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Brian Greene and John Preskill on Steven Weinberg

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There’s a very nice tribute to Steven Weinberg by Brian Greene and John Preskill that I came across recently that is worth watching. Weinberg was of course one of the greatest theoretical physicists of the later half of the 20th century, winning the Nobel Prize for one of the great unifications of modern physics, which was the unification of the electromagnetic and the weak forces. He was also a prolific author of rigorous, magisterial textbooks on quantum field theory, gravitation and other aspects of modern physics. And on top of it all, he was a true scholar and gifted communicator of complex ideas to the general public through popular books and essays; not just ideas in physics but ones in pretty much any field that caught his fancy. I had the great pleasure and good fortune to interact with him twice.

The conversation between Greene and Preskill is illuminating because it sheds light on many underappreciated qualities of Weinberg that enabled him to become a great physicist and writer, qualities that are worth emulating. Greene starts out by talking about when he first interacted with Weinberg when he gave a talk as a graduate student at the physics department of the University of Texas at Austin where Weinberg taught. He recalls how he packed the talk with equations and formal derivations, only to have the same concepts explained by Weinberg more clearly later. As physicists appreciate, while mathematics remains the key to unlock the secrets of the universe, being able to understand the physical picture is key. Weinberg was a master at doing both.

Preskill was a graduate student of Weinberg’s at Harvard and he talks about many memories of Weinberg. One of the more endearing and instructive ones is from when he introduced Weinberg to his parents at his house. They were making ice cream for dinner, and Weinberg wondered aloud why we add salt while making the ice cream. By that time Weinberg had already won the Nobel Prize, so Preskill’s father wondered if he genuinely didn’t understand that you add the salt to lower the melting point of the ice cream so that it would stay colder longer. When Preskill’s father mentioned this Weinberg went, “Of course, that makes sense!”. Now both Preskill and Greene think that Weinberg might have been playing it up a bit to impress Preskill’s family, but I wouldn’t be surprised if he genuinely did not know; top tier scientists who work in the most rarefied heights of their fields are sometimes not as connected to basic facts as graduate students might be. 

More importantly, in my mind the anecdote illustrates an important quality that Weinberg had and that any true scientist should have, which is to never hesitate to ask even simple questions. If, as a Nobel Prize winning scientist, you think you are beyond asking simple questions, especially when you don’t know the answers, you aren’t being a very good scientist. The anecdote demonstrates a bigger quality that Weinberg had which Preskill and Greene discuss, which was his lifelong curiosity about things that he didn’t know. He never hesitated to pump people for information about aspects of physics he wasn’t familiar with, not to mention another disciplines. Freeman Dyson who I knew well had the same quality: both Weinberg and Dyson were excellent listeners. In fact, asking the right question, whether it was about salt and ice cream or about electroweak unification, seems to have been a signature Weinberg quality that students should take to heart.

Weinberg became famous for a seminal 1967 paper that unified the electromagnetic and weak force (and used ideas developed by Peter Higgs to postulate what we now call the Higgs boson). The title of the paper was “A Model of Leptons”, but interestingly, Weinberg wasn’t much of a model builder. As Preskill says, he was much more interested in developing general, overarching theories than building models, partly because models have a limited applicability to a specific domain while theories are much more general. This is a good point, but of course, in fields like my own field of computational chemistry, the problem isn’t that there are no general theoretical frameworks  – there are, most notably the frameworks of quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics – but that applying them to practical problems is too complicated unless we build specific models. Nevertheless, Weinberg’s attitude of shunning specific models for generality is emblematic of the greatest scientists, including Newton, Pauling, Darwin and Einstein.

Weinberg was also a rather solitary researcher; as Preskill points out, of his 50 most highly cited papers, 42 are written alone. He admitted himself in a talk that he wasn’t the best collaborator. This did not make him the best graduate advisor either, since while he was supportive, his main contribution was more along the lines of inspiration rather than guidance and day-to-day conversations. He would often point students to papers and ask them to study them themselves, which works fine if you are Brian Greene or John Preskill but perhaps not so much if are someone else. In this sense Weinberg seems to be have been a bit like Richard Feynman who was a great physicist but who also wasn’t the best graduate advisor.

Finally, both Preskill and Greene touch upon Weinberg’s gifts as a science writer and communicator. More than many other scientists, he never talked down to his readers because he understood that many of them were as smart as him even if they weren’t physicists. Read any one of his books and you see him explaining even simple ideas, but never in a way that assumes his audience are dunces. This is a lesson that every scientist and science writer should take to heart.

Greene especially knew Weinberg well because he invited him often to the World Science Festival which he and his wife had organized in New York over the years. The tribute includes snippets from Weinberg talking about the current and future state of particle physics. In the last part, an interviewer asks him about what is arguably the most famous sentence from his popular writings. In the last part of his first book, “The First Three Minutes”, he says, “The more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it seems pointless.” Weinberg’s eloquent response when he was asked what this means sums up his life’s philosophy and tells us why he was so unique, as a scientist and as a human being:

“Oh, I think everything’s pointless, in the sense that there’s no point out there to be discovered by the methods of science. That’s not to say that we don’t create points for our lives. For many people it’s their loved ones; living a life of helping people you love, that’s all the point that’s needed for many people. That’s probably the main point for me. And for some of us there’s a point in scientific discovery. But these points are all invented by humans and there’s nothing out there that supports them. And it’s better that we not look for it. In a way, we are freer, in a way it’s more noble and admirable to give points to our lives ourselves rather than to accept them from some external force.”


Source: http://wavefunction.fieldofscience.com/2022/07/brian-greene-and-john-preskill-on.html


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