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The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist

by Richard P. Feynman

Review

This is a set of three lectures given by Richard Feynman in 1963 at the University of Washington as part of the then new Danz lectures. The themes of the lectures are: the nature of science, the relationship of science to society and religion, and the unscientific American culture of the day.

I've seen films of other Feynman lectures and found him to be really engaging, personable, and down to earth. These qualities come across in these lectures as well, but it turns out that folksiness doesn't translate well to the written word. The second and third lectures seemed disjointed, rambling, not well thought out. The first one, on the crucial role of doubt, skepticism, and uncertainty in science was better, but not really very enlightening for anyone who has thought at all about scientific activity.


NewBookForm
status: completed
isbn: 0465023940
title: The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen-Scientist
author: Richard P. Feynman
category: technical
comments:
rating: poor

 
 
Current Rev: r1.1 - 20 Aug 2011 - 00:00 GMT - DaleBrayden, Revision History:Diffs | r1.1
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