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벼락치기에도 비법이 있다
국민 여배우라는 애칭으로 불리는 배우 나향기 씨. 빼어난 미모와 내밀한 감정 연기, 폭넓은 연기세계, 게다가 명석한 두뇌까지! 빠지는 게 없다. 그녀와 함께 일했던 영화감독들은 다들 그녀의 탁월한 기억력에 감탄을 금치 못한다.
“의학 분야나 사극처럼 전문용어, 고어가 난무하면 아무리 연기라고 해도 대사 외우는 게 쉽지 않은데, 향기 씨는 어떤 역을 맡겨도 걱정이 없죠. 전문직, 사극 캐스팅 1순위는 항상 나향기 씨입니다.”
“부끄러운 얘기지만, 촬영 1시간 전에 ‘쪽 대본’이 나와도 걱정이 없었습니다. 나향기 씨라면 완벽하게 소화를 해내니까요.”
까칠한 영화감독들이 입을 모아 칭찬하는 나향기 씨의 이 탁월한 기억력의 비결은 무엇일까? 신은 왜 이 사람에게 빼어난 미모와 천재적인 기억력을 동시에 주신 것인가? 나, 과학기자는 오늘 이 문제를 짚고 넘어가보려 한다.
“향기 씨, 뵙게 되어 영광입니다. 오늘은 이미 영화계에 소문이 자자한 향기 씨의 뛰어난 기억력에 대해서 얘기를 나눠보려고 합니다. 탁월한 기억력의 비결을 알려주실 수 있을까요?”
“호호. 과장된 소문이에요. 제가 급한 대사를 잘 외우는 편이지만 평소 기억력은 형편없어요. 사람 이름도 잘 외우지 못하고, 뭐든 잘 잊어버리는 걸요. 대사 외우는 건 학교 다닐 때 벼락치기 하는 거랑 비슷해요. 연기하고 나면 금방 다 잊어버리죠. 방금 녹화하고 온 대사도 지금 기억 안 나는 걸요.”
과학 기자는 ‘벼락치기’라는 말에서 번쩍하고 머릿속에 불이 켜졌다.
“그거야말로 제가 궁금한 것입니다. 다들 시험을 앞두면 벼락치기를 하지만 사람마다 효과는 다르지 않습니까? 혹 남들과 다른 벼락치기 비법이 있지 않습니까?”
“저도 학교 다닐 때는 벼락치기 잘하지 못했어요. 성적에는 크게 관심이 없었죠. 연기는, 곧 카메라가 켜지고 대사를 제대로 외우지 못하면 NG가 난다는 긴장감 때문인지 집중력이 좋아지더군요. 배역에 감정이 이입된 상태라서 무심결에 외워지게 되는 것도 같아요. 하지만 잔뜩 긴장해서 대사를 외우고 나면 엄청나게 피곤해요. 한 페이지 넘어가는 긴 대사가 있는 촬영을 하고 나면 속도 쓰리고. 연기 생활 덕분에 만성 위궤양을 앓고 있어요. 의사는 스트레스 때문이라고 하더군요. 저 말고도 배우 중에 위궤양 앓는 사람들이 많아요.”
‘벼락치기와 스트레스라…’
과학기자는 고개를 끄덕였다. 이른바 ‘마감 증후군’이다. 글을 쓰거나 시험을 볼 때 막판에 몰리면 교감신경활성도가 올라간다. 즉 스트레스와 유사한 상태가 된다. 이 상태에서는 뇌가 각성하면서 일시적으로 집중력이 올라간다. 일정 정도의 스트레스가 긍정적인 영향력을 발휘하는 것이다. 벼락치기 상황이 되면 우리의 뇌는 고도의 집중력을 발휘한다. 공부를 하든 대사를 외우든 최고의 능률을 올릴 수 있게 되는 것이다. 배우들은 감정을 이입해서 대사를 외우는데, 감정을 자극하면 더 잘 외워진다. 두려움을 느끼는 등 감정을 자극하면 편도체가 반응한다. 편도체는 소리나 자극에 반응하여 정서가 기억되는 역할을 하는 대뇌부위다. 이 편도체에 정보를 저장하고 기억하는 기관 ‘해마’가 붙어 있다. 그래서 감정이 이입되면 편도체와 해마의 상호작용에 의해 해마가 자극을 받아 더 쉽게 기억되는 것이다.
벼락치기로 외웠다면 쉽게 잊어버리게 되는 것도 당연하다. 뇌는 해마에 의해 학습한 정보 중 기억해야 할 것만 대뇌피질로 보낸다. 이때 신경세포들 사이에 새로운 회로망이 생성된다. 입력된 정보가 장기기억 되려면 ‘반복’이 꼭 필요한 것이다. 벼락치기로 습득한 정보로는 장기기억이 이루어지지 않는다. 게다가 스트레스 상황에서 분비되는 호르몬인 코티졸은 장기기억을 방해한다. 부신에서 분비되는 코티졸은 해마의 신경세포들을 줄어들게 해 기억력을 둔화시킨다. ‘네이처’ 지에 실린 캘리포니아대학 신경생물학센터 연구 결과에 따르면 건강한 사람에게 코티졸을 투여했더니 기억력이 현저히 떨어졌다고 한다. 어느 정도의 스트레스는 기억력에 도움이 되지만, 스트레스가 과도해지면 해마가 코티졸 때문에 수축하면서 오히려 기억력이 떨어지게 되는 것이다.
대사는 잘 외우지만, 평소 기억력은 형편없다는 나향기 씨의 얘기는 확실히 설득력이 있다. 장기기억력을 높이려면 벼락치기를 하는 습관을 버려야 한다. 하지만 이미 벼락치기에 익숙해진 사람들에게 그런 말은 소용이 없다. 나, 과학기자만 해도 마감이 임박해야 간신히 글을 쓰지 않는가? 사람들은 왜 벼락치기의 유혹을 떨치지 못할까? 쾌락을 담당하는 핵심 부위인 측좌핵은 벼락치기를 할 때 ‘도파민’이 분비되는 곳이다. 도파민은 기쁨을 느끼게 하는 신경전달물질로 경마나 도박, 마약 등 중독에 관여하는 호르몬이다. 고통을 받다가 그 순간이 끝나고 얻는 보상심리와 만족감은 실로 크다. 담배나 술뿐 아니라 시간에 쫓기면서 일을 하는 것도 중독이 된다.
과학기자가 생각에 잠겨 있는 사이, 나향기 씨가 생각났다는 듯이 입을 열었다.
“대사를 외우는 저만의 노하우랄까 그런 게 있긴 한데요. 징크스 같은 거랍니다. 전 급한 대사를 외울 때 항상 빨간색 옷을 입어요. 처음 사극 할 때 붉은 치마를 입은 날은 대사가 더 잘 외워지고 푸른 색 치마를 입은 날은 신통치가 않더라고요. 그때 생긴 버릇이지요.”
이럴 수가! 과학 기자는 무릎을 쳤다. 캐나다 브리티시컬럼비아대 경영학과 루이 주 교수팀은 최근 사이언스지에 빨간색이 단기 기억에 도움이 된다는 연구 결과를 발표했다. 연구진은 빨강과 파랑 배경에 적힌 36개의 단어를 2분 동안 208명에게 보여 주고 20분 뒤 이를 기억하는 정도를 알아봤는데 빨간 바탕에 쓰인 단어를 본 사람들은 36개의 단어 중 20~21개를 외웠지만 파란 바탕에 적힌 단어를 본 사람들은 그보다 적은 6~17개를 기억했다.
“혹시 대사 외울 때 단 음료도 드시나요?”
“아니, 그걸 어떻게 아세요?”
“단맛을 내는 당 성분은 세포 내의 여러 과정을 거쳐 글루코스를 만듭니다. 뇌 세포는 글루코스만을 사용해 살아가죠. 글루코스가 뇌 속에서 순환하면서 기억력을 활성화시키는 역할을 하기 때문에 설탕을 섭취하면 기억력이 좋아지는 현상이 일어난다고 합니다. 설탕이 함유된 음료가 최소 24시간 동안 단기 기억력을 향상시킨다는 또 다른 연구결과도 있습니다.”
“그럼 제가 저도 모르게 과학적인 방법으로 대사를 외우고 있었던 것이로군요? 이거 참 재미있는데요. 호호.”
글 : 이소영 과학칼럼리스트
김별명
어제 한일전은 정말 끝까지 숨막히는 경기였지.
뭐 지난번 패배의 아픔이 싹 사라질 정도는 아니였지만 값진 승리임에는 틀림없다.
지난 경기도 그렇고 이번경이서도 맹활약을 펼친 김태균 선수의 모든것을 담고 있는 페이지가 있어서 링크를 걸어둔다.
http://wiki.angelhalo.org/wiki.php/%ea ··· 5aa%2585
아래는 너무 웃겨서 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
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예의 바른 한국 야구
질 때는 많은 점수 내줘 일본 열도에 더없는 기쁨을 주었다.
이것이 첫번째 예다.
이길 때는 최소의 점수로 소박하게 이겨 패자의 마음을 배려했다.
이것이 두 번째 예다.
승부의 세계에도 예가 있나니, 그 누가 이 깊은 뜻을 알겠느뇨.
출처 : http://bbs.sports.media.daum.net/gaia/ ··· hname%3D
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[Muse] Supermassive Black Hole
Oh baby can you hear me moan?
You caught me under false pretences
How long before you let me go?
Oooh...You set my soul alight
Oooh...You set my soul alight
(You set my soul alight)
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
(You set my soul alight)
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
I thought I was a fool for no-one
Oh baby I'm a fool for you
You're the queen of the superficial
And how long before you tell the truth
Oooh...You set my soul alight
Oooh...You set my soul alight
(You set my soul alight)
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
(You set my soul alight)
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
Supermassive black hole
Supermassive black hole
Supermassive black hole
Supermassive black hole
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
(You set my soul alight)
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
(You set my soul)
Glaciers melting in the dead of night
And the superstars sucked into the supermassive
Supermassive black hole
Supermassive black hole
Supermassive black hole
Supermassive black hole
뭐 Muse 노래가 그렇듯 상당히 몽환적이다.
처음 접했을때 상당히 인상깊어 한동안 Muse 노래만 들었던 기억이 난다.
근데 뮤직비디오가 참 안드로메다네 -_-;;
Burn-in wave
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[Nickelback] Dark Horse
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CURSOR INVISIBLE
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[Paul Dirac] the purest soul in physics
출처 : http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/print/1705
Paul Dirac: the purest soul in physics
Paul Dirac published the first of his papers on "The Quantum Theory of the Electron" seventy years ago this month. The Dirac equation, derived in those papers, is one of the most important equations in physics.
Each day, I walk past the road where Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac lived as a child. It is pleasant to have even this tenuous association with one of the greatest intellects of the 20th century. Paul Dirac was born at 15 Monk Road in Bishopston, Bristol, on 8 August 1902, and educated at the nearby Bishop Road Primary School. The family later moved to Cotham Road, near the University of Bristol, and in 1914 the young Dirac joined Cotham Grammar School, formerly the Merchant Venturers.
Dirac was a student at Bristol University between 1918 and 1923, first in electrical engineering and then in applied mathematics. Much later, he said: "I owe a lot to my engineering training because it [taught] me to tolerate approximations. Previously to that I thought...one should just concentrate on exact equations all the time. Then I got the idea that in the actual world all our equations are only approximate. We must just tend to greater and greater accuracy. In spite of the equations being approximate, they can be beautiful."
Because Dirac was a quiet man - famously quiet, indeed - he is not well known outside physics, although this is slowly changing. In 1995 a plaque to Dirac was unveiled at Westminster Abbey in London and last year Institute of Physics Publishing, which is based in Bristol, named its new building Dirac House.
It is hard to give the flavour of Dirac's achievements in a non-technical article, because his work was so mathematical. He once said: "A great deal of my work is just playing with equations and seeing what they give."
Early days
When Dirac went to Cambridge in 1923, the physics of matter on the smallest scales - in those days this was the physics of the atom - was in ferment. It had been known for more than a decade that the old mechanics of Newton - "classical" mechanics, as it came to be called - does not apply in the microscopic world. In particular, evidence from the light coming out of atoms seemed to indicate that some quantities that in classical mechanics can take any values are actually restricted to a set of particular values: they are "quantized". One of these quantities is the energy of the electrons in an atom. This was strange and shocking. Imagine being told that when your car accelerates from 0 to 70 miles per hour it does so in a series of jumps from one speed to another (say in steps of one thousandth of a mph), with the intermediate speeds simply not existing. It did not make sense, and yet observations seemed to demand such an interpretation.
In the first attempts at a theoretical understanding, physicists tried to find the general rules for imposing these restrictions on classical mechanics - that is rules for quantization. It seemed that in order to quantize, it was necessary first to identify those quantities that do not change when their environment is slowly altered. If a pendulum is slowly shortened, for example, it swings farther and also faster, in such a way that its energy divided by its frequency stays constant. These rules worked for simple atoms and molecules but failed for complicated ones.
Dirac entered physics at the end of this baroque period. One of his first papers was an attempt at a general theory of these unchanging quantities. This is a delicate problem in classical mechanics, not solved even now. It is amazing today to read that paper. In its mathematics it is quite unlike any of Dirac's later works (for example, he brings in fine differences between rational and irrational numbers), and "pre-invents" techniques developed by other people only decades later. (I say pre-invents because the paper was forgotten until recently.)
At this time the situation in atomic physics resembled that at the end of the 16th century, when the old Earth-centred astronomy had to be made ever more elaborate in the face of more accurate observations. The difficulties of the 16th and 20th centuries were resolved in the same way: by a complete shift of thought. In atomic physics this happened suddenly, in 1925, with the discovery by Heisenberg of quantum mechanics. This seemed to throw out classical mechanics completely, though it was built in as a limiting case to ensure that, on larger scales, the new mechanics agreed with more familiar experience. The quantum rules emerged automatically, but from a mathematical framework that was peculiar. For example, it involved multiplication where the result depends on the order in which the multiplication is done. It is as though 2 multiplied by 3 is different from 3 multiplied by 2. Heisenberg found this ugly and unsatisfactory. Dirac disagreed, and just a few months after Heisenberg he published the first of a series of papers in which quantum mechanics took the definitive form we still use today.
The main idea is that the multiplied objects - objects that represent variables we can measure in experiments - should be thought of as operations. An experiment is an operation, of course, even though its result is a number. With this interpretation, it is not surprising that the order matters: we all know that putting on our socks and then our shoes gives a result different from putting on our shoes and then our socks. Dirac found the one simple rule by which a multiplied by b differed from b multiplied by a, and from which the whole of quantum mechanics follows.
The same unification was soon found to include Schrödinger's way of doing quantum mechanics, where the state of a system is represented by a wave whose strength gives the probabilities of the different possible results of measurements on it. For a while this seemed completely different from the framework that Heisenberg had used, but it quickly emerged that in fact each represents Dirac's operators in a different way. It seemed miraculous.
The Dirac equation
Although brilliant - in Einstein's words, "the most logically perfect presentation of quantum mechanics" - this was a reformulation of physics that had, admittedly only just, been discovered. Dirac's main contribution came several years later, when (still in his mid-twenties) he made his most spectacular discovery.
Before quantum mechanics, there had been another revolution in physics, with Einstein's discovery in 1905 that Newton's mechanics fails for matter moving at speeds approaching that of light. To get things right, time had to be regarded as no longer absolute: before-and-after had to be incorporated as a fourth co-ordinate like the familiar three spatial co-ordinates that describe side-to-side, forward-and-backward and up-and-down. Just as what is side-to-side and what is forward-and-backward change when you turn, so time gets mixed in with the other three co-ordinates when you move fast. Now, in the 1920s, came quantum mechanics, showing how Newton's mechanics failed in a different way: on microscopic scales. The question arose: what is the physics of particles that are at the same time small and moving fast?
This was a practical question: the electrons in atoms are small, and they move fast enough for the new quantum mechanics to be slightly inaccurate, since it had been constructed to have as its large-scale limit Newton's mechanics rather than Einstein's. From the start people tried to construct a quantum theory concordant with relativity, but failed to overcome technical obstructions: in particular, their attempts gave probabilities that were negative numbers - something that is nonsense, at least in the usual meaning of probability. The question boiled down to this: what are the right sort of quantum waves describing electrons? And what is the wave equation that governs the dynamics of these waves, while satisfying the requirements of relativity and giving sensible physical predictions?
Dirac's construction of his wave equation for the electron - published in two papers in the Proceedings of the Royal Society (London) in February and March 1928 - contained one of those outrageous leaps of imagination shared by all great advances in thought. He showed that the simplest wave satisfying the requirements was not a simple number but had four components (see below). This seemed like a complication, especially to minds still reeling from the unfamiliarity of the "ordinary" quantum mechanics. Four components! Why should anybody take Dirac's theory seriously?
First, and above all for Dirac, the logic that led to the theory was, although deeply sophisticated, in a sense beautifully simple. Much later, when someone asked him (as many must have done before) "How did you find the Dirac equation?" he is said to have replied: "I found it beautiful." Second, it agreed with precise measurements of the energies of light emitted from atoms, in particularly where these differed from ordinary (non-relativistic) quantum mechanics.
There are two more reasons why the Dirac equation was compelling as the correct description of electrons. To understand them, you should realize that any great physical theory gives back more than is put into it, in the sense that as well as solving the problem that inspired its construction, it explains more and predicts new things. Before the Dirac equation, it was known that the electron spins. The spin is tiny on the scale of everyday but is always the same and plays a central part in the explanation through quantum mechanics of the rules of chemistry and the structure of matter. This spin was a property of the electron, like its mass and its electric charge, whose existence simply had to be assumed before quantum mechanics could be applied. In Dirac's equation, spin did not have to be imported: it emerged - along with the magnetism of the electron - as an inevitable property of an electron that was both a quantum particle and a relativistic one.
So, electron spin was the third reason for believing Dirac's mathematically inspired equation. The fourth came from a consequence of the equation that was puzzling for a few years at first. Related to its four components was the fact that any solution of the equation where the electron had a positive energy had a counterpart where the energy was negative. It gradually became clear that these counterpart solutions could be interpreted as representing a new particle, similar to the electron but with positive rather than negative charge; Dirac called it an "anti-electron", but it soon came to be known as the positron. If an electron encounters a positron, Dirac predicted, the two charges cancel and the pair annihilates, with the combined mass transforming into radiation in the most dramatic expression of Einstein's celebrated equation E = mc2. Thus was antimatter predicted. When the positron was discovered by Anderson in 1932, Dirac's immortality was assured. Dirac and Schrödinger shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1933.
Nowadays, positrons are used every day in medicine, in PET (positron emission tomography) scanners that pinpoint interesting places in the brain (e.g. places where drugs are chemically active). These work by detecting the radiation as the positrons emitted from radioactive nuclei annihilate with ordinary electrons nearby.
The Dirac equation
Other achievements
Having explained spin, it was natural for Dirac to try to explain electric charge, and in particular the mysterious fact that it is quantized: all charges found in nature are multiples of the charge on the electron. In classical electricity, there is no basis for this: charges can have any value.
In 1931 Dirac gave a solution of this problem in an application of quantum mechanics so original that it still astounds us to read it today. He combined electricity with magnetism, in a return to the 18th-century notion of a magnet being a combination of north and south magnetic poles (magnetic charges), in the same way that a charged body contains positive and negative electric charges. That symmetry was lost in the 19th century with the discoveries of Oersted, Ampère and Faraday, culminating in Maxwell's synthesis of all electromagnetic and - in another example of getting out more than you put in - optical phenomena. In its place came a greater simplicity: there are only electric charges, whose movement generates magnetism (and now the motive power for much of our civilisation). The absence of isolated magnetic poles - magnetic monopoles - was built into classical electromagnetism, and also the quantum mechanics that grew out of it.
Dirac wondered if there was any way that magnetic monopoles could be brought into quantum physics without spoiling everything that had grown out of assuming that they did not exist. He found that this could be done, but only if the strength of the monopole (the "magnetic charge") was linked to that of the electric charge, and if both were quantized. This solved the original problem: for consistency with quantum mechanics, the existence of even one monopole anywhere in the universe would suffice to ensure that electric charge must be quantized. The implication is compelling: to account for the quantization of electricity, magnetic poles must exist. After this, Pauli referred to Dirac as "Monopoleon".
Alas, no magnetic monopole has ever been found. Perhaps they do not exist, or perhaps (and there are hints of this in the theory) positive and negative monopoles are so tightly bound together that they have not been separated. Much later, Dirac referred to this theory as "just a disappointment". However, the mathematics he invented to study the monopole - combining geometry with analysis - now forms the basis of the modern theories of fundamental particles.
There were two other seminal contributions to physics in those early years. I have space only to mention them. Dirac applied quantum mechanics to the way light and matter interact. This made him realize that it was necessary to quantize not only particles but the electromagnetic field itself, and led him to the first consistent theory of photons (which had been discovered several decades previously in the beginnings of quantum mechanics). This led to the elaborate and thriving quantum field theories of today.
Dirac also showed how quantum waves for many electrons had to be constructed, incorporating the philosophically intriguing fact that any two of these particles are absolutely identical and so cannot be distinguished in any way. This produced the definitive understanding of earlier rules about how quantum mechanics explains the periodic table of the elements, and provided the basis for the theory of metals and the interior of stars.
Like all scientists at the highest level, Dirac was not afraid to descend from the pinnacle and discuss more down-to-earth matters. Here are two examples. Much of our knowledge comes from light scattered by matter; in particular, that is how we see. In a clever stroke of lateral thinking, Dirac realized that the quantum symmetry between waves of light and waves of matter implied that it is also possible for material particles to be scattered by light, a ghostly possibility that could be observed, as he showed in 1933 in a paper with Peter Kapitza. This was observed for the first time about ten years ago and the manipulation of atoms by laser beams is now a thriving area of applied quantum mechanics - a fact recognized with a Nobel prize last year (Physics World November 1997 p51, print version).
The second example is his Second World War work. In the Manhattan Project to develop the first nuclear bombs, it was necessary to separate isotopes of uranium. One class of methods involved the centrifugal effects of fluid streams that were made to bend. Dirac put the theory of these techniques on a firm basis, and indeed his work in this field has been described as seminal.
Dirac stories
It is not my intention to write about what sort of person Dirac was. But I must mention the genre of "Dirac stories". He was so unusual in the logic and precision of his interaction with the world, both in and out of physics, that tales have become attached to him and have acquired a life of their own. I suppose it matters to a historian whether they are true or apocryphal (or as Norman Mailer says, "factoids"), but to us they have a deeper resonance that transcends fact. Resisting temptation, I retell just two less well known ones.
Like many scientists, Dirac was known to sleep during (other people's) lectures, and then wake and suddenly make a penetrating remark. Once, a speaker stopped, scratched his head and declared: "Here is a minus where there should be a plus. I seem to have made an error of sign." Dirac opened one eye and said: "Or an odd number of them." Another time, Dirac was at a meeting in a castle, when another guest remarked that a certain room was haunted: at midnight, a ghost appeared. In his only reported utterance on matters paranormal, Dirac asked: "Is that midnight Greenwich time, or daylight saving time?"
Dirac's writing was famous for its clarity and simplicity. Every physicist knows his Principles of Quantum Mechanics - such a perfect and complete summary of his views that in later years his lectures consisted of readings from it. There is the story that he was once present when Niels Bohr was writing a scientific paper - with many hesitations and redraftings, as was his custom. Bohr stopped: "I do not know how to finish this sentence." Dirac replied: "I was taught at school that you should never start a sentence without knowing the end of it."
Many physicists have spoken of Dirac with awe. John Wheeler, referring to the sharp light of his intelligence, said "Dirac casts no penumbra." Niels Bohr said: "Of all physicists, Dirac has the purest soul." He is also reported as saying (I cannot now find this quotation): "Dirac did not have a trivial bone in his body."
The mathematician Mark Kac divided geniuses into two classes. There are the ordinary geniuses, whose achievements one imagines other people might emulate, with enormous hard work and a bit of luck. Then there are the magicians, whose inventions are so astounding, so counter to all the intuitions of their colleagues, that it is hard to see how any human could have imagined them. Dirac was a magician.
About the author
Sir Michael Berry is Royal Society Research Professor at the H H Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TL, UK. This is a version of a talk delivered in September 1997 at the official opening of Dirac House, the headquarters of Institute of Physics Publishing.
Further reading
P A M Dirac 1928 The quantum theory of the electron Proc. R. Soc. (London) A 117 610-612
P A M Dirac 1928 The quantum theory of the electron Part II Proc. R. Soc. (London) A 118 351-361
R H Dalitz (ed) 1995 The Collected Works of P A M Dirac 1924-1948 (Cambridge University Press) Buy the book: Amazon UK/Amazon US
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