Brian Cox on Richard Feynman
Brian Cox, a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association who delivered this year’s Voltaire Lecture, presents a tribute to science popularizer and eminent physicist Richard Feynman.
Widely regarded as the finest physicist of his generation and the most influential since Einstein, Feynman did much to popularise science, through lectures, books and television, not least his revelation at a press conference in which he demonstrated the exact cause of the Challenger Shuttle explosion in 1986.
Described as the ‘Mozart of physics’, Feynman’s amazing life and career seemingly had no end of highlights.
A student at MIT and then Princeton (where he obtained an unprecedented perfect score on the entrance exam for maths and physics), he was drafted onto the Manhattan Project as a junior scientist.
There his energy and talents made a significant mark on two of the project’s leaders, Robert Oppenheimer and Hans Bethe.
The latter would become Feynman’s lifelong mentor and friend.
Bethe called his student “a magician”, setting him apart from other scientists as ‘no ordinary genius’.
Listen at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00b6djp (via RDF)
