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Jul. 2nd, 2004 03:15 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
James D. Patterson, professor emeritus of Florida Institute of Technology, has written An Open Letter to the Next Generation (see also physicstoday) in which he describes some of the pitfalls of the profession of Physics. A lot of what he says (for instance, about politics, respect, efficiency, and activity) is applicable to any profession, but other points are specific to Physics and are phenomena I've seen in myself any many others, like the nagging suspicion that Theory and Particle Physics are somehow the "most noble" fields. I think the most interesting thing that he says is "Scientific papers are almost always more complete and understandable than their digested versions in books. ... Textbooks are often abbreviated second− or third−hand distortions of the facts, and they usually do not convey the flavor of scientific research."
By the way, another blog I find quite interesting is languagelog.
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