거지와 갑부

 

로스차일드 남작은 유명한 대부호로 로스차일드가를 일으킨 인물이다.

  그는 많은 자식들을 두었으며 그 아들 하나씩을 유럽의 수도에 살게 하여

로스차일드가의 국제적인 네트워크를 형성해 놓았다.

   어느 날, 이 로스차일드 남작이 베를린의 거리를 걷고 있는데,

한 걸인이 한쪽 손에 빈 깡통을 들고 나타났다.

  " 로스차일드 남작님! 한 푼 보태주십시오!"

  로스 차일드는 인정이 많은 사람이었으므로 지갑에서 소액 지폐 몇 장을 꺼내 가지고 걸인에게 주었다.

  그러자 걸인은 말했다.

  " 로스차일드 남작님! 지난 번 아드님께서는 배나 더 주셨는데요."

  그러자 로스차일드 남작은 얼굴에 미소를 지으며 나직하게 말했다.

  " 아들에게는 돈 많은 아버지가 있지만, 공교롭게도 나에게는 돈 많은 아버지가 없어서 말야."

 


2004/06/29 19:57 2004/06/29 19:57

명답




 

옛날, 어느 나라에 왕에게 여러해 동안 시중들고 있던 피에로가 있었다.

 그러나 이 피에로는 어느 날 궁전에서 어찌된 일이 었던지 왕을 화나게 만들었다.

 왕은 피에로에게 사형을 선고했다.

하지만 이 피에로는 왕이 어렸을 때부터 지금까지 궁전에서

일을 열심히 해왔기 때문에 왕은 마지막 자비를 베풀었다.

 " 나도 자비심이 깊느니라. 내가 어렸을 때부터 너는 확실히 나를 웃기려고 열심히 노력해 왔다.

그래서 마지막으로 한가지만 소원을 들어주도록 하겠노라.

너는 어떻게 죽었으면 좋겠느냐? 네 소원대로 죽는 방법을 택하도록 하라."

 왕은 왕좌의 옆에 있는 자그마한 모래시계를 거꾸로 돌려 놓고

 " 이 모래가 다 흘러내릴 때까지 생각해서 대답토록 하라." 고 말했다.

 피에로는 모래 시계가 마지막 다 흘러내릴 때까지 줄곧 아무 말 없었다.

 그리고 최후의 모래가 밑의 유리 상자 속에 떨어지자 왕은 물었다.

 " 자 , 이제 마음은 결정되었는가?"

 

 

 " 예 , 정해졌습니다. 나는 노쇠해서 자연사하는 방법을 희망합니다."

 

 


2004/06/28 19:52 2004/06/28 19:52

생각중

resize



 

아~~

요즘 생각할게 많아~~

진학문제도 그렇고 ~~

 

 


2004/06/28 19:50 2004/06/28 19:50
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ♡ 나의 하루 ♡
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

항복

resize



2004/06/28 19:48 2004/06/28 19:48
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ◆ 귀여워>_< ◆
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

리플은 나의 힘





 

 


2004/06/23 19:47 2004/06/23 19:47
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ◇ 흔적남기3 ◇
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

학교를 가면서

   


  <나의 모교>

 

오늘 주민등록증을 찾으러 동사무서에 들려다 학교에 왔다...

동사무소 옆 초등학교에서 쉬는시간 종소리가 들리더군...

 

생각해보니... 대학와서 없어서 섭섭했던 거 중 하나가 쉬는 시간 종소리다...

대학에서는 종을 치지 않으니 끝나는 시간이 교수님 맘이다 -_-;;

그래도 시간을 잘 지키시는 교수님이 대부분이지만...

몇몇 교수님은 소중한 우리들의 쉬는 시간을 강의에 투자하게 만든다...

 

특히 역학 교수님 안교수님은 늦게 끝내주시기로 유명하다...

교수님은 수업 시간이 끝나면 넘었다고 말해달라고 한다...

하지만 교수님이 열강을 하고 계신데...

누가 교수님께 수업시간 끝났다고 대놓고(!) 말할 수 있는가~  -_-;;;

하지만 몇몇 선배들은

"지금 몇시야?"  하고 옆에 앉은 친구에게 물어본다...

"어... 지금 53분인데~~  ㅡ_ㅡ;;; "  교수님도 들리게끔 대답을 하곤 한다...ㅋㅋ

 

대학에는 왜 종소리가 없는지 참 궁굼하네...

할튼 올만에 종소리를 들으니 옛 생각이 새록새록~

 


2004/06/23 19:38 2004/06/23 19:38
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ♡ 나의 하루 ♡
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

파인만

출처 : yudau`s cafe

 



Courtesy of The Archives, California Institute of Technology
 
 

Richard Feynman's parents were Melville Feynman and Lucille Phillips. Melville was born into a Jewish family in Minsk, Belarus, and emigrated with his parents to the United States when he was five years old. He was a business man who tried, not too successfully, many different types of business. It is clear that his talents were not in business but rather in science which was the subject that fascinated him but he never had the opportunity to make a career from it. Lucille Phillips was born in the United States into a Jewish family. Lucille's father had emigrated from Poland and her mother also came from a family of Polish immigrants. She trained as a primary school teacher but married Melville in 1917 before taking up a profession.

After their marriage Lucille and Melville Feynman moved into a Manhattan apartment and, in the following year, their first child Richard was born. Melville wanted his first child to be a son and he also wanted him to become a scientist so, overjoyed when he got the son he wanted, he did all he could to interest Richard in science throughout his childhood. Gleick writes [6]:-

Melville's gift to the family was knowledge and seriousness. Humour and storytelling came from Lucille.

Tragedy struck the family when Richard was five years old for Lucille and Melville had a second son who died when four weeks old. It meant that a sadness fell over the household which must have greatly affected the young Richard. After this, he remained an only child until his sister Joan was born when he was nine years old. The family moved several times during these years but when Richard was ten they settled in Far Rockaway.

Richard, or Ritty as his friends called him, learnt a great deal of science from Encyclopaedia Britannica and taught himself elementary mathematics before he encountered it at school. He also set up a laboratory in his room at home where he experimented with electricity. In particular he wired circuits with light bulbs, he invented a burglar alarm, and he took radios apart to repair damaged circuits. When he entered Far Rockaway High School his interests were almost entirely mathematics and science. He found little liking for arts type subjects at this time [4]:-

I always worried about being a sissy; I didn't want to be too delicate. To me, no real man ever paid any attention to poetry and such things.

At school Feynman approached mathematics in a highly unconventional way. Basically he enjoyed recreational mathematics from which he derived a large amount of pleasure. He studied a lot of mathematics in his own time including trigonometry, differential and integral calculus, and complex numbers long before he met these topics in his formal education. Realising the importance of mathematical notation, he invented his own notation for sin, cos, tan, f(x) etc. which he thought was much better than the standard notation. However, when a friend asked him to explain a piece of mathematics, he suddenly realised that notation could not be a personal matter since one needed it to communicate. He really enjoyed mathematics competitions and was a real star in his school. In his final year at Far Rockaway High School he won the New York University Math Championship.

After leaving school he applied to several universities to study there. One would have expected every university to which he applied would enthusiastically offer him a place but it was not that easy. Although his grades in mathematics and science were outstanding, he had performed much less well in other subjects. There was also the "problem" that he was a Jew, which really was a problem in the United States at this time with universities having quotas on the number of Jews they admitted. He sat an entrance examination for Columbia University and they turned him down. He never quite forgave them for charging him 15 dollars and then rejecting him. He was accepted, however, by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

He entered MIT in 1935 and, after four years study, obtained his B.Sc. in 1939. He went there to study mathematics but, although he found the courses easy, he became increasingly worried by the abstraction and lack of applications which characterised the course at this time. He read Eddington's Mathematical Theory of Relativity while in his first year of studies and felt that this was what he wanted from mathematics. His mathematics lecturers presented him with the view that one did mathematics for its own sake so Feynman changed courses, taking electrical engineering. Very quickly he changed again, this time moving into physics. It is interesting to think that had Feynman taken the mathematics course at Cambridge which Hoyle took around the same time, he would have found it exactly what he wanted.

The physics course that Feynman took at MIT was not the standard one. He took Introduction to Theoretical Physics, a class intended for graduate students, in his second year. There was no course on quantum mechanics, a topic that Feynman was very keen to study, so together with a fellow undergraduate, T A Welton, he began to read the available texts in the spring of 1936. Returning to their respective homes in the summer of 1936 the two exchanged a series of remarkable letters as they tried to develop a version of space-time where (quoted from one of the letters - see [6]):-

... electrical phenomena [are] a result of the metric of a space in the same way that gravitational phenomena are.

By 1937 Feynman was reading Dirac's The principles of quantum mechanics and seeing how his highly original ideas fitted into Dirac's approach. In fact Dirac became the scientist who Feynman most respected throughout his life.

We mentioned above that Feynman went home for his vacations. In fact he applied for summer jobs at the Bell Telephone Laboratories every summer but was always refused a position there despite the highest recommendations. Although it can never be proved, there seems no other reason that he would be turned down other than that he was Jewish.

As he approached the end of his remarkable four undergraduate years at MIT he began to think about studying for his doctorate. Since he had been so happy at MIT and also believing it to be the leading institution, he approached the head of physics, John Slater, requesting that he stay on to take a Ph.D. course. Slater told him that for his own good he had to move and he suggested Princeton.

Despite the personal recommendation that Harry Smyth at Princeton received from Slater, it was not obvious that Feynman would be accepted. He had the best grades in physics and mathematics that anyone had seen, but on the other hand he was close to the bottom in history, literature and fine arts. He had one other thing going against him - namely that he was Jewish. Smyth wrote:-

Is Feynman Jewish? We have no definite rule against Jews but have to keep their proportion in our department reasonably small because of the difficulty of placing them.

After further letters from Slater, Feynman was accepted by Princeton. His doctoral work at Princeton was supervised by John Wheeler, and after finding the first problem that Wheeler gave him rather intractable, he went back to ideas he had thought about while at MIT. The first seminar that he gave at Princeton was to an audience which included Einstein, Pauli and von Neumann. Pauli said at the end [4]:-

I do not think this theory can be right ...

In retrospect, Feynman thought that Pauli must have seen difficulties at once, for after Feynman had spent a long time working on it, he too thought that it was not satisfactory. However, he then went on to develop a new approach to quantum mechanics using the principle of least action. He replaced the wave model of electromagnetics of Maxwell with a model based on particle interactions mapped into space-time. Gleick writes [6]:-

This was Richard Feynman nearing the crest of his powers. At twenty-three ... there was no physicist on earth who could match his exuberant command over the native materials of theoretical science. It was not just a facility at mathematics (though it had become clear ... that the mathematical machinery emerging from the Wheeler-Feynman collaboration was beyond Wheeler's own ability). Feynman seemed to possess a frightening ease with the substance behind the equations, like Einstein at the same age, like the Soviet physicist Lev Landau - but few others.

He received his doctorate from Princeton in 1942 but before this time the United States had entered World War II.

Feynman worked on the atomic bomb project at Princeton University (1941-42) and then at Los Alamos (1943-45). When he was approached during his final year of research to take part in the project his first reaction had been a very definite no since he was entering the final stages of work for his thesis at the time [4]:-

... I went back to my thesis - for about three minutes. Then I began to pace the floor and think about the thing. The Germans had Hitler and the possibility of developing an atomic bomb was obvious, and the possibility that they would develop it before we did was very much of a fright.

Feynman began work on the Manhattan project at Princeton developing a theory of how to separate Uranium 235 from Uranium 238, while his thesis supervisor Wheeler went to Chicago to work with Fermi on the first nuclear reactor. Wigner, in Wheeler's absence, advised Feynman to write up his thesis and after Wheeler and Wigner examined the work he received his doctorate in June 1942.

Feynman had a difficult personal problem at this time. His girlfriend of many years, Arlene Greenbaum, had been diagnosed as having tuberculosis and his family opposed their marriage. Shortly after he was awarded his doctorate Feynman married Arlene with no family members present. Shortly after his marriage Feynman went to the newly constructed Los Alamos site to work on the atomic bomb project. His remarkable abilities soon led to him being appointed as head of the theoretical division. Arlene died in 1945 just before the first test of the bomb. Feynman would marry twice more and have two children with his third wife.

After World War II, in the autumn of 1945, Feynman was appointed as a professor of theoretical physics at Cornell University. At first he devoted himself to teaching and put his research aside. The pressure of the work at Los Alamos, together with the personal stress of watching his wife's health decline, had taken its toll. He wrote [4]:-

If you're teaching a class, you can think about the elementary things that you know very well. These things are kind of fun and delightful. It doesn't do any harm to think them over again. Is there a better way to present them? The elementary things are easy to think about; if you can't think of a new thought, no harm done; what you thought about it before is good enough for the class. If you do think of something new, you're rather pleased that you have a new way of looking at it.

He received offers of posts at other universities but felt that as a non-researcher he could not even consider them. Suddenly the desire to undertake research hit him again and he returned to the quantum theory of electrodynamics that he was working on before World War II.

In 1950 Feynman accepted a position as professor of theoretical physics at the California Institute of Technology. Since he had already planned a sabbatical leave before receiving the offer, he was able to arrange to spend the first ten months of his new appointment in Brazil. He remained at Cal tech for the rest of his career, being appointed Richard Chace Tolman Professor of Theoretical Physics there in 1959.

Feynman's main contribution was to quantum mechanics, following on from the work of his doctoral thesis. He introduced diagrams (now called Feynman diagrams) that are graphic analogues of the mathematical expressions needed to describe the behaviour of systems of interacting particles. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1965, jointly with Schwinger and Tomonoga:-

... for fundamental work in quantum electrodynamics, with deep-ploughing consequences for the physics of elementary particles.

Other work on particle spin and the theory of 'partons' which led to the current theory of quarks were fundamental in pushing forward an understanding of particle physics.

In early 1979 Feyman's health had deteriorated and he had surgery for stomach cancer. This was very successful and his doctors believed that he would not suffer a recurrence. After his recovery he enjoyed the limelight as a famous public figure, a role which was enhanced when the book [4] became a surprise best seller. His final major task was as a member of a committee set up to investigate the cause of the explosion on the space shuttle Challenger on Tuesday 28 January 1986. The fascinating story of the science and politics of this investigation is told in Feyman's own words in [5]. It was a very difficult time for Feyman since throughout the investigation his health was deteriorating. Near the end of 1987 cancer was found again in his abdomen. After his death, Chandler wrote on 17 February 1988 in [17]:-

Feynman, who died at the University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center after an eight-year battle with abdominal cancer, was a popular and energetic lecturer who, despite his illness, continued to teach at the California Institute of Technology until two weeks ago.

Feynman's books include many outstanding ones which evolved out of lecture courses. For example Quantum Electrodynamics (1961) and The Theory of Fundamental Processes (1961), The Feynman Lectures on Physics (1963-65) (3 volumes), The Character of Physical Law (1965) and QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter (1985).

In [6] Gleick described Feynman's approach to science:-

So many of his witnesses observed the utter freedom of his flights of thought, yet when Feynman talked about his own methods not freedom but constraint ... For Feynman the essence of scientific imagination was a powerful and almost painful rule. What scientists create must match reality. It must match what is already known. Scientific creativity, he said, is imagination in a straitjacket ... The rules of harmonic progression made for Mozart a cage as unyielding as the sonnet did for Shakespeare. As unyielding and as liberating - for later critics found the creator's genius in the counterpoint of structure and freedom, rigour and inventiveness.

Feynman received many honours for his work. He was elected to the American Physical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the National Academy of Science, and the Royal Society of London. Among the awards he received were the Albert Einstein Award (1954), the Einstein Award, and the Lawrence Award (1962).

As to Feynman's character, he was described in [17] as follows:-

He was widely known for his insatiable curiosity, gentle wit, brilliant mind and playful temperament.

Gleick [6] describes him as:-

... mystifyingly brilliant at calculating, strangely ignorant of the literature, passionate.

Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson

 

 


resize


Courtesy of The Archives, California Institute of Technology

2004/06/20 19:35 2004/06/20 19:35
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ◇ PhysicsⅠ◇
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

넘 널널하네

resize




  아~  이런...

  자다가 일어나보니 벌써 막차시간이 지났더군  -_-;;;;;;

  막차시간이 11시 50분~12시 사이인데 일어나보니 11시 58분!!

  대략 난감이였다는...

 

  그래서 그냥 계속 자다가 지금 일어났다  ㅋㅋ

  꽤 피곤했는지 불편한 자세로 5시간이나 잤더군...

  일어나려고 하니 몸이 말을 안듣네...

  이리 저리 쑤시고 저리고 -_-^

  일어나보니 상현이 형은 역시 공부하고 있더군...

  역시 열심힌 상현이형...

 

  그리고 어제까지 무섭게 내리던 비가 그쳐서 다행이다...

  좀있다 첫 차 타고 집에가서 또 자야지 ㅎㅎ

 


2004/06/20 19:30 2004/06/20 19:30
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ♡ 나의 하루 ♡
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

공부잘하는 방법 100%




 

앞으로 몇일동안 이 방법을 써야 겠다

 


2004/06/20 19:28 2004/06/20 19:28
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ♡ 나의 하루 ♡
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed

인연

 

resize


 

사람들의 새끼발가락엔 보이지 않는 빨간 실이 있다고 한다.

나와 연결된 빨간 실의 나머지 끝을 묶고 있는 사람이

정말 인연이 되는 사람이라고.....

하지만 때로는

그 실이 너무 엉켜있어서 가는 길이 멀기도 하고

또 다른 사람의 실과 엉켜 착각하게 되기도 하는 거라고.......

 


2004/06/09 19:26 2004/06/09 19:26
Posted at
Last updated at
Posted by
Filed under ◆ 삶을 풍유롭게 ◆
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed
Response
No Trackback No Comment
You can track responses via RSS / ATOM feed
RSS 2.0 feed
ATOM 1.0 feed