A Random Walk In Science

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There was an electron in gold Who said, 'Shall I do as I'm told? Shall I snuggle down tight With a brief flash of light Or be Auger outside in the cold?' (Arthur Snell, Fluorescent yield) "This isn't right. This isn't even wrong." Wolfgang Pauli, on a paper of a physicist colleague Tour of Delightful Science: Such stimulating tour of witty and pleasing stories, memories, biographies, poetry, vocabulary and quotations with funny drawings and caricatures invoking fresh air for a mind eager for a relaxing massage of humor and a reassuring message whispering that clever scientists can be great fun! The wonderful collection seems like a coffee table book of science delights, but for an experienced sampler, "When does jam becomes marmalade," goes beyond such differences of beer and lager to a culture gap which Kipling's statement on East and West could not console. Creative Vocabulary: While philology is not closely related to natural sciences, the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts claims its original aims was to "care for the study of language and literature". A conference glossary informed me on the inner meaning of scientists' papers discussions. 'The physics terms made easy' cheered me up a lot, here are selected few: Conic section: Funny paper, Cosine: The opposite of stop sign, flux: past participle of the verb 'to flex', Harmonic function: Concert, Hypotenuse: Animal like rhinoceros but with no horn on nose, normal solution: the wrong answer, statistical correlation: 36-22-35, and, Watt: will you please repeat that remark. Promoting Academic Research: Being critical of scientific research is understandable, but when it comes from researchers it is normally funny sarcasm, and this book was not short of issues; In defense of pure research, American Institute of Useless Research, What do physicist do?, Pneumatic experiment, How a theoretical physicist works, Researcher prayer, ... In conclusion, a researcher's prayer: May be the best way to persuade readers of science, with PhD and MS incumbents to read this lovely anthology comes from the proceedings of the chemical society records, pray! "Grant, oh God, thy benedictions On my theory's predictions Lest the facts, when verified, Show Thy servant to have lied. May they make me B.Sc., A Ph.D. and then A D.Sc., and F.R.S., A time Obit. Amen My Book Review: A quarter of a century after its publication, this collection is still brisk Like fresh air. As the researcher's prayer, the Fisherman's prayer, expresses it best for me, "God give me strength to catch a fish, So Large that even I, When telling of it afterward, May never need to lie." This book is that magical fish! In Summa, a philosopher's observation: "Scientists animated by the purpose of proving that they are purposeless are an interesting subject of study." Alfred N. Whitehead, The Function of Reason

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A random walk in science The Compiler Robert L Weber (deceased) drew on long years of experience as an educator, author and editor to illustrate the humour and humanism in science to prove that the subject can be entertaining as well as enlightening. He was Associate Professor of physics at The Pennsylvania State University, and the author of more than a dozen books. He served on the boards of scientific and scholarly publications and regularly reviewed books for a wide range of scientific publications. Dr Weber received his BA at Yale University and his PhD at The Pennsylvania State University. Sadly, he died in 1997. The Editor Professor Eric Mendoza became interested in education while at the University of Manchester. He was mainly responsible for reforming the physics syllabus at Manchester and later at the University College of North Wales, and he