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  1. On 14 March 1964 Richard Feynman, one of the greatest scientific thinkers of the 20th Century, delivered a lecture entitled 'The Motion of the Planets Around the Sun'. For thirty years this remarkable lecture was believed to be lost. But now Feynman's work has been reconstructed and explained in meticulous, accessible detail, together with a history of ideas of the planets' motions.

  2. 17 de feb. de 2000 · But Feynman's Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun shows that the great man did just that. Originally delivered to an introductory physics class at Caltech in 1963, this 76-minute CD and book set contains everything the math-savvy listener needs to savor the pleasures of applied math.

  3. Feynman's Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun [With CD] David Goodstein, Carl Feynman. W. W. Norton & Company, $35 (0pp) ISBN 978-0-393-03918-4. Isaac Newton, in his Principia ...

  4. Una lezione inedita di Richard Feynman. Feynman's Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun è un libro di fisica che tratta del moto dei pianeti intorno al Sole, basato su una lezione tenuta da Richard Feynman agli studenti del primo anno del California Institute of Technology, il 13 marzo 1964, nell'ambito dell'esperimento didattico ...

  5. Feynman's Lost Lecture: The Motion of Planets Around the Sun. The great theoretical physicist and Nobel Prize winnder, Richard Feynman, left an indelible imprint on scientific thought. On 14 March 1964 he delivered a remarkable lecture which, until now, was believed to be lost. His lecture was about a single fact, though by no means a small one.

  6. Feynman's Lost Lecture: Motion of Planets Around the Sun is a book based on a lecture by Richard Feynman. Restoration of the lecture notes and conversion into book form was undertaken by Caltech physicist David L. Goodstein and archivist Judith R. Goodstein. Feynman had given the lecture on the motion of bodies at Caltech on March 13, 1964, but ...

  7. On March 13, 1964, Feynman delivered a lecture to the Caltech freshman class, "The Motion of Planets Around the Sun"why the planets move elliptically instead of in perfect circles. For reasons unknown, most probably for his own amusement, he chose to make the argument using mathematics no more advanced than high-school plane geometry. Isaac Newton had pulled off much the same trick nearly 300 ...