Who Is Your Favorite Scientist?

CACTUSJACKmankin

Critical Thinker
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Jan 13, 2006
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Right now I'd have to go with Richard Dawkins, I could listen to him speak for days.

I would say Stephen Hawking if it weren't for the computer voice, it's hard enough to comprehend what he's saying period. I don't know about anybody else but most of it goes over my head.

Well that's my two cents.
 
Kepler. For his perseverence: spending a decade trying to figure out the orbit of Mars. For his original thinking: Kant called "the most acute thinker ever born." For his groundbreaking work in many fields: astonomy, astrometry, optics, mathematics.
 
Doctor Decepticon - for his groundbreaking work in laser beam weapons, death-ray modelling equations, and his pioneering contributions to the field of mind-control beams.

Other than that, I'm surprised no-one has mentioned Carl Sagan. He has to be my favourite ever scientist - Dawkins is fantastic too. Both these guys are (and were, sadly) extremely humble and clear.

Ringo
 
Right now I'd have to go with Richard Dawkins, I could listen to him speak for days.

I would say Stephen Hawking if it weren't for the computer voice, it's hard enough to comprehend what he's saying period. I don't know about anybody else but most of it goes over my head.

Well that's my two cents.

Richard Dawkins, without a doubt.
 
Feynman.

Not for his science particularly, more for living a fascinating life and leaving us with his stories.
 
Currently, Richard Feynman. I got some of his lectures on CD, and they're wonderful.

Richard Feynman is my favourite as well. I saw a video of his lectures of when he visited University of Auckland, New Zealand. The lectures were held years before I enrolled at varsity.
 
Richard Feynman - for his work, his life, and the title The Pleasure of Finding Things Out.
 
Richard Feynman is great

Benoit Mandelbrot is running a close second these days, probably cause I'm reading one of this books.
 

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