Though even there, his lectures are famous for only being truly appreciated after you’ve first learned the material elsewhere. They are incredibly good at giving you the feeling of understanding but quite a bit less good at actually teaching problem-solving. When reading them, it was a common occurrence for me to read a chapter and believe the subject was the most straightforward and natural thing in the world, only to be completely mystified by the problems.
His contribution to computing, formalizing problems into code, parallelizing, etc
His mathematical contributions (Feynman diagrams, Feynman integrals)
His contributions to teaching/reasoning methods in general.
I agree that I’d want to learn physics from him, I’m just not sure he was an exceptional physicist. Good, but not Von Neuman. He says as much in his biographies (e.g. pointing out one of his big contributions came from randomly point to a valve on a schematic and getting people to think about the schematic).
He seems to be good at “getting people to think reasonably and having an unabashedly open, friendly, mischievous and perseverant personality”, which seems to be what he’s famous for and the only thing he thinks of himself as being somewhat good at. Though you could always argue it’s due to modesty.
To give a specific example, this is him “explaining magnets”, except that I’m left knowing nothing extra about magnets, but I do gain a new understanding of concepts like “level of abstraction” and various “human guide to word”-ish insights about language use and some phenomenology around what it means to “understand”.
I agree that I’d want to learn physics from him, I’m just not sure he was an exceptional physicist. Good, but not Von Neuman. He says as much in his biographies (e.g. pointing out one of his big contributions came from randomly point to a valve on a schematic and getting people to think about the schematic).
(Disclaimer: not a physicist). From what I understand, Feynman was a really really good physicist. Besides winning a Nobel Prize for his work on quantum electrodynamics, he also contributed to several other areas during his career. Also, if you look at what other eminent mathematicians of the time say about him, you get the sense that he was exceptional even amongst the exceptional.
For example, Mark Kac, an eminent mathematician of the time, said:
There are two kinds of geniuses: the ‘ordinary’ and the ‘magicians.’ an ordinary genius is a fellow whom you and I would be just as good as, if we were only many times better. There is no mystery as to how his mind works. Once we understand what they’ve done, we feel certain that we, too, could have done it. It is different with the magicians… Feynman is a magician of the highest caliber.
Hans Bethe (another Nobel Prize winning physicist of the time) shared similar sentiments:
As the late, great Nobel Laureate physicist Hans Bethe remarked: “Feynman was a magician. With a magician, you just do not know how he does it.”
I don’t have the time to find more quotes like this right now but I think there are a bunch more like them if you look for them.
Yes, although this is the exception rather than the rule- Feynman happens to both be a world-class physicist and a world-class communicator (in addition to being talented at many other things)- I suppose the class Feynman belongs to is that of polymath- he didn’t strive to be the singular best at any one thing, but rather to be as good as possible in many different fields
Right, there is a difference between your clone who is a few lessons ahead of you and a really good teacher. So, you don’t learn from the best, but try to find the best teacher?
You should still want to learn physics from Richard Feynman
Though even there, his lectures are famous for only being truly appreciated after you’ve first learned the material elsewhere. They are incredibly good at giving you the feeling of understanding but quite a bit less good at actually teaching problem-solving. When reading them, it was a common occurrence for me to read a chapter and believe the subject was the most straightforward and natural thing in the world, only to be completely mystified by the problems.
Wasn’t Feynman basically known for:
His contribution to computing, formalizing problems into code, parallelizing, etc
His mathematical contributions (Feynman diagrams, Feynman integrals)
His contributions to teaching/reasoning methods in general.
I agree that I’d want to learn physics from him, I’m just not sure he was an exceptional physicist. Good, but not Von Neuman. He says as much in his biographies (e.g. pointing out one of his big contributions came from randomly point to a valve on a schematic and getting people to think about the schematic).
He seems to be good at “getting people to think reasonably and having an unabashedly open, friendly, mischievous and perseverant personality”, which seems to be what he’s famous for and the only thing he thinks of himself as being somewhat good at. Though you could always argue it’s due to modesty.
To give a specific example, this is him “explaining magnets”, except that I’m left knowing nothing extra about magnets, but I do gain a new understanding of concepts like “level of abstraction” and various “human guide to word”-ish insights about language use and some phenomenology around what it means to “understand”.
(Disclaimer: not a physicist). From what I understand, Feynman was a really really good physicist. Besides winning a Nobel Prize for his work on quantum electrodynamics, he also contributed to several other areas during his career. Also, if you look at what other eminent mathematicians of the time say about him, you get the sense that he was exceptional even amongst the exceptional.
For example, Mark Kac, an eminent mathematician of the time, said:
Hans Bethe (another Nobel Prize winning physicist of the time) shared similar sentiments:
I don’t have the time to find more quotes like this right now but I think there are a bunch more like them if you look for them.
Yes, although this is the exception rather than the rule- Feynman happens to both be a world-class physicist and a world-class communicator (in addition to being talented at many other things)- I suppose the class Feynman belongs to is that of polymath- he didn’t strive to be the singular best at any one thing, but rather to be as good as possible in many different fields
Right, there is a difference between your clone who is a few lessons ahead of you and a really good teacher. So, you don’t learn from the best, but try to find the best teacher?