Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 6 de abr. de 2005 · How I Found The Meaning of It All. One day in June of 1997, I was combing through the Feynman archives in the basement of CalTech. My goal was to see what unpublished gems might lie in the midst of the paper relics stored there since, several years earlier, Addison Wesley Longman's General Publishing Group had signed an agreement with Richard P. Feynman's heirs for the exclusive right to ...

  2. Books. The Meaning Of It All: Thoughts Of A Citizen-scientist. Richard P. Feynman. Basic Books, 1998 - Religion - 133 pages. Many appreciate Richard P. Feynman's contributions to twentieth-century physics, but few realize how engaged he was with the world around him—how deeply and thoughtfully he considered the religious, political, and ...

  3. 31 de mar. de 1998 · The Meaning Of It All: Thoughts Of A Citizen-scientist (Helix Books) Hardcover – March 31, 1998 by Richard P. Feynman (Author) 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 484 ratings

  4. The word is usually used to mean one of three things, or a mixture of them. I do not think we need to be precise—it is not always a good idea to be too precise. Science means, sometimes, a special method of finding things out. Sometimes it means the body of knowledge arising from the things found out.

  5. Richard P. Feynman The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen Scientist "In case you are beginning to believe that some of the things I said before are true because I am a scientist and according to the brochure that you got I won some awards and so forth, instead of your looking at the ideas themselves and judging them directly--in other words, you have some feeling toward authority--I will ...

  6. 2 de abr. de 2000 · The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist. In 1963, Richard Feynmann gave three lectures at the University of Washington. This short book (only 133 pages) is a transcript of those talks. The lectures were not really physics, but were a very informal (virtually extemporaneous) view of what the results of modern physics means to ...

  7. Richard P. Feynman's The Meaning Of It All: Thoughts Of A Citizen-scientist is a delightful series of three lectures on the uncertainty of science, then of values, and ending with the best of all -- "This Unscientific Age" -- which deals with popular notions which militate against science in favor of various shaky beliefs.