Examples of using Feynman in English and their translations into German
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Political
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Computer
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Programming
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Official/political
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Political
And that's Richard Feynman.
Feynman loved this story.
But how should we honor Feynman?
About Feynman the physicist.
It reminds me of this Feynman quote.
People also translate
And Feynman also understood this.
His boss there was Richard Feynman.
Richard Feynman's parents were Melville Feynman and Lucille Phillips.
And I'm going to tell you the Richard Feynman that I knew.
Richard Feynman was a colorful character, who played the bongo drums in a strip joint in Pasadena, and was a brilliant physicist at the California Institute of Technology.
And I got him this amazing autographed copy of The Feynman Lectures on Physics.
Feynman and Gell-Mann, after developing theories on electrons and quarks, expressed their view that electrons and quarks might be mathematical constructs rather than real entities.
And the computations that it uses, they're molecular computations,and in order to understand this and get a better handle on it, as Feynman said, you know, we need to build something to understand it.
Nobel Laureate Richard Feynman and one of Einstein's protégés, John Wheeler, calculated that there is more than enough energy(from ZPE) in a coffee cup to evaporate all the worlds' oceans.
Now, we could dismiss this whole story into the realm of science fiction, if it were not for the judgment of internationally reputed physicists such as Steven Weinberg,Murray Gell-Mann and Richard Feynman.
It was at the end of the 1950s that the American physicist andlater Nobel laureate Richard Feynman prophesied that all the knowledge in the world would one day be stored in a memory the size of a grain of sand.
James Bjorken and Richard Feynman analyze this data in terms of a model of constituent particles inside the proton they didn't use the name"quark" for the constituents, even though this experiment provided evidence for quarks.
This brings physicists one step closer to the far-sighted ideas ofphysics Nobel Prize laureate Richard Feynman, who in 1982 dreamed of a universal quantum simulator which would be able to experimentally simulate any given quantum system.
Richard Feynman, the great theoretical physicist, has offered a simple yet powerful retort:"Does our understanding of the mechanisms of stellar activity diminish in any way our appreciation of the beauty and splendor of the night sky?
With his observation“There is plenty of roomat the bottom,” the physicist Richard Feynman founded the field of present-day nanotechnology, which enables the construction of materials and structures made up of individual atoms.
I remember the legends of great minds like Enrico Fermi, who estimated the power output of the first nuclear blast by floating a few pieces of scrap paper,and like Richard Feynman, who beat an abacus expert by doing binomial expansion.
Long before physicist Richard Feynman launched the nanotechnology era with his 1959 assertion,"There's plenty of room at the bottom," people were manipulating glass at the nano level-Â often without realizing it.
Yet the assumptions that quantum theory needs to make in order todeliver those predictions are so mysterious that even Feynman himself was moved to remark,"If you think you understand quantum theory, you don't understand quantum theory.
Feynman says,"From the hypothesis that the world is a fluctuation, all the predictions are that if we look at a part of the world we have never seen before, we will find it mixed up, and not like the piece we have just looked at-- high entropy.
A frustration I have experienced often over the years is remembering a brilliant insight from Carl Sagan,Richard Feynman, or some other author that would make an excellent complement for my current blog post, but having no idea which book in which it appeared.
It is named after physicist Richard Feynman, who once stated during a lecture he would like to memorize the digits of until that point, so he could recite them and quip"nine nine nine nine nine nine and so on", suggesting, in a tongue-in-cheek manner, that is rational.
What's it like to be pals with a genius? Onstage at TEDxCaltech,physicist Leonard Susskind spins a few stories about his friendship with the legendary Richard Feynman, discussing his unconventional approach to problems both serious and... less so.
Following an approach that was echoed by Suraj N. Gupta, Richard Feynman and Steven Weinberg, Kraichnan showed that, under some mild secondary assumptions, the full nonlinear equations of general relativity follow from its linearized form: the quantum field theory of a massless spin 2 particle, the graviton, coupled to the stress-energy tensor.
This state of mind, the sense of harmony we receive from comprehending that our reality is orderly and understandable is known as the Ionian Enchantment, a term coined by the physicist and philosopher Gerald Holton,and I have always thought the Physicist Richard Feynman best articulated it in this passage.
My recent most favorite example of a parent teaching their child scienceis the Energy Game Dr. Richard Feynman used to play with is father growing up, where he was challenged to answer where something got its energy(ie. a spring wound up by a person), and where that energy came from(person ate food), and where that came from, etc.