• Culture evolves! by Fiona Jordan

    Culture evolves: Not just in a petri dish. What I talk about: evolution, anthropology, human diversity and science. Frequency of posts is determined by an exponential distribution with λ = 0.5

    • Favourites and Alternates

      Tuesday, 25 Sep 2007 - 10:29 UTC

      Matt B. asked the Nature Network bloggers a couple of questions. I meant to answer them on Friday but I couldn’t decide the first one!

      Who’s your favourite scientist (dead or alive) and why?

      The reason I couldn’t decide was that I just couldn’t figure out what my criteria for “favourite” should be! There are people who have been inspirational or instrumental to me becoming a scientist … but mainly through their communication of ideas, rather than the science they themselves performed.

      Then there are people who I know: mentors or colleagues, but that just seems like unfair weighting when they’re people you can chat to in the pub.

      So I thought I’d pick someone outside of anthropology or biology: the physicist Richard Feynman. He was a marvellous communicator and teacher, and knew the importance of inspiring people—but he also did groundbreaking theoretical work and defended vociferously the importance of “big idea” science as well as the individual sense of satisfaction from puzzle-solving. And he was the ultimate geek who thought safe-cracking was a fun hobby. And he played the bongos.

      If you could have another job or career outside of science, what would it be and why?

      I have had a job outside of science: I was a jewellery designer for a couple of years. It was rewarding when it was good and dreadful when it wasn’t.

      But my alternate life is the one where I became a professional cellist, played with an innovative chamber group like the Kronos Quartet, and had a top ten indie/classical crossover album. Why? Because music is as creative and intriguing and rewarding as science.

      Last updated: Tuesday, 25 Sep 2007 - 10:29 UTC

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