left Los Alamos labs after the Manhattan Project there were no places left to hide secrets from Feynman.
So Feynman was no doubt a really cool guy, the kind of scientist you would want to invite to your party without hesitation. His first interest was science, and as scientist go, he was one of the best.
That doesn't mean that reading him is entirely entertaining.
The book is, for me, not very readable for two reasons. The first is that it goes get terribly technical at times, and while I love science, I am not educated enough in it to grasp a lot of the technical details. Indeed, it broke my heart when Feynman said that, when it comes to physics, if you don't know the math, you don't know the science. True, yes. Humbling, yes. But still....
Were I editing a collection of Feynman's work, I would have started with the Big Ideas, defenses of science as an integral function of humanity's ultimate progress. Then, having made the reader comfortable with how Feynman thought, they could have gotten into what Feynman thought.
But no, the book starts of with highly technical lectures on quantum electrodynamics and the difficulties in getting parallel computers to work. If you don't know a lot about how computers work, or you don't have a detailed awareness of atomic theory, you're going to be a little lost. Or a lot lost. Even his minority opinion on the Challenger accident, something I was especially keen to read, was far too dry to be enjoyable.
The second reason why I didn't really enjoy this book is because a lot of it is transcripts of speeches and interviews. Very few people are able to speak in a readable manner, and someone with a mind like Feynman's - always moving, always active - isn't one of them. There are a lot of asides and false starts, wandering thoughts and truncated paragraphs. Even his more structured speeches aren't structured very well for the reader. Perhaps it would be different to listen to him, to sit in the audience and watch the man speak. I reckon that he had the kind of infectious energy and enthusiasm that would make it easy to gloss over structural problems and really enjoy the speech. But turning speech into print is always dangerous, and here I think it fails.
For different people - people who are deeply involved in physics or who are Feynman acolytes - this book is probably a fascinating look into the mind of one of the 20th century's greatest scientists. For the rest of us, we're going to have to find other things to enjoy from the text, and it is there. One of those is, indeed, the title of the book - the pleasure of finding things out.
For Feynman, science wasn't a rigor or a job, it was a joy. He attributes a lot of that attitude to his father, an unlikely fan of science. As a uniform salesman, Feynman's father was not a scientist and had no scientific training. But he raised his son to think about the world. Rather than tell him why, for example, a bird picked at its feathers with its beak, encouraged Richard to observe the bird, to form a hypothesis and then see if observations confirmed it. His father taught him to question everything, to form his own opinions about the world, and by doing so, made him into a scientist from an early age.
It is that attitude which should be the dominant theme of this book, rather than Feynman's technical genius. He says, over and over, to doubt everything. Ask yourself why things are the way they are, rather than just relying on what other people tell you. Observe, experiment and test, and you're doing science.
He has some disdain for social sciences, and a pretty healthy dose of misogyny in a couple of places, but if he is arrogant, then it is probably deserved. Feynman was a man fascinated with how the universe worked, all the way down to its smallest components, and that was his passion. Not awards, not titles, not praise - just the work, the discovery and the pleasure.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
g026r
If you want to immerse yourself in the human side of the great Richard Feynman without having to struggle with a book full of equations, then this book is for you.
As the subtitle of the book suggests, this book is a compilation of short works by Richard Feynman. Most of them are transcriptions of public talks and interviews, some other are short essays and one of them is the famous report he made after participating in the committee that investigated the reasons behind the explosion of the Challenger space shuttle.
Throughout the book you learn how much of an influence his father (who was a simple uniforms salesman) was on Feynman's deeply scientific mind as well as on his irreverent attitude towards authority.
Standing out among the many chapters is 'Los Alamos from Below', in which he talks about the whole experience of being part of the Manhattan project. From the moment in which he was invited to participate in the project, all the way to his analysis of the morality of creating the atomic bomb, years after it was completed. In this chapter you also learn about his infamous ability to crack safes.
My favorite passage is where he describes what science is to a group of science teachers. I love the way he explains how the human ability to learn from others experience and to pass this knowledge from one generation to the next is both a blessing and a curse of our species, and why science is the cure for it.
After reading this book, you really end up with a clear idea of why Richard Feynman is one of the most revered scientists of the twentieth century.
As the subtitle of the book suggests, this book is a compilation of short works by Richard Feynman. Most of them are transcriptions of public talks and interviews, some other are short essays and one of them is the famous report he made after participating in the committee that investigated the reasons behind the explosion of the Challenger space shuttle.
Throughout the book you learn how much of an influence his father (who was a simple uniforms salesman) was on Feynman's deeply scientific mind as well as on his irreverent attitude towards authority.
Standing out among the many chapters is 'Los Alamos from Below', in which he talks about the whole experience of being part of the Manhattan project. From the moment in which he was invited to participate in the project, all the way to his analysis of the morality of creating the atomic bomb, years after it was completed. In this chapter you also learn about his infamous ability to crack safes.
My favorite passage is where he describes what science is to a group of science teachers. I love the way he explains how the human ability to learn from others experience and to pass this knowledge from one generation to the next is both a blessing and a curse of our species, and why science is the cure for it.
After reading this book, you really end up with a clear idea of why Richard Feynman is one of the most revered scientists of the twentieth century.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
lizard
To be honest, I can't get enough Richard Feynman. One of the most horrible realizations for me is the knowledge that I will never get to know him personally. Luckily, books such as this do much to bring the man closer, and well illustrate the genius that he was.
This collection of transcripts and writings delves into the mind of Richard Feynman, and shows him at his greatest. His irreverence for the honors and accolades of academia, his incomprehension of authority, and the joy and wonder that was his perspective of life. This is not a physics book, but a book of philosophy, disguised as anecdote; this book will help you see the world as Feynman saw it. Read SURELY YOU MUST BE JOKING and WHAT DO YOU CARE..., followed by this book, and you will quickly develop a love for, and a deep regret for the loss of, Richard Feynman.
This collection of transcripts and writings delves into the mind of Richard Feynman, and shows him at his greatest. His irreverence for the honors and accolades of academia, his incomprehension of authority, and the joy and wonder that was his perspective of life. This is not a physics book, but a book of philosophy, disguised as anecdote; this book will help you see the world as Feynman saw it. Read SURELY YOU MUST BE JOKING and WHAT DO YOU CARE..., followed by this book, and you will quickly develop a love for, and a deep regret for the loss of, Richard Feynman.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
joanne brogan
Feynman expresses a love for discovery, starting with his father's walk in the woods ... not identifying birds but rather trying to discover why the birds do things. He sees science as fitting in the mold of asking questions of the form: "If I do this, what will happen?" and of doubt being a continual part of the scientific process. He views religion as not having this doubt, but I would offer Paul Tillich as a counter example. His chief area of conflict is with the metaphysical aspects of religion.
He has little patience either for sociology or psychology, pseudoscience or the ponderousness of philosophy. In some ways he is still a "kind in a candy shop", for example hob-knobbing with physicist at the Los Alamos lab, but never afraid of any of them when he is talking about physics. He exhibits a quest for truth, for example if the Challenger inquiry. The articles on understanding physics reveal his enthusiasm at its best!
He has little patience either for sociology or psychology, pseudoscience or the ponderousness of philosophy. In some ways he is still a "kind in a candy shop", for example hob-knobbing with physicist at the Los Alamos lab, but never afraid of any of them when he is talking about physics. He exhibits a quest for truth, for example if the Challenger inquiry. The articles on understanding physics reveal his enthusiasm at its best!
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
dereka
While not as funny as other stories featuring Feynman, these collected lectures go over the relationship between science, doubt, philosophy, and teaching. They also do a great job of explaining QED (Quantum Electro-Dynamics, what Feynman shared a Nobel Prize for) and quarks in terms a layman can understand. After reading, I understand what the Hadron super-collider is trying to experimentally prove.
If you enjoy science, physics especially, this is an excellent work. Two or three of the chapters are on the dry side, which is what keeps it off five stars from me.
If you enjoy science, physics especially, this is an excellent work. Two or three of the chapters are on the dry side, which is what keeps it off five stars from me.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
luis contreras
Feynman reminds me that the basis for an interesting human being is that person's pursuit of curiosity.
As Salvador Dali said, "Intelligence without ambition is a bird without wings", this aphorism applies so very well to Feynman.
The chapters in the book I enjoyed the most were "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out", "What is Science?" "Cargo Cult Science: Some Remarks on Science, Pseudoscience, and Learning How to Not Fool Yourself" and "The Relation of Science and Religion".
It is always wonderful to read intelligent people express their ideas and thoughts so that one can learn from them and check one's own!
These short works gave me a glimpse of someone wonderfully human. Feynman is capable of great introspection and expressions of truth as he sees them. He jokes about his ignorance and then proceeds to "rush in where fools fear to tread". That is his strength and weakness. Here is a certified genius that sees the world around him in ways we are aware of but usually keep to ourselves since we do not have his chutzpah.
On page 245, Richard P. Feynman discusses the relation of Science to Religion where he writes "In this age of specialization, men who thoroughly know one field are often incompetent to discuss another." I heartily agree with him but wonder why he does not apply this dictum to himself.
First of all I will not dispute his genius status. I do not know him well enough, but will accept Freeman J. Dyson's opinion of Feynman "half genius and half buffoon". Freeman J. Dyson's forward to the book "This Side Idolatry" was the best chapter in the book.
Feynman's originality and greatness are in his physics and mathematics; his other pursuits have authority because of his Nobel Prize.
In this "short works" Richard P. Feynman's proletarian background and weakness in the humanities rear their unruly head from time to time.
Let me give you just one example: on pages 172-173 he writes, "What is science? Of course you all must know, if you teach it. That's common sense. What can I say? If you don't know, every teacher's edition of every textbook gives a complete discussion of the subject. There is some kind of distorted distillation and watered-down and mixed-up words of Francis Beacon from centuries ago, words which then were supposed to be the deep philosophy of science. But one of the greatest experimental scientists of the time who was really doing something, William Harvey (1578-1657, discovered the body's circulatory system), said that what Bacon said science was, was the science that a lord chancellor would do. He spoke of making observations, but omitted the vital factor of judgment about what to observe and what to pay attention to.".
I do not see why Feynman has this animus towards Francis Bacon. He is well respected by historians of science and they see Bacon in a positive light.
W.P.D. Wightman in his book, "The Growth of Scientific Ideas", Yale University Press, New Haven CT, 1953, page 61 had this to say about Francis Bacon* "but his comparisons are applicable to all the problems of nature. The gist of the message is that we must seek out the common natures of the things we are comparing, and thus, remembering that "all true and fruitful natural philosophy hath a double scale or ladder, ascendant and descendent, ascending from experiments to the invention of causes, and descending from causes to the invention of new experiments', we may knit all nature together into one coherent assemblage of events.".
*Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
"Advancement of Learning"
"Novum Organum"
"New Atlantis"
According to the "The Works of Marx K. & Engels F", Kyiv, 1955, Volume 2, page 135, Karl Marx had this opinion of Francis Bacon "the real progenitor of English materialism and current experimental science".
Quote from Feynman "William Harvey (1578-1657, discovered the body's circulatory system), said that what Bacon said science was, was the science that a lord chancellor would do.".
The "lord chancellor's view" in my opinion is indispensable in the development of abstract ideas and general principles.
Compare the science of ancient China, Egypt and Greece and you will see the foolishness of ignoring the "lord chancellor's view".
It was the ancient Greeks (6thh century B.C.) who for the first time in human history abstracted the concept of straight line, circle, radius, and angle and so on from the practical surveying geometry of the Egyptians. Fortunately for science the Greeks had a distain for physical labor, only slaves did that! This does not mean that applied science is any way less important. We need both, as Francis Bacon in his book "Advancement of Learning" propose.
The diversity of intellects, outlooks and experiences of billions of human beings over the years have enabled us to stumble onto the scientific method. I applaud all honest efforts to advance our limited knowledge by people such as Richard P. Feynman and Francis Bacon.
As Salvador Dali said, "Intelligence without ambition is a bird without wings", this aphorism applies so very well to Feynman.
The chapters in the book I enjoyed the most were "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out", "What is Science?" "Cargo Cult Science: Some Remarks on Science, Pseudoscience, and Learning How to Not Fool Yourself" and "The Relation of Science and Religion".
It is always wonderful to read intelligent people express their ideas and thoughts so that one can learn from them and check one's own!
These short works gave me a glimpse of someone wonderfully human. Feynman is capable of great introspection and expressions of truth as he sees them. He jokes about his ignorance and then proceeds to "rush in where fools fear to tread". That is his strength and weakness. Here is a certified genius that sees the world around him in ways we are aware of but usually keep to ourselves since we do not have his chutzpah.
On page 245, Richard P. Feynman discusses the relation of Science to Religion where he writes "In this age of specialization, men who thoroughly know one field are often incompetent to discuss another." I heartily agree with him but wonder why he does not apply this dictum to himself.
First of all I will not dispute his genius status. I do not know him well enough, but will accept Freeman J. Dyson's opinion of Feynman "half genius and half buffoon". Freeman J. Dyson's forward to the book "This Side Idolatry" was the best chapter in the book.
Feynman's originality and greatness are in his physics and mathematics; his other pursuits have authority because of his Nobel Prize.
In this "short works" Richard P. Feynman's proletarian background and weakness in the humanities rear their unruly head from time to time.
Let me give you just one example: on pages 172-173 he writes, "What is science? Of course you all must know, if you teach it. That's common sense. What can I say? If you don't know, every teacher's edition of every textbook gives a complete discussion of the subject. There is some kind of distorted distillation and watered-down and mixed-up words of Francis Beacon from centuries ago, words which then were supposed to be the deep philosophy of science. But one of the greatest experimental scientists of the time who was really doing something, William Harvey (1578-1657, discovered the body's circulatory system), said that what Bacon said science was, was the science that a lord chancellor would do. He spoke of making observations, but omitted the vital factor of judgment about what to observe and what to pay attention to.".
I do not see why Feynman has this animus towards Francis Bacon. He is well respected by historians of science and they see Bacon in a positive light.
W.P.D. Wightman in his book, "The Growth of Scientific Ideas", Yale University Press, New Haven CT, 1953, page 61 had this to say about Francis Bacon* "but his comparisons are applicable to all the problems of nature. The gist of the message is that we must seek out the common natures of the things we are comparing, and thus, remembering that "all true and fruitful natural philosophy hath a double scale or ladder, ascendant and descendent, ascending from experiments to the invention of causes, and descending from causes to the invention of new experiments', we may knit all nature together into one coherent assemblage of events.".
*Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
"Advancement of Learning"
"Novum Organum"
"New Atlantis"
According to the "The Works of Marx K. & Engels F", Kyiv, 1955, Volume 2, page 135, Karl Marx had this opinion of Francis Bacon "the real progenitor of English materialism and current experimental science".
Quote from Feynman "William Harvey (1578-1657, discovered the body's circulatory system), said that what Bacon said science was, was the science that a lord chancellor would do.".
The "lord chancellor's view" in my opinion is indispensable in the development of abstract ideas and general principles.
Compare the science of ancient China, Egypt and Greece and you will see the foolishness of ignoring the "lord chancellor's view".
It was the ancient Greeks (6thh century B.C.) who for the first time in human history abstracted the concept of straight line, circle, radius, and angle and so on from the practical surveying geometry of the Egyptians. Fortunately for science the Greeks had a distain for physical labor, only slaves did that! This does not mean that applied science is any way less important. We need both, as Francis Bacon in his book "Advancement of Learning" propose.
The diversity of intellects, outlooks and experiences of billions of human beings over the years have enabled us to stumble onto the scientific method. I applaud all honest efforts to advance our limited knowledge by people such as Richard P. Feynman and Francis Bacon.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
kristi martin
This book is a great introduction to Feynman, though I would still have to recommend "Surely You're Joking..." for the novice. That book was not technical at all, and exposed Feynman's joy in both learning and being a prankster. The Pleasure of Finding Things Out is (slightly) more technical in places, but hardly difficult. It is also much more well-rounded, allowing greater insight into Feynman, who was:
1. Smart as hell
2. Arrogant
3. Happy only when learning
4. Quite a storyteller (in every sense of the word)
5. Thoroughly unconventional
The piece by Freeman Dyson was worth the price of admission, and led me to investigate his works (also highly recommended). I also think the very underrated Challenger Inquiry report was extremely interesting.
Keep in mind, though, that many people I've spoken with really dislike Feynman's arrogance (one person said "he's just a jerk"). I personally feel he had every right to be vain, but over the course of four books, it does get tiring.
1. Smart as hell
2. Arrogant
3. Happy only when learning
4. Quite a storyteller (in every sense of the word)
5. Thoroughly unconventional
The piece by Freeman Dyson was worth the price of admission, and led me to investigate his works (also highly recommended). I also think the very underrated Challenger Inquiry report was extremely interesting.
Keep in mind, though, that many people I've spoken with really dislike Feynman's arrogance (one person said "he's just a jerk"). I personally feel he had every right to be vain, but over the course of four books, it does get tiring.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
ee ah
Although the forward by Dyson did seem a little too worshipful, I can't blame him for writing kind things about his friend and mentor.
This was the first of Feynman's works I've read (actually I listened to it, as an audiobook). I enjoyed his descriptions of his pranks and work at Los Alamos. I also very much enjoyed hearing his thoughts on the value of science and what science is. The talk at the Galileo symposium was great.
On a human level, it was interesting learning about how he interacted with other people, especially other physcists. I went to Caltech as an undergrad, but unfortunately that was after Feynman passed away. Reading this now, I appreciate how well he fit with the culture there. He didn't beleive in worshiping other people or accepting the opinions of anyone as dogma.
As a scientist, I know why the great physicists at Los Alamos appreciated this quality in the young Feynman. We need to be challenged, to hear criticism of our work. (Of course not everyone would have been able to meaningfully challenge Bohr's or Bethe's ideas about physics. I know I wouldn't have been able to. But Feynman could, and he didn't just sit quietly out of reverence like many other physicists who were there with them.)
His musing on nonscientific questions were interesting, even though I do not agree with all of them. In his own spirit of inquiry, his ideas pose interesting questions precisely when you don't take them as dogma. I particularly like his humility about addressing nonscientific topics.
This was the first of Feynman's works I've read (actually I listened to it, as an audiobook). I enjoyed his descriptions of his pranks and work at Los Alamos. I also very much enjoyed hearing his thoughts on the value of science and what science is. The talk at the Galileo symposium was great.
On a human level, it was interesting learning about how he interacted with other people, especially other physcists. I went to Caltech as an undergrad, but unfortunately that was after Feynman passed away. Reading this now, I appreciate how well he fit with the culture there. He didn't beleive in worshiping other people or accepting the opinions of anyone as dogma.
As a scientist, I know why the great physicists at Los Alamos appreciated this quality in the young Feynman. We need to be challenged, to hear criticism of our work. (Of course not everyone would have been able to meaningfully challenge Bohr's or Bethe's ideas about physics. I know I wouldn't have been able to. But Feynman could, and he didn't just sit quietly out of reverence like many other physicists who were there with them.)
His musing on nonscientific questions were interesting, even though I do not agree with all of them. In his own spirit of inquiry, his ideas pose interesting questions precisely when you don't take them as dogma. I particularly like his humility about addressing nonscientific topics.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
sheila
Mostly the written ramblings of Feynman, often heard previously in his many videos/interviews that can be found on You Tube. Lots of his "books" seem to re-presentations of material found almost verbatim in other published works or from interviews/lectures.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
james l
Our middle school physics teacher keeps a selection of interesting books arrayed on the metal tray of his whiteboard. This was one of them.
"Borrow it before you buy it," he said, "to see if you like it." (These are the kinds of generous people I work with.) Thank you, Mr. E.
Feynman is an affable narrator with a friendly, conversational style. He worked on the "Manhattan Project" and gives a human take on that. Helpful, since I just found out that my father's role as a pilot for SAC (Strategic Air Command), in the 60's, was to transport atomic weapons...
Feynman makes physics interesting and relevant. I'm buying this and other Feynman books, not only to learn, but to understand.
"Borrow it before you buy it," he said, "to see if you like it." (These are the kinds of generous people I work with.) Thank you, Mr. E.
Feynman is an affable narrator with a friendly, conversational style. He worked on the "Manhattan Project" and gives a human take on that. Helpful, since I just found out that my father's role as a pilot for SAC (Strategic Air Command), in the 60's, was to transport atomic weapons...
Feynman makes physics interesting and relevant. I'm buying this and other Feynman books, not only to learn, but to understand.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
brian mason
I recommend this book to people who have never read Feynman before, and to those people who only know Feynman's funny stories.
This book is a good overview of Feynman's thinking and not merely a collection of his humorous anecdotes. If you have read many of his other works and you are expecting a great amount of new material, then this book will probably be a disappointment. However, if you are only marginally familiar with Feynman or not familiar at all with him, I highly recommend it.
I believe some of the less than stellar reviews found here were written by Feynman fans who thought this book contained lots of new material. They are correct claiming there is not a lot of new material here for the well-read Feynman fan. However, for the unfamiliar who doesn't want to read everything he wrote, I believe this is the book to get.
If you are interested more in his humorous storytelling, as opposed to his ideas, then I recommend 'Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman' instead of this book.
This book is a good overview of Feynman's thinking and not merely a collection of his humorous anecdotes. If you have read many of his other works and you are expecting a great amount of new material, then this book will probably be a disappointment. However, if you are only marginally familiar with Feynman or not familiar at all with him, I highly recommend it.
I believe some of the less than stellar reviews found here were written by Feynman fans who thought this book contained lots of new material. They are correct claiming there is not a lot of new material here for the well-read Feynman fan. However, for the unfamiliar who doesn't want to read everything he wrote, I believe this is the book to get.
If you are interested more in his humorous storytelling, as opposed to his ideas, then I recommend 'Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman' instead of this book.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
barukisu balqis
Mr. Feynman refers to the work that merited his Nobel Prize as an example of the "swindle" that is science. He is neither displaying false modesty nor disrespect for his own work. Simply, in his usual, colorful language, he reminds us that even though we may bring the best in rigor to science, we still must admit that we Know nothing. In fact, Mr. Feyman states in various speeches that he is content "not knowing", settling for the space between the absolutes of truth and falsity.
That said, of course he has contributed major work to our understanding of how the world works. Yet he did this without the distorting bias for discovering the specific fundamental meaning and composition of life. We discover what we discover. If it is not what we expect or theorize, then nothing is lost, even if the discovery has no practical use. There is still beauty there -- in seeing one more thing about the world in which we live.
This is the integrity Mr. Feynman brings in these essays. He was a man who doggedly worked out critical problems, but who at the same time had the sense to be humble in the face of the universe and infinity. If you want a practical expression of this, consider the Challenger incident.
Respectfully disagreeing with a previous reviewer, I think that his essay on the Challenger incident was perhaps his most accessible. Mr. Feynman speaks in human and prophetic terms as he explains that experiments demand honest controls if they are to become reference points or that declaring a system "safe" using the "it worked o.k. before" criterion is not good science.
Integrity, Brilliance, Humility, and Humour are on marvelous display in this series of essays. Nature demands these elements in our approach to understand, because the truth of nature can not be avoided, cheated,or taken lightly.
Humour should perhaps be considered as the backdrop, because we should be ready at any one moment to stop and laugh at the folly of our human understanding in the context of the universe(s?)
That said, of course he has contributed major work to our understanding of how the world works. Yet he did this without the distorting bias for discovering the specific fundamental meaning and composition of life. We discover what we discover. If it is not what we expect or theorize, then nothing is lost, even if the discovery has no practical use. There is still beauty there -- in seeing one more thing about the world in which we live.
This is the integrity Mr. Feynman brings in these essays. He was a man who doggedly worked out critical problems, but who at the same time had the sense to be humble in the face of the universe and infinity. If you want a practical expression of this, consider the Challenger incident.
Respectfully disagreeing with a previous reviewer, I think that his essay on the Challenger incident was perhaps his most accessible. Mr. Feynman speaks in human and prophetic terms as he explains that experiments demand honest controls if they are to become reference points or that declaring a system "safe" using the "it worked o.k. before" criterion is not good science.
Integrity, Brilliance, Humility, and Humour are on marvelous display in this series of essays. Nature demands these elements in our approach to understand, because the truth of nature can not be avoided, cheated,or taken lightly.
Humour should perhaps be considered as the backdrop, because we should be ready at any one moment to stop and laugh at the folly of our human understanding in the context of the universe(s?)
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
salma abdelnour
Richard Feynman's The Pleasure of Finding Things Out is an outstanding book. This book goes in depth into the mind of the Nobel Prize winning physicist. The book is great for a couple of reasons. First of all it is interesting to learn about the childhood of the man. The book also talks about his experiences he has gone through in his life. Another interesting thing is the technology talk in the book that doesn't become too complex. The Pleasure of Finding Things Out is definitely a book worth taking note.
The childhood of Feynman was quite interesting. The fact that his father, a salesman, got him interested in science was surprising. This made the book even better as one can discover his cognitive mind through an explanation of his childhood. The fact that he talks about simple things such as moving a toy wagon and can relate it to the cognitive mind is quite incredible.
The book is very in depth about occurrences in his life, one in particular, Los Alamos. He talks about his work on the atomic bomb. In his reflection, he also goes into the moral issue of the bomb. This is great, because it is very rare to hear of any of the Los Alamos scientists talk about the lighter side of the work they did on the bomb. Not only are moral issues presented, but the fun he had comes in as well, as not to keep the whole part serious. One fun example is how he managed to crack safe codes.
One part that was kind of boring was the nanotechnology presented in the book. It wasn't presented in a difficult manner though. It was interesting to talk about atom sized circuits and computer parts. But you really have to think in order to understand what is being talked about. Which makes some of the reading challenging, yet exciting.
Overall this book is definitely worth reading. It isn't just for science and technology people. The ethical discussions found throughout the book can spur anyone's interest. This book isn't landmark in any sense though. But if you're looking for a book that talks about "finding things out" or simply "finds things out" then this is a terrific book.
The childhood of Feynman was quite interesting. The fact that his father, a salesman, got him interested in science was surprising. This made the book even better as one can discover his cognitive mind through an explanation of his childhood. The fact that he talks about simple things such as moving a toy wagon and can relate it to the cognitive mind is quite incredible.
The book is very in depth about occurrences in his life, one in particular, Los Alamos. He talks about his work on the atomic bomb. In his reflection, he also goes into the moral issue of the bomb. This is great, because it is very rare to hear of any of the Los Alamos scientists talk about the lighter side of the work they did on the bomb. Not only are moral issues presented, but the fun he had comes in as well, as not to keep the whole part serious. One fun example is how he managed to crack safe codes.
One part that was kind of boring was the nanotechnology presented in the book. It wasn't presented in a difficult manner though. It was interesting to talk about atom sized circuits and computer parts. But you really have to think in order to understand what is being talked about. Which makes some of the reading challenging, yet exciting.
Overall this book is definitely worth reading. It isn't just for science and technology people. The ethical discussions found throughout the book can spur anyone's interest. This book isn't landmark in any sense though. But if you're looking for a book that talks about "finding things out" or simply "finds things out" then this is a terrific book.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
robi
This book is yet another posthumous compilation of Feynman's musings. With each successive book - starting from the wonderful transcriptions of Leighton, Surely You're Joking Mr. Feynman - they have been declining in quality for years. Well, this is a hodgepodge of paper scraps and even raw oral interviews that have been thrown together to exploit just about the last drop of these kinds of things, and I can say that I don't think the process should continue.
There are some amusing things in this book and some interesting details, but there really isn't anything special except for the fact that Feynman enjoys the personality cult associated with a zany physics genius. He was an original character and, in physics, a truly great thinker. But that doesn't make every last little thing that he ever said or scribbled down interesting, except to uncritical devotees who live with the fantasy that everything he said was better than worthwhile. Indeed, if you know about something in great depth he writes (well talks) about, his views appear as superficial as the rest of non-specialists on the subjects. Where he is truly interesting in on physics, mathematics, and science - and the overwhelming majority of what he produced on those subjects is already available.
I would not recommend this book, except as a source of Feynman trivia if that is your bag. Indeed, I had heard most of these things before - either in films about the man or from his earlier writings. As such, that makes this book the crassest attempt to commercially exploit the legacy of this great man yet again. If such a thing were possible, the editor should be ashamed.
There are some amusing things in this book and some interesting details, but there really isn't anything special except for the fact that Feynman enjoys the personality cult associated with a zany physics genius. He was an original character and, in physics, a truly great thinker. But that doesn't make every last little thing that he ever said or scribbled down interesting, except to uncritical devotees who live with the fantasy that everything he said was better than worthwhile. Indeed, if you know about something in great depth he writes (well talks) about, his views appear as superficial as the rest of non-specialists on the subjects. Where he is truly interesting in on physics, mathematics, and science - and the overwhelming majority of what he produced on those subjects is already available.
I would not recommend this book, except as a source of Feynman trivia if that is your bag. Indeed, I had heard most of these things before - either in films about the man or from his earlier writings. As such, that makes this book the crassest attempt to commercially exploit the legacy of this great man yet again. If such a thing were possible, the editor should be ashamed.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
marilee cornelius
He is an interesting man, and the people who knew him were very fortunate. He was an obvious genius and deserving of his Nobel prize in Physics which he shared with two other persons who made a joint discovery essentially at the same time. Obviously, he work on the failure of the space shuttle was well done, even though it ended up as a minority report, and annoyed NASA. My personal favorite is "There's Plenty of room at the Bottom", where he looks at the idea of making things much smaller. He is credited with being the father of nanotechnology.
I wish that i would have been so fortunate as to have him for a teacher.
I wish that i would have been so fortunate as to have him for a teacher.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
hollie
I was only slightly disappointed in reading this book because the subject is such a famous physicist that some of the pieces seemed lacking in a coherent comprehensiveness and detail. They were more anecdotal and disjointed, all in all, not a whole story, as I might have liked. This does not detract from the book at face value, which reads great and, at that level, is a wonderful book. Other books attempting similar things, however, are much more detailed and read with full plots-- Sobel's Galileo's Daughter and the Zoland book Nabokov's Blues. But perhaps what the editor preferred here was something more general and disjointed since the subject is a celebrity anyway. I did not find this a problem once I realized what the book seemed to be attempting; I think I got spoiled by reading other scientific "biographies" with a real plot. Yet, for anecdotal charm, wit, and poignancy relative to some of the problems of our times-- like Challenger and all it symbolized for America-- this book still hits hard.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
oanh tran
This collection of "short works" a decent collection, and will surely appeal to those who enjoyed "Genius" and "Surely You Must Be Joking..." The pieces included run quite a gamut of subjects - the function of science, the necessity of doubt in scentific method, religion vs. science, teaching and learning, and many others. All of them are brought to life by Feynman's conversational style and facility with description and coherent threads of thought.
As much as I was hungry to hear more of Feynman's thought process, I was kind of disappointed by this book. There are many facts and revelations in the text of many of these short works, but nearly all of them have a sketchy, half-finished quality to them. From the reverent forward by Freeman Dyson to the equally gushy introduction by the author, I got rather the impression that this book is some sort of campaign for Feynman's sainthood. Feynman is very articulate, and expresses well-defined opinions on a number of subjects, supported by an illustrious history in his field and numerous facts. This book makes better cocktail conversation than a collection of works from an already distiguished thinker.
Feynman's common sense approach, and bottom line reasoning is very appealing and, short of the Challenger testimony piece (the most technical of the addresses included) easy for the average reader to understand and enjoy. Many of Feynman's opinions may affect your own thinking on these subjects - not really a bad thing at all. The Pleasure of Finding Things Out isn't up to the standard of the other two, however, and that was a little dissatisfying to me.
As much as I was hungry to hear more of Feynman's thought process, I was kind of disappointed by this book. There are many facts and revelations in the text of many of these short works, but nearly all of them have a sketchy, half-finished quality to them. From the reverent forward by Freeman Dyson to the equally gushy introduction by the author, I got rather the impression that this book is some sort of campaign for Feynman's sainthood. Feynman is very articulate, and expresses well-defined opinions on a number of subjects, supported by an illustrious history in his field and numerous facts. This book makes better cocktail conversation than a collection of works from an already distiguished thinker.
Feynman's common sense approach, and bottom line reasoning is very appealing and, short of the Challenger testimony piece (the most technical of the addresses included) easy for the average reader to understand and enjoy. Many of Feynman's opinions may affect your own thinking on these subjects - not really a bad thing at all. The Pleasure of Finding Things Out isn't up to the standard of the other two, however, and that was a little dissatisfying to me.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
misshannah
I felt a bit of trepidation when approaching this work, as reading a collection of what are considered "The Best Short Works" of a Nobel Laureate Physicist, sounds daunting even for someone trained to some degree in the field. I am not so trained. Mr. Richard Feynman has the additional gift of speaking passionately, and often in a self-deprecating manner, about what he does, with the result that the layperson can enjoy both his originally spoken, and written thoughts. There are terms and concepts that are understood best, and perhaps only, by those who have made the decision to pursue physics to its higher levels. However the vast majority of the book is readable to any that are inquisitive.
Mr. Feynman's Father was also a remarkable man. He was not a trained scientist, and his profession had absolutely nothing to do with science. However as is repeated throughout the book he was the catalyst that recognized and nurtured the talent his precocious son possessed. This topic and the ideas that are expressed about learning and teaching are just one of the topics that is completely accessible to any reader. The topics make for such interesting reading, as the author's enthusiasm combined with his gift for explaining the complex and the abstract, is what allows his thoughts to be accessible, and this is what I enjoyed so much. He was a man of great enthusiasm for the wonders that he sought to understand, and his writing transfers this feeling to his audience.
The quote that titles this review is Mr. Feynman's way of describing his feelings when he learns something new. The feelings translated not only into every recognition that his peers could bestow, but also a gift to the rest of us, for he was able to apply the same mind to questions of religion, morality, teaching, governmental roles in science, the responsibilities scientists have to society, and dozens of other topics.
I enjoyed the entire work but there were some sections that could have justified the entire time spent reading on their own. His lecture at The Galileo Symposium in 1964, and his report on the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster were remarkable. I was unaware of his role as an investigator into the Challenger episode, and was even more surprised that the committee on which he served attempted to suppress his report. Once you have read his report you will understand why many would have liked to see it locked away. He explains what is arguably the most complex piece of equipment assembled by man, and it is elegant in its simplicity. I believe he intended it to be so, as he could have made his case in language that would have been foreign if he had so chose.
I read this book as I enjoyed "Fermat's Enigma" so much. It is not necessary to understand everything that is involved with what these gifted minds have done. It is a pure joy when you can read and gain a glimpse, just a bit, of the ideas that are discussed. It requires a gifted speaker/writer, and this man clearly counted his extraordinary ability to communicate among his skills.
A wonderful enlightening book.
Mr. Feynman's Father was also a remarkable man. He was not a trained scientist, and his profession had absolutely nothing to do with science. However as is repeated throughout the book he was the catalyst that recognized and nurtured the talent his precocious son possessed. This topic and the ideas that are expressed about learning and teaching are just one of the topics that is completely accessible to any reader. The topics make for such interesting reading, as the author's enthusiasm combined with his gift for explaining the complex and the abstract, is what allows his thoughts to be accessible, and this is what I enjoyed so much. He was a man of great enthusiasm for the wonders that he sought to understand, and his writing transfers this feeling to his audience.
The quote that titles this review is Mr. Feynman's way of describing his feelings when he learns something new. The feelings translated not only into every recognition that his peers could bestow, but also a gift to the rest of us, for he was able to apply the same mind to questions of religion, morality, teaching, governmental roles in science, the responsibilities scientists have to society, and dozens of other topics.
I enjoyed the entire work but there were some sections that could have justified the entire time spent reading on their own. His lecture at The Galileo Symposium in 1964, and his report on the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster were remarkable. I was unaware of his role as an investigator into the Challenger episode, and was even more surprised that the committee on which he served attempted to suppress his report. Once you have read his report you will understand why many would have liked to see it locked away. He explains what is arguably the most complex piece of equipment assembled by man, and it is elegant in its simplicity. I believe he intended it to be so, as he could have made his case in language that would have been foreign if he had so chose.
I read this book as I enjoyed "Fermat's Enigma" so much. It is not necessary to understand everything that is involved with what these gifted minds have done. It is a pure joy when you can read and gain a glimpse, just a bit, of the ideas that are discussed. It requires a gifted speaker/writer, and this man clearly counted his extraordinary ability to communicate among his skills.
A wonderful enlightening book.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
gabrielle dilorenzo
As one of the most fascinating characters in twentieth-century physics (not to mention one of the most brilliant), it is always enjoyable to read anything by, or about, Richard Feynman. This book, a collection of some of his best works (interviews, lectures, essays), is an obvious must for any Feynman fan.
While some of these works will probably be familiar to most readers, the majority will probably be new. The topic range is very broad, and while some works will appeal more to some than others (for instance, technical pieces versus anecdotal ones), they are all enjoyable, and I could not say which was my favourite, or, for that matter, list any that I didn't enjoy.
Scientists like Feynman help to capture the public's attention, and hopefully, encourage more interest in science. It would be good for high-school students to be exposed to books such as this one, not overly technical, but exciting enough to transmit that love of learning that Feynman embodies, and seems to be so lacking in the youth of today.
While some of these works will probably be familiar to most readers, the majority will probably be new. The topic range is very broad, and while some works will appeal more to some than others (for instance, technical pieces versus anecdotal ones), they are all enjoyable, and I could not say which was my favourite, or, for that matter, list any that I didn't enjoy.
Scientists like Feynman help to capture the public's attention, and hopefully, encourage more interest in science. It would be good for high-school students to be exposed to books such as this one, not overly technical, but exciting enough to transmit that love of learning that Feynman embodies, and seems to be so lacking in the youth of today.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
emily purcell
Richard Feynman achieved something like cult status, almost on a par with Stephen Hawking and for some time I resisted the temptation to read him. This was partly because physics is not my area of interest and also because Hawking was such a disappointment with his naïve belief that the final unified theory of everything would soon be invented. Also it seemed that the Hawking books are much bought but little read, thereby diminishing the status of cult figures in science writing.
On the way back from the Popper Centenary Conference, in the airport Frankfurt, curiosity won over skepticism, also I had a few euros to unload, so I took on board this collection of "best short works". I now consider the euros well spent and Feynman fully deserving of respect and admiration.
Under the circumstances, with a satchel of Popper stuff from Vienna, the most striking thing about Feynman was his relentlessly critical, imaginative and enthusiastic approach to everything, especially science. In short, he lived and breathed the philosophy of Karl Popper. That might have surprised him because it is hard to say whether he had the most contempt for philosophers or for the soft social sciences.
Maybe Feynman is too hard on the social sciences. It is helpful to remember that physicists restrict their predictions to model systems, otherwise they settle for explanations in principle. We can explain in principle the trajectory of leaves that fall off a tree but nobody would be expected to predict which ones will end up in the street and which will fly up on to the roof and block your gutter. Similarly in some areas of the social sciences (those that are not pure ideology and verbalism) we can predict tendencies, such as increased prices due to import restrictions, without being able to predict the size of the increase due to the many other factors that are involved in setting prices.
Feynman had the incredible good fortune to be in the right place at the right time but that would not have worked if he did not have the capacity to do the right thing at the right time as well. Like all great artists and scientists, he was captivated by his work, so at times nothing else mattered. That saved him from nerves, even as youth, when he found himself lecturing to an audience that included Einstein and other great men in the field. His hands were shaking when he took his papers from the envelope to start talking . "Then something happened to me which has always happened since...If I'm talking physics , I love the thing, I think only about physics, I don't worry where I am; I don't worry about anything". This probably also saved him from being disabled by the impending death of his first wife who was fading away while he worked on the Big Bomb at Los Alamos.
His capacity to focus on the physics and not the audience made him an invaluable foil for Bohr. Everyone else was so overawed by Bohr that they never challenged his ideas. "I was always worried by the physics; if the idea looked lousy, I said it looked lousy...later Bohr said to his son `He's the only guy who is not afraid of me, and will say when I've got a crazy idea...when we want to discuss ideas, we're not able to do it with these guys who say everything is yes, yes Dr Bohr. Get that guy first.'"
Like most collections of occasional pieces, there is a tendency to repetition of key themes such as the uncertainty of all knowledge and the inferior nature of the social sciences. Also it tends to lack continuity and physics buffs will probably find that it lacks depth. This is because almost all of the pieces were written for general audiences and for most of us the lack of depth is a strong point because we only get lost in the depths.
On the way back from the Popper Centenary Conference, in the airport Frankfurt, curiosity won over skepticism, also I had a few euros to unload, so I took on board this collection of "best short works". I now consider the euros well spent and Feynman fully deserving of respect and admiration.
Under the circumstances, with a satchel of Popper stuff from Vienna, the most striking thing about Feynman was his relentlessly critical, imaginative and enthusiastic approach to everything, especially science. In short, he lived and breathed the philosophy of Karl Popper. That might have surprised him because it is hard to say whether he had the most contempt for philosophers or for the soft social sciences.
Maybe Feynman is too hard on the social sciences. It is helpful to remember that physicists restrict their predictions to model systems, otherwise they settle for explanations in principle. We can explain in principle the trajectory of leaves that fall off a tree but nobody would be expected to predict which ones will end up in the street and which will fly up on to the roof and block your gutter. Similarly in some areas of the social sciences (those that are not pure ideology and verbalism) we can predict tendencies, such as increased prices due to import restrictions, without being able to predict the size of the increase due to the many other factors that are involved in setting prices.
Feynman had the incredible good fortune to be in the right place at the right time but that would not have worked if he did not have the capacity to do the right thing at the right time as well. Like all great artists and scientists, he was captivated by his work, so at times nothing else mattered. That saved him from nerves, even as youth, when he found himself lecturing to an audience that included Einstein and other great men in the field. His hands were shaking when he took his papers from the envelope to start talking . "Then something happened to me which has always happened since...If I'm talking physics , I love the thing, I think only about physics, I don't worry where I am; I don't worry about anything". This probably also saved him from being disabled by the impending death of his first wife who was fading away while he worked on the Big Bomb at Los Alamos.
His capacity to focus on the physics and not the audience made him an invaluable foil for Bohr. Everyone else was so overawed by Bohr that they never challenged his ideas. "I was always worried by the physics; if the idea looked lousy, I said it looked lousy...later Bohr said to his son `He's the only guy who is not afraid of me, and will say when I've got a crazy idea...when we want to discuss ideas, we're not able to do it with these guys who say everything is yes, yes Dr Bohr. Get that guy first.'"
Like most collections of occasional pieces, there is a tendency to repetition of key themes such as the uncertainty of all knowledge and the inferior nature of the social sciences. Also it tends to lack continuity and physics buffs will probably find that it lacks depth. This is because almost all of the pieces were written for general audiences and for most of us the lack of depth is a strong point because we only get lost in the depths.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
dan debono
This is a decent book although it's rather thin. This is true in both content and production value. It shouldn't come as a surprise since it's a summary of some interviews. If Feyman had a blog this book would basically be a compendium of his top posts. That's what it feels like.
Oddly enough I thought of Feynman looking over me reading and saying "why are you wasting your time reading this book."
As usual he would be mostly right!
Oddly enough I thought of Feynman looking over me reading and saying "why are you wasting your time reading this book."
As usual he would be mostly right!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
wayne owens
Over in English departments they like to say that, 'For every difficult question, there's a simple answer. And it's wrong.'
Not true for physics. We derive our common sense from the things around us--if the laws we use to describe the world strike us as any more complicated that their phenomenon, we should be suspicious. Feynman's physics always inspires me with the same simplicity as I find in the world--it's a joy to read.
Just because it's simple, though, shouldn't make you doubt his intellect. The great dancers always make it look easy, too. His chapters on computation, for instance, are the grist for the yet-to-be tested quantum computer, still very much on the cusp of QM. Presented here for anyone to understand. If beautiful physics carries a sort of necessity, this thing has got to be built.
Not true for physics. We derive our common sense from the things around us--if the laws we use to describe the world strike us as any more complicated that their phenomenon, we should be suspicious. Feynman's physics always inspires me with the same simplicity as I find in the world--it's a joy to read.
Just because it's simple, though, shouldn't make you doubt his intellect. The great dancers always make it look easy, too. His chapters on computation, for instance, are the grist for the yet-to-be tested quantum computer, still very much on the cusp of QM. Presented here for anyone to understand. If beautiful physics carries a sort of necessity, this thing has got to be built.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
june shi
I had a general impression of Feynman before reading this. I knew he was defiant, funny, brilliant, etc., but this collection of works, letter, and interviews featuring Richard Feynman really shows just how different and original this man was. I enjoyed reading words and ideas coming directly from the man himself, rather than being regurgitated by some biographer. Feynman is by no means a good writer, which he admits, but nevertheless he has important things to say. His perspectives on life, science, learning, and religion are worth hearing out.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
mikia
This book was my first introduction to Feynman. Being an engineer, I find his deep dives into physics very interesting. However, the true gem here is his philosophy that keeps peeking out: doubt everything - test it for yourself; and have a child-like wonder of the universe. His sense of humor also jumps out and makes you laugh out loud. This book covers a wide range, from his early adventures to his later musings. I recommend it to anyone who is curious about how to find out for themselves how things work.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
antusa
Feynman expresses a love for discovery, starting with his father's walk in the woods ... not identifying birds but rather trying to discover why the birds do things. He sees science as fitting in the mold of asking questions of the form: "If I do this, what will happen?" and of doubt being a continual part of the scientific process. He views religion as not having this doubt, but I would offer Paul Tillich as a counter example. His chief area of conflict is with the metaphysical aspects of religion.
He has little patience either for sociology or psychology, pseudoscience or the ponderousness of philosophy. In some ways he is still a "kind in a candy shop", for example hob-knobbing with physicist at the Los Alamos lab, but never afraid of any of them when he is talking about physics. He exhibits a quest for truth, for example if the Challenger inquiry. The articles on understanding physics reveal his enthusiasm at its best!
He has little patience either for sociology or psychology, pseudoscience or the ponderousness of philosophy. In some ways he is still a "kind in a candy shop", for example hob-knobbing with physicist at the Los Alamos lab, but never afraid of any of them when he is talking about physics. He exhibits a quest for truth, for example if the Challenger inquiry. The articles on understanding physics reveal his enthusiasm at its best!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
david vaughan
This book is a great introduction to Feynman, though I would still have to recommend "Surely You're Joking..." for the novice. That book was not technical at all, and exposed Feynman's joy in both learning and being a prankster. The Pleasure of Finding Things Out is (slightly) more technical in places, but hardly difficult. It is also much more well-rounded, allowing greater insight into Feynman, who was:
1. Smart as hell
2. Arrogant
3. Happy only when learning
4. Quite a storyteller (in every sense of the word)
5. Thoroughly unconventional
The piece by Freeman Dyson was worth the price of admission, and led me to investigate his works (also highly recommended). I also think the very underrated Challenger Inquiry report was extremely interesting.
Keep in mind, though, that many people I've spoken with really dislike Feynman's arrogance (one person said "he's just a jerk"). I personally feel he had every right to be vain, but over the course of four books, it does get tiring.
1. Smart as hell
2. Arrogant
3. Happy only when learning
4. Quite a storyteller (in every sense of the word)
5. Thoroughly unconventional
The piece by Freeman Dyson was worth the price of admission, and led me to investigate his works (also highly recommended). I also think the very underrated Challenger Inquiry report was extremely interesting.
Keep in mind, though, that many people I've spoken with really dislike Feynman's arrogance (one person said "he's just a jerk"). I personally feel he had every right to be vain, but over the course of four books, it does get tiring.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
liane l
I was only slightly disappointed in reading this book because the subject is such a famous physicist that some of the pieces seemed lacking in a coherent comprehensiveness and detail. They were more anecdotal and disjointed, all in all, not a whole story, as I might have liked. This does not detract from the book at face value, which reads great and, at that level, is a wonderful book. Other books attempting similar things, however, are much more detailed and read with full plots-- Sobel's Galileo's Daughter and the Zoland book Nabokov's Blues. But perhaps what the editor preferred here was something more general and disjointed since the subject is a celebrity anyway. I did not find this a problem once I realized what the book seemed to be attempting; I think I got spoiled by reading other scientific "biographies" with a real plot. Yet, for anecdotal charm, wit, and poignancy relative to some of the problems of our times-- like Challenger and all it symbolized for America-- this book still hits hard.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
crash
I recommend this book to people who have never read Feynman before, and to those people who only know Feynman's funny stories.
This book is a good overview of Feynman's thinking and not merely a collection of his humorous anecdotes. If you have read many of his other works and you are expecting a great amount of new material, then this book will probably be a disappointment. However, if you are only marginally familiar with Feynman or not familiar at all with him, I highly recommend it.
I believe some of the less than stellar reviews found here were written by Feynman fans who thought this book contained lots of new material. They are correct claiming there is not a lot of new material here for the well-read Feynman fan. However, for the unfamiliar who doesn't want to read everything he wrote, I believe this is the book to get.
If you are interested more in his humorous storytelling, as opposed to his ideas, then I recommend 'Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman' instead of this book.
This book is a good overview of Feynman's thinking and not merely a collection of his humorous anecdotes. If you have read many of his other works and you are expecting a great amount of new material, then this book will probably be a disappointment. However, if you are only marginally familiar with Feynman or not familiar at all with him, I highly recommend it.
I believe some of the less than stellar reviews found here were written by Feynman fans who thought this book contained lots of new material. They are correct claiming there is not a lot of new material here for the well-read Feynman fan. However, for the unfamiliar who doesn't want to read everything he wrote, I believe this is the book to get.
If you are interested more in his humorous storytelling, as opposed to his ideas, then I recommend 'Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman' instead of this book.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
macarena
As one of the most fascinating characters in twentieth-century physics (not to mention one of the most brilliant), it is always enjoyable to read anything by, or about, Richard Feynman. This book, a collection of some of his best works (interviews, lectures, essays), is an obvious must for any Feynman fan.
While some of these works will probably be familiar to most readers, the majority will probably be new. The topic range is very broad, and while some works will appeal more to some than others (for instance, technical pieces versus anecdotal ones), they are all enjoyable, and I could not say which was my favourite, or, for that matter, list any that I didn't enjoy.
Scientists like Feynman help to capture the public's attention, and hopefully, encourage more interest in science. It would be good for high-school students to be exposed to books such as this one, not overly technical, but exciting enough to transmit that love of learning that Feynman embodies, and seems to be so lacking in the youth of today.
While some of these works will probably be familiar to most readers, the majority will probably be new. The topic range is very broad, and while some works will appeal more to some than others (for instance, technical pieces versus anecdotal ones), they are all enjoyable, and I could not say which was my favourite, or, for that matter, list any that I didn't enjoy.
Scientists like Feynman help to capture the public's attention, and hopefully, encourage more interest in science. It would be good for high-school students to be exposed to books such as this one, not overly technical, but exciting enough to transmit that love of learning that Feynman embodies, and seems to be so lacking in the youth of today.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
amanda
To be honest, I can't get enough Richard Feynman. One of the most horrible realizations for me is the knowledge that I will never get to know him personally. Luckily, books such as this do much to bring the man closer, and well illustrate the genius that he was.
This collection of transcripts and writings delves into the mind of Richard Feynman, and shows him at his greatest. His irreverence for the honors and accolades of academia, his incomprehension of authority, and the joy and wonder that was his perspective of life. This is not a physics book, but a book of philosophy, disguised as anecdote; this book will help you see the world as Feynman saw it. Read SURELY YOU MUST BE JOKING and WHAT DO YOU CARE..., followed by this book, and you will quickly develop a love for, and a deep regret for the loss of, Richard Feynman.
This collection of transcripts and writings delves into the mind of Richard Feynman, and shows him at his greatest. His irreverence for the honors and accolades of academia, his incomprehension of authority, and the joy and wonder that was his perspective of life. This is not a physics book, but a book of philosophy, disguised as anecdote; this book will help you see the world as Feynman saw it. Read SURELY YOU MUST BE JOKING and WHAT DO YOU CARE..., followed by this book, and you will quickly develop a love for, and a deep regret for the loss of, Richard Feynman.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
cynthia elliott
Over in English departments they like to say that, 'For every difficult question, there's a simple answer. And it's wrong.'
Not true for physics. We derive our common sense from the things around us--if the laws we use to describe the world strike us as any more complicated that their phenomenon, we should be suspicious. Feynman's physics always inspires me with the same simplicity as I find in the world--it's a joy to read.
Just because it's simple, though, shouldn't make you doubt his intellect. The great dancers always make it look easy, too. His chapters on computation, for instance, are the grist for the yet-to-be tested quantum computer, still very much on the cusp of QM. Presented here for anyone to understand. If beautiful physics carries a sort of necessity, this thing has got to be built.
Not true for physics. We derive our common sense from the things around us--if the laws we use to describe the world strike us as any more complicated that their phenomenon, we should be suspicious. Feynman's physics always inspires me with the same simplicity as I find in the world--it's a joy to read.
Just because it's simple, though, shouldn't make you doubt his intellect. The great dancers always make it look easy, too. His chapters on computation, for instance, are the grist for the yet-to-be tested quantum computer, still very much on the cusp of QM. Presented here for anyone to understand. If beautiful physics carries a sort of necessity, this thing has got to be built.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
benjamin griffin
Although I had been given the book earlier, I never seemed to get around to actually reading it. Listening to the tape was so much easier. Plus the reader does a terrific job of making it seem like Feynman himself is talking. A 5-star recording!
I listened to this tape on my daily commute, having just returned from a trip to Los Alamos the week before. Feynman worked there as a young graduate student and shares personal insights about Oppenheimer, Fuchs and the others on the tapes.
This set of tapes is a terrific collection of short pieces on everything from The Bomb to how his father whetted his interest in science as a child. A must-listen for anyone remotely intrigued by brilliant teachers, science, and/or raising children. Have I forgotten anyone?
I listened to this tape on my daily commute, having just returned from a trip to Los Alamos the week before. Feynman worked there as a young graduate student and shares personal insights about Oppenheimer, Fuchs and the others on the tapes.
This set of tapes is a terrific collection of short pieces on everything from The Bomb to how his father whetted his interest in science as a child. A must-listen for anyone remotely intrigued by brilliant teachers, science, and/or raising children. Have I forgotten anyone?
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
andrea waldron
I bought this book because I was familiar with Feynman and his work with QED. It's a fantastic book that contains lectures and interviews about Feynman's childhood and work on the Manhattan Project, to the future of computer technology, as well as many more subjects. This man had an awesome life that anyone interested in math or science would aspire to. The book is interesting and easy to read. I'm in 11th grade and I can understand it, so anyone who is at all familiar with physics and has a decent mathematical background will do fine reading it.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
morgue anne
This book tells us lots of things: computer, science and physics. Do you know how small we can make a computer? Feyman tells you from a viwe of physics. Do you know science or just the difinitions? Check it with this book! The lectures on this book surely broadens your knowledge and gives you a new way to think everything in the world.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
krzysztof
This book makes Feynman come alive in all his irreverant best,the man,his works,his brilliance,"Feynman-the rough cut",it all gells magically thru this wonderful book.Richard Feynman continues to be a tower of inspiration to millions worldwide.The best role model one can ever imagine.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jessica farrell
Mr. Feynman refers to the work that merited his Nobel Prize as an example of the "swindle" that is science. He is neither displaying false modesty nor disrespect for his own work. Simply, in his usual, colorful language, he reminds us that even though we may bring the best in rigor to science, we still must admit that we Know nothing. In fact, Mr. Feyman states in various speeches that he is content "not knowing", settling for the space between the absolutes of truth and falsity.
That said, of course he has contributed major work to our understanding of how the world works. Yet he did this without the distorting bias for discovering the specific fundamental meaning and composition of life. We discover what we discover. If it is not what we expect or theorize, then nothing is lost, even if the discovery has no practical use. There is still beauty there -- in seeing one more thing about the world in which we live.
This is the integrity Mr. Feynman brings in these essays. He was a man who doggedly worked out critical problems, but who at the same time had the sense to be humble in the face of the universe and infinity. If you want a practical expression of this, consider the Challenger incident.
Respectfully disagreeing with a previous reviewer, I think that his essay on the Challenger incident was perhaps his most accessible. Mr. Feynman speaks in human and prophetic terms as he explains that experiments demand honest controls if they are to become reference points or that declaring a system "safe" using the "it worked o.k. before" criterion is not good science.
Integrity, Brilliance, Humility, and Humour are on marvelous display in this series of essays. Nature demands these elements in our approach to understand, because the truth of nature can not be avoided, cheated,or taken lightly.
Humour should perhaps be considered as the backdrop, because we should be ready at any one moment to stop and laugh at the folly of our human understanding in the context of the universe(s?)
That said, of course he has contributed major work to our understanding of how the world works. Yet he did this without the distorting bias for discovering the specific fundamental meaning and composition of life. We discover what we discover. If it is not what we expect or theorize, then nothing is lost, even if the discovery has no practical use. There is still beauty there -- in seeing one more thing about the world in which we live.
This is the integrity Mr. Feynman brings in these essays. He was a man who doggedly worked out critical problems, but who at the same time had the sense to be humble in the face of the universe and infinity. If you want a practical expression of this, consider the Challenger incident.
Respectfully disagreeing with a previous reviewer, I think that his essay on the Challenger incident was perhaps his most accessible. Mr. Feynman speaks in human and prophetic terms as he explains that experiments demand honest controls if they are to become reference points or that declaring a system "safe" using the "it worked o.k. before" criterion is not good science.
Integrity, Brilliance, Humility, and Humour are on marvelous display in this series of essays. Nature demands these elements in our approach to understand, because the truth of nature can not be avoided, cheated,or taken lightly.
Humour should perhaps be considered as the backdrop, because we should be ready at any one moment to stop and laugh at the folly of our human understanding in the context of the universe(s?)
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
mike loftus
I found this book to be complicating as it jumped from subject to subject. It wasnt really that informative. It gave out the authors personal information and feelings rather than actual facts. I guess it was something that one with the same mind frame as him could relate to. I had to read this book for school. I got nothing out of it, except the ignorant and close minded thoughts of the author. The grammar was also terrribe. It wasnt written in a way that one could follow. I had to use my imagination to kind of figure out the authors feelings of whatever he was talking. It was written in a way as if he was actually talking to in person rather than through a book. But I do have to say that it was different. I guess if you are into and study science it is the book for you. But its not really a book to learn from. Instead its more like a book to say "Oh! I feel that way too." To conclude, I dont know what to say to those of you who are into science, but to those of you who do not have much of an interest in it i would reccomend that you choose another book.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
ulrich kakou
Boy, yet another collection of incoherent musings by Feynman. Instead of being impressed, I am quite disgusted at this bundle of babble being sold as some profound truths uttered by a deep thinker. If there is one thing that's been elucidated by Feynman's nontechnical writings, it is the fact that outside of physics Feynman was a totally pedestrian individual. His thoughts on social and religious issues are no deeper than those of an average college kid. Yet with his "genius" label successfully marketed, in no small part by himself, he could ramble aimlessly about anything and the Feynman groupies would take it as gospel. Even on some technical issues, such as quantum computing and nano technology, his thoughts were really quite superficial, or sketchy, at best. Nonetheless, they have been billed as ideas of a "visionary." For those of you who aren't paying attention to the cult behavior among physicists, a side-benefit of being a visionary is that you don't actually have to think hard about the question of feasibility -- it's mundane task for the lesser men.
All in all, another ripoff from the Feynman cult industry.
All in all, another ripoff from the Feynman cult industry.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jordan pike
Richard Feynman was a great physicist and a wonderful teacher. In another nice book THE BIBLE ACCORDING TO EINSTEIN, he is quoted as saying "The fact that I understand this rose -- the light reflected off its surface, how it is composed of cells, why it is red, the evolutionary origin of the bees' attraction to it, and so on -- these things do not in any way diminish my appreciation of its beauty. In fact, they enhance my ability to enjoy the rose." This says it all.
Please RateThe Best Short Works of Richard P. Feynman (Helix Books)
I particularly enjoyed the subtle yet unmistakable way he scolded the people at NASA for putting their political butts before the safety of the space program they were managing in his famous "Minority Report to the Space Shuttle Challenger Inquiry." But the chapter that really sold me on Richard P. Feynman, boy wonder grown up, was "It's as Simple as One, Two, Three" in which he explores the ability to do two things at once through an experiment with counting. Such a delight he took in learning as a kid from his friend Bernie that we sometimes think in pictures and not in words. And then the further delight he took in learning that some people count with their inner voice (himself), and others (his friend John Tukey) count by visualization.
I was also loved the chapter, "What is Science?", a talk to science teachers in which Feynman demonstrates that the real difference between science and other ways of "knowing" (e.g., religion) is the ability to doubt. In science we learn, as Feyman said he himself learned, to live with doubt. But in the religious way of "knowing" doubt is intolerable. Feynman gives an evolutionary illustration of why doubt is essential. He begins with the "intelligent" animals "which can learn something from experience (like cats)." At this stage, he says, each animal learned "from its own experience." Then came some animals that could learn more rapidly and from the experience of others by watching. Then came something "completely new...things could be learned by one animal, passed on to another, and another, fast enough that...[the knowledge] was not lost to the race...," and could be passed on to a new generation.
Now, let's stop for a moment. What a great teacher does--and here and elsewhere Feynman proves himself to be a great teacher (although he said he doubted that!)--is to guide the student just enough so that the student arrives at or anticipates the point of the lesson before the teacher gets there. What is the punch line of this lesson for the science teachers? Namely this: with the passing of knowledge from one generation to the next it became also possible to pass on false knowledge or "mistaken ideas." Feynman calls this a "disease."
"Then a way of avoiding the disease was discovered. This is to doubt that what is being passed from the past is in fact true, and to try to find out ab initio, again from experience, what the situation is, rather than trusting the experience of the past..."
In other words, don't blindly accept the word of authority. Test it for yourself! And this is what science does. It tests and it tests again, and it doubts and it doubts--always.
I loved this because one of my dictums is "always guide the experts"--the lawyer, the doctor, the insurance adjustor, et al. Always guide them because, although they are the experts, you're the one who really cares. To this I can now add that you should also doubt the experts because even though they are experts they can be wrong. And, as Feynman showed in his report on the Challenge disaster, they can be wrong for reasons that have nothing to do with their expertise.
I also liked the commencement address he gave at Caltech on "Cargo Cult Science...and How to Not Fool Yourself." We fool ourselves a lot. The managers at NASA fooled themselves; what's their names of cold fusion delusion fame fooled themselves. Feynman has noted that he has fooled himself. Science, he avers, is a tool to help us to not fool ourselves. He is profoundly right. Without science we would go on fooling ourselves with all sorts of mumbo-jumbo, "revealed" religiosity and scientific-seeming stuff such as Rhine's ESP experiments some years ago at Duke, the entire litany of New Age pseudobabblese, and--yes!--such stuff as the amazing Cargo Cult Science in which some Pacific Islanders, in an attempt to attract the big birds of the sky with their cargoes of goodies, built "nests," that is, landing fields with empty cargo boxes, and faux towers, etc. in the hope that the planes flying overhead would see them and land on their island. Feynman has taken this as an example of pseudoscience, that is, behavior in the form of science without the substance of science, without the "integrity" of science.
The integrity of science, Feynman advised the graduates, demands that all the information about the experiment be given, even detrimental facts. Feynman contrasts this idea with that of advertizing in which only that which makes the product look good is given.
When reading this book it helps to imagine that one is listening to Feynman speak. The text includes repetitions and the omissions which he no doubt conveyed with his voice, expression or gesture. When one reads him this way, some of Feynman's endearing charm and the gentle, self-effacing humor for which he is famous comes through. Here's a joke from pages 206-207: He is at Esalen in a hot bath with another man and a girl. The man begins to massage the girl's foot. He feels something in her big toe. He asks his instructor, "Is that the pituitary?" The girl says, "No, that's not the way it feels." Feynman injects, "You're a hell of a long way from the pituitary, man." And they both look at him. "I had blown my cover, you see--and she said, It's reflexology. So I closed my eyes and appeared to be meditating." Yes, Feynman is a long way from reflexology.
--Dennis Littrell, author of "The World Is Not as We Think It Is"