Cover of Don't You Have Time to Think?

Don't You Have Time to Think?

by Richard Phillips Feynman

4.0
(1 ratings)
512 pages2006Penguin BooksISBN 9780141021133

About this book

<p><b><i>Don't You Have Time to Think?</i></b><b> collects the witty, eccentric and moving letters letters of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard P. Feynman. </b> <p> Richard Feynman was no ordinary genius. Brilliant, free-spirited and irreverent, he upset those in authority, gave captivating lectures, wrote equations on napkins in strip joints and touched countless lives everywhere. He also wrote hundreds of letters to friends, family, critics, colleagues and devoted fans around the world. <p> Now these letters have been brought together for the first time. From down-to-earth advice to eager students to discussions of time travel and the atom bomb, and from blunt rebuttals to journalists to poignant exchanges with his first wife as she lay dying, they will introduce you to a unique person whose wisdom and lust for life inspired all those who came into his orbit. <p> 'Nobel-winning physicist, expert bongo-player, safe-cracker and all-round genius, Feynman was, as this wonderful and inspiring collection records, also a champion letter-writer ... Witty, deadpan, warm ... some are unbearably poignant'<br> <i>Guardian</i> <p> 'Plain-speaking ... touching'<br> <i>Daily Telegraph</i> <p> 'He sparked excitement not just about science but also about the power of creativity, passion, curiosity'<br> <i>The New York Times</i> <p> <b>Richard P. Feynman </b>(1918-1988) was one of this century's most brilliant theoretical physicists and original thinkers. Feynman's other books, also available in Penguin, include <i>QED</i>, <i>Six Easy Pieces</i>, <i>Six Not-so-Easy Pieces, Don't You Have Time to Think</i>, <i>The Pleasure of Finding Things Out</i>, <i>What Do You Care What Other People Think? </i>and <i>The Meaning of it All</i>.</p>

Publication Details

Publisher
Penguin Books
Published
2006
Pages
512
ISBN
9780141021133
Language
en

About Richard Phillips Feynman

Richard Phillips Feynman was an American theoretical physicist known for his work in the path integral formulation of quantum mechanics, the theory of quantum electrodynamics, and the physics of the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium, as well as in particle physics for which he proposed the parton model. For his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics, Feynman, jointly with Julian Schwinger and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965. - Wikipedia

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