Taken from “Surely You're Joking, Mr.
Feynman!” Adventures of a Curious Character by Richard Phillips Feynman as told to Ralph Leighton edited by
Edward Hutchings
Preface
The
stories in this book were collected intermittently and informally during seven
years of very enjoyable drumming with Richard Feynman. I have found each story by
itself to be amusing, and the collection taken together to be amazing:
That
one person could have so many wonderfully crazy things happen to him in one
life is sometimes hard to believe. That one person could invent so much
innocent mischief in one life is surely an inspiration!
Ralph
Leighton
Introduction
I
hope these won’t be the only memoirs of Richard Feynman. Certainly the
reminiscences here give a true picture of much of his character—his almost
compulsive need to solve puzzles, his provocative mischievousness, his
indignant impatience with pretension and hypocrisy, and his talent for
one-upping anybody who tries to one-up him! This book is great reading:
outrageous, shocking, still warm and very human.
For
all that, it only skirts the keystone of his life: science. We see it here and
there, as background material in one sketch or another, but never as the focus
of his existence, which generations of his students and colleagues know it to
be. Perhaps nothing else is possible. There may be no way to construct such a
series of delightful stories about himself and his work: the challenge and
frustration, the excitement that caps insight, the deep pleasure of scientific
understanding that has been the wellspring of happiness in his life.
I remember
when I was his student how it was when you walked into one of his lectures. He
would be standing in front of the hall smiling at us all as we came in, his
fingers tapping out a complicated rhythm on the black top of the demonstration
bench that crossed the front of the lecture hall. As latecomers took their
seats, he picked up the chalk and began spinning it rapidly through his fingers
in a manner of a professional gambler playing with a poker chip, still smiling
happily as if at some secret joke. And then—still smiling—he talked to us about
physics, his diagrams and equations helping us to share his understanding. It
was no secret joke that brought the smile and the sparkle in his eye, it was
physics. The joy of physics! The joy was contagious. We are fortunate who
caught that infection. Now here is your
opportunity to be exposed to the joy of life in the style of Feynman.
Albert
R. Hibbs
Senior
Member of the Technical Staff, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute
of Technology
Vitals
Some
facts about my timing: I was born in 1918 in a small town called Far Rockaway,
right on the outskirts of New York, near the sea. I lived there until 1935,
when I was seventeen. I went to MIT for four years, and then I went to
Princeton, in about 1939. During the time I was at Princeton I started to work
on the Manhattan Project, and I ultimately went to Los Alamos in April 1943,
until something like October or November 1946, when I went to Cornell.
I
got married to Arlene in 1941, and she died of tuberculosis while I was at Los
Alamos, in 1946.
I
was at Cornell until about 1951. I visited Brazil in the summer of 1949 and
spent half a year there in 1951, and then went to Caltech, where I’ve been ever
since.
I
went to Japan at the end of 1951 for a couple of weeks, and then again, a year
or two later, just after I married my second wife, Mary Lou.
I
am now married to Gweneth, who is English, and we have two children, Carl and
Michelle.
R.P.F.
Story
Listing
Part
1: From Far Rockaway to MIT
Part
2: The Princeton Years
Part
3: Feynman, the Bomb, and the Military
Part
4: From Cornell to Caltech, With a Touch of Brazil
Part
5: The World of One Physicist