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Saturday, March 22, 2014

To celebrate Spring, here's Richard Feynman’s famous Ode to a Flower

Richard Feynman (wiki):
The science knowledge only adds to the excitement, the mystery and the awe of a flower.
From Brain Pickings, one of my favorite websites:

Richard Feynman — champion of scientific culture, graphic novel hero, crusader for integrity, holder of the key to science, adviser of future generations, bongo player, no ordinary genius. In this fantastic animated adaptation of an excerpt from Christopher Sykes’s celebrated 1981 BBC documentary about Feynman, The Pleasure of Finding Things Out — which gave us the great physicist’s timeless words on beauty, honors, and curiosity and his fascinating explanation of where trees actually come fromFraser Davidson captures in stunning motion graphics Feynman’s short, sublime soliloquy on why knowledge enriches life rather than detracting from its mystery.



I have a friend who’s an artist and has sometimes taken a view which I don’t agree with very well. He’ll hold up a flower and say “look how beautiful it is,” and I’ll agree. Then he says “I as an artist can see how beautiful this is but you as a scientist take this all apart and it becomes a dull thing,” and I think that he’s kind of nutty. First of all, the beauty that he sees is available to other people and to me too, I believe…

I can appreciate the beauty of a flower. At the same time, I see much more about the flower than he sees. I could imagine the cells in there, the complicated actions inside, which also have a beauty. I mean it’s not just beauty at this dimension, at one centimeter; there’s also beauty at smaller dimensions, the inner structure, also the processes. The fact that the colors in the flower evolved in order to attract insects to pollinate it is interesting; it means that insects can see the color. It adds a question: does this aesthetic sense also exist in the lower forms? Why is it aesthetic? All kinds of interesting questions which the science knowledge only adds to the excitement, the mystery and the awe of a flower. It only adds. I don’t understand how it subtracts.

2 comments:

  1. Isaac Asimov addressed this issue in his parody of the old standard:
    Tell me why the sun does shine,
    Tell me why the ivy climbs,
    Tell me why the sky's so blue,
    And I will tell you just why I love you....

    Nuclear fusion it makes sun shine,
    Phototropism makes ivy climb,
    Rayleigh scattering makes skies blue,
    Hormone imbalances make me love you.

    It's romance, not beauty, that is lost.

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    Replies
    1. Nice! Thanks, Dale - I've never seen that before.

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