A science is any discipline in which the fool of this generation can go beyond the point reached by the genius of the last generation
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Author Archives: Jon Butterworth
Some top measurements from CERN’s Large Hadron Collider
At the Guardian.
Posted in Particle Physics, Physics, Science
Tagged CERN, cosmic rays, LHC
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Royal Society Winton Science Book Prize
Smashing Physics was shortlisted, and was featured on BBC Radio 4 Inside Science with an interview.
Posted in Writing
Tagged BBC, Inside Science, Royal Society, Smashing Physics
Comments Off on Royal Society Winton Science Book Prize
Clockwise to Titan
I’ve been on holiday, and my son read a book I liked, so here’s an idle bit of logrolling which might be of interest. Back to business shortly At the Guardian.
Heroes, monsters and people: When it comes to moral choices, outstanding physicists are very ordinary
Did German physicists have a plan in the 1930s? And if so, was their physics any help? Last week, on the plane back from Chicago, I finished Philip Ball’s book about physics in Germany in the nineteen-thirties and -forties. I’m still … Continue reading
Posted in History, Politics, Science, Writing
Tagged books, Philip Ball, quantum mechanics, Relativity
Comments Off on Heroes, monsters and people: When it comes to moral choices, outstanding physicists are very ordinary