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Stephen Hawking Looking for Assistant

An anonymous reader writes "Wanted: Bright graduate student to assist world-famous scientist. International travel, developing computer systems and dealing with the press required. Renowned astrophysicist and best-selling author Stephen Hawking has announced he is looking for a graduate student to work for him for one to two years. Dust off those CVs, kids!"

57 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Does it involve emptying bedpans? by catbutt · · Score: 5, Funny

    (goodbye, karma! :)

    1. Re:Does it involve emptying bedpans? by solevita · · Score: 5, Funny

      >One purpose of the job was to aid the professor in areas which he has difficulty due to his disability, the posting said.

      Bedpans. And walking upstairs with a prof. over one shoulder.

      I've submitted my CV.

    2. Re:Does it involve emptying bedpans? by megaditto · · Score: 5, Informative

      Should be noted that there are allegations that Dr. Hawking is into either spousal abuse roleplay. Last years there were pictures of injuries to Dr. Hawking consistent with the above practice, a police inquiry was initiated; to this, Dr. Hawking responded: "mind your own business".

      Would the assistant be expected to participate in a practice such as this?

      A side note: men with ALS are capable of eye control, sphincter control (they do not pee or shit themselves uncontrollably), as well as able to have erections and orgasms. Only motor neurons are affected while the full sensory input is retained.

      Another side note: it is not definite that Dr. Hawking actually has ALS (as opposed to some other neurodegenerative disorder). He is the only known ALS patient known to survive for this long, and he has consistently refused any advanced ALS testing.

      --
      Obama likes poor people so much, he wants to make more of them.
    3. Re:Does it involve emptying bedpans? by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 3, Funny

      and.who.is.the.journal.of.quantum.medicine.going.t o.beleive?

    4. Re:Does it involve emptying bedpans? by Penguinshit · · Score: 5, Informative

      The "advanced testing" of ALS involves demonstrated upper and lower motor neuron damage with all other known causes (Lyme's, etc.) ruled out. Professor Hawking has already had "advanced testing".

      I know, because I was diagnosed two years ago.

    5. Re:Does it involve emptying bedpans? by fireman+sam · · Score: 4, Funny

      Assistant: Time to wipe your ass.
      Hawking: I prefer to call it a Hawking hole.

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
  2. You're Fired! by TylerTheGreat · · Score: 5, Funny

    I can't wait to see NBC's new reality show, The Assistant starring Stephen Hawking. Now, that would be good television.

    1. Re:You're Fired! by Kesch · · Score: 4, Funny

      Wow, I just had a sound clip of Stephen Hawking saying "You are fired" pop into my head. I don't know how it sounds in the real world but in my own personal world it's hilarious.

      --
      If this signature is witty enough, maybe somebody will like me.
    2. Re:You're Fired! by Stormwatch · · Score: 5, Funny

      I guess it would sound like his singing.

    3. Re:You're Fired! by AuMatar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't be dissin da MC/a.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    4. Re:You're Fired! by Stormwatch · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I dig the description for this animation on Newgrounds: "This submission is appropriate for all audiences" "Users who enjoyed this entry also enjoyed: French Erotic Film." Nevermind the grand unification theory, I'd just like to know anyone can unify a Hawking rendition of Rocket Man with French erotic film. Oh, wait...No. No I really don't.
      Actually, "French Erotic Film" is not French, nor erotic, nor a film -- it's just the first episode in Andrew Kepple's animutation epic trilogy "Colin Mochrie versus Jesus H. Christ".
  3. Dear Stephen by Mancat · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't know anything about physics but dude, I will get you laid. And you're probably all like, "but I'm paralyzed." Dude, you don't even know. The bitches I know don't give a fuck. I'm tellin' you man they're crazy!

    Hope to hear back from you!

    --
    hello dear sirs my name is jamesh i are india (bihar) can u guide me install red had linux 9?
    1. Re:Dear Stephen by BobNET · · Score: 5, Funny
      The bitches I know don't give a fuck. I'm tellin' you man they're crazy!

      But Stephen Hawking himself is Crazy As Fuck!

      Straight out of Oxford a crazy motherfucker named Hawking.
      When I be rocking the mic you be gawking,
      at me 'cause I'm a bad mama-jamma,
      you wanna lock me up put my ass in the slamma.
      But fuck that shit 'cause no jail can hold me,
      you can't even catch me much less control me.
      So if you see me coming you better duck,
      'cause Stephen Hawking is crazy as fuck.

    2. Re:Dear Stephen by BrokenHalo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hasn't he had like three wives?

      Which just goes to show he's not as smart as we thought... ;-)

      *ducks flying crockery*

  4. Aspirin for Mensa members. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Wanted: Bright graduate student to assist world-famous scientist. International travel, developing computer systems and dealing with the press required.

    *sniff*
    Mommmeeee!

  5. The Apprentice by TheOtherKiwi · · Score: 5, Funny

    He should run a TV show to find his next apprentice...oh, whoops.

    --

    -- Sig meltdown immine...
  6. Yes, but... by abes · · Score: 5, Funny

    the chances of getting the job are astronomically low. Besides, you're thesis will probably just get black-holed. Perhaps it's worth getting the position still, for all the star-power?

    Sorry, couldn't resist. I understand if you have to mod me down.

    1. Re:Yes, but... by houghi · · Score: 3, Funny

      You're thesis? You're Merican, right?

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  7. Looking for what?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    My firefox tabs loads: Stephen Hawking Looking for Ass...

  8. The link by Lithgon · · Score: 5, Informative
  9. Star Wars: Stephen Hawking style by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Graduate Student A: I can't. This matrix is too big
    Stephen Hawking: Size matters not. Look at me. Judge me by my size, do you? Hmm? Hmm. And well you should not. For my ally is the Force, and a powerful ally it is. Life creates it, makes it grow. Its energy surrounds us and binds us. Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter. You must feel the Force around you; here, between you, me, the tree, the rock, everywhere, yes. Even between the land and the ship.



    Stephen Hawking: Why wish you become physicist?
    Graduate Student B: Well, mostly because of my father, I guess.
    Stephen Hawking: Ahh, physicist. Powerful physicist was he. Powerful physicist.
    Graduate Student B: How could you know my father? You don't even know who I am. Oh, I don't even know what I'm doing here! We're wasting our time!
    Stephen Hawking: [Looking away from Graduate Student B] I cannot teach him. The boy has no patience.
    Albert Einstein: He will learn patience.
    Stephen Hawking: Much anger in him... like his father.
    Albert Einstein: Was I any different when you taught me?

  10. Requirements by eebra82 · · Score: 5, Funny
    I believe he left out a few requirements, so here they are.
    • You may not loop around me with a Segway. EVER.
    • You may not replace my speech tool with a southern state gay accent. It aggrevates me.
    • You may not stack pornography in "A Brief History of Time" and "The Universe in a Nutshell".
    • You may not answer my great question, "How can the human race survive the next hundred years" with anything related to Star Trek or Star Wars anecdotes.
    • You may not ask me to do a 360 with my vehicle.
    • You may not replace pawns with queens once they've reached the other end of the chess table.
    1. Re:Requirements by multipartmixed · · Score: 2, Funny

      > You may not replace pawns with queens once they've reached
      > the other end of the chess table.

      Assuming you could get pawns that far on Hawking... Why the fuck not?

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
  11. Not a student.. by paxmaniac · · Score: 5, Informative

    The headline is a bit inaccurate.

    If you read the advertisement, it seeks a "recent graduate", not a "graduate student". This is definitely a job, not a studentship. Do not expect to come out of it with a graduate degree. That aside, there are plenty of other reasons to see it as an appealing opportunity.

    1. Re:Not a student.. by Mr.+Roadkill · · Score: 4, Insightful
      That aside, there are plenty of other reasons to see it as an appealing opportunity.
      The biggest, and only one that really counts? He's Stephen Hawking.
    2. Re:Not a student.. by archen · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well if you're going for a sort of academic career, then the next "level" I would think would be this sort of apprenticeship. Which would be pretty cool considering there are many people capable of getting a doctorate, but only one such opportunity to work for Stephen Hawking. I imagine that if you could land that job then your resume would only need one sentence. "Stephen Hawking picked ME to work for him".

  12. Re:Qualifications updated! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Your dyslexia got that part backwards. "Applicants must provide their own Star Wars voice addresser when changing Mr. Hawking".

  13. "Must be young, attractive, and female" by Nova+Express · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

  14. add this caveat: by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Funny

    no matter smart you are, everyone will immediately think of you as pinky in pinky and the brain, as compared to your boss, so please have a healthy ego

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:add this caveat: by jamstar7 · · Score: 3, Funny
      "Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?"

      "I think so, Brain, but where are we going to find a herd of yaks, a box of latex gloves, and a swimming pool filled with vaseline at this time of night?"

      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
  15. I thought he had a titanium exoskeleton... by gatkinso · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...and was currently battling some sort of trouble on the moon.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    1. Re:I thought he had a titanium exoskeleton... by hambonewilkins · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Sigh. No, not Moon Hitler or whatever, but the Onion.

      http://www.theonion.com/content/node/39133

      I wish more people read the Onion.

      --

      God Bless America. Why? Did it sneeze?
  16. Stellar oppurtunity for some lucky person by JavaManJim · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Alas I am too old and creaky and the wrong discipline, computer science, myself to qualify for job. But what a chance! To actually live, rather than read, those books and concepts that Hawkings ponders. What a way to expand one's imagination. Then the quotidian tasks for a person of this intellectual stature would seem light.

    My sincere and most envious congratulations to whomever gets this position,
    Jim

    1. Re:Stellar oppurtunity for some lucky person by JavaManJim · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Bedpans and diapers. There is something to be learned even by emptying bedpans and wiping from diapers. Life is not all sweetness and light. Drudgery too offers dimensions to grow. Depends on what you think about when your mind is .0001% occupied. Even then, you are doing a good thing for that person and thus mankind.

      Then for the other 99.9999%. For math things and my mind. I create a mental ball within my mind, a virtual brain if you will, and let that intuitively come back with my answer. One of my projects is that I am going back to make really sure I understand the language of basic math through integrals and thats how the answers return this time around.

      Thanks for the replies and thoughts too. They spark ideas out there in SlashdotLand (oh no, a pun on Flatland. Forgive me.).

      back to reading,
      Jim

  17. Stephan Hawking needs respect too. by Almost-Retired · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And so far, in the 26 messages posted, I have detected damned little respect for the perservereance and intelligence of the man, who does after all, hold the Issac Newton Chair in Mathematics at Cambridge, no small feat by itself. To me that apparent lack of respect is most sad.

    Here we have a man, who perhaps because of his disability, is giving his brain exersize that the rest of his body will never get, a man who has contributed much to our knowledge of the universe, and who may yet deduce the causitive reason for the accelleration we are seeing of distant objects before he passes.

    As for his passing, I'd imagine that his health is monitored at least 10 times more diligently than any of us do for ourselves. That will see to it that the age related degenerative things are kept in check as best we know how to do. However, the real monitoring is more likely concentrated on the treatment of bedsores and that sort of thing, as well as maintaining his immune system as best we (the medical professions 'we') can. However, he has a resident rn to handle the bedpanish and bedsores sorts of things, so those duties would not normally fall to the assistant.

    If I were 50 years younger, I'd kill for a chance at that job. Unforch, my experience level at 50 years ago wouldn't have allowed me to do what he needs done today. Without formal schooling, it does take a while to arrive at that point of having the knowledge needed.

    --
    Cheers, Gene

    1. Re:Stephan Hawking needs respect too. by luder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Have you ever watched the two Simpsons episodes starring Stephen Hawking (They Saved Lisa's Brain and Don't Fear the Roofer)? If you didn't, then watch and you'll see that even him has no problem in joking about his own condition.

    2. Re:Stephan Hawking needs respect too. by xee · · Score: 4, Funny

      He holds the Lucasian Chair. Isaac Newton was a previous holder of this chair, but it was not motorized back then. It is of course named for the benefactor of the chair, George Lucas.

      --
      Oh shit! I forgot to click "Post Anonymously"...
    3. Re:Stephan Hawking needs respect too. by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Funny

      Whats the point of holding a chair? Chairs are designed to sit on. I'm surprised even Isaac Newton didn't figure this out. He seemed pretty bright otherwise.

  18. ALS by jd · · Score: 5, Interesting
    It's probably not going to be easy to diagnose at this stage - not only because it likely advanced far beyond the point 99.9% of sufferers would be tested, making any kind of direct comparison impossible, but also because he has survived so long, and we therefore have no data whatsoever on what ALS would look like at this point, and also because the disease has not progressed significantly for some time - it stopped and even reversed a very little at one point. Sure, you can study the existing damage, but without an active element, there would be nothing to test for.


    Actually, it shouldn't be too hard to identify the illness, even from an armchair, for exactly the reasons I outlined. The number of neurologically degenerative diseases that actually spontaneously go into remission is not exactly high. That alone should eliminate the vast majority of ALS-like diseases to something much more manageable. We also have video footage from different stages. Horison did a documentary on Professor Hawking prior to him losing his speech to the trachea operation. We certainly have video footage of him since. Again, that should allow you to exclude certain possibilities. Finally, although a lot of his body has no motor control worth speaking of, his hands most evidently do as that is how he controls the chair and the voice synthesizer, although he's not exactly a speed demon on typing with it. His face also does - he doesn't lack the ability to show emotions.


    Oh, that made me think of something else. Those are the same muscles he pushed the hardest from shortly before being diagnosed until he became a total invalid. He would swing on trees extensively, according to his mother in one documentary. It's suspected his heavy physical exercise regimen may have contributed to the disease slowing down and stopping later on in his life, but I believe it to be highly significant that the muscles he pushed the most suffered the least. Again, that can't possibly be characteristic of too many conditions.


    From these well-documented and well-established facts, it should be easy to go through those conditions which Professor Hawking might have and discard those that simply don't behave in the way observed. (Or, to pull a Sherlock Holmes, reject the impossible and whatever is left - however improbable - must be correct. This doesn't work in practice for most things, but in this one case, there will be few enough possibilities that eliminating the impossible should be very doable indeed.)

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:ALS by Lord+Aurora · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Or, to pull a Sherlock Holmes, reject the impossible and whatever is left - however improbable - must be correct.

      Actually, that's technically pulling an Occam, as it's a variation on Occam's Razor. Yeah, yeah, Holmes said it like that, but Occam's razor is generally thought to be the foundation for Holmes' theory. Er...Doyle's theory, as it were.

      --
      The heavens do not fall for such a trifle.
    2. Re:ALS by bigpat · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually, that's technically pulling an Occam, as it's a variation on Occam's Razor [wikipedia.org]. Yeah, yeah, Holmes said it like that, but Occam's razor is generally thought to be the foundation for Holmes' theory. Er...Doyle's theory, as it were.

      ya well... no shit, Shirlock.

    3. Re:ALS by jmhoule314 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Actually, that's technically pulling an Occam, as it's a variation on Occam's Razor. Yeah, yeah, Holmes said it like that, but Occam's razor is generally thought to be the foundation for Holmes' theory. Er...Doyle's theory, as it were."

      Actually I think you are dead wrong here. Occam's razor states that you should always choose the least complicated explanation. With Holmes practice deductional observation the more complicated theory is just as or more likely to be the one that actually occurred. Just because it seems simple when Holmes is done explaining it doesnt mean that it was the less complicated scenario. The least complicated scenario, if you have actually read any of the stories, is invariably selected by Inspector lastrade.

      Take the case of 'The six Napoleans'. Lastrade comes to holmes with a case where a man is breaking into peoples houses to smash their busts of napolean. One of the simplest explinations is Lastrade's , "he's a nut, simply a nut", if I remember right. As it turns out it is because the man is smashing the busts because there is the bounty from a robery hidden inside of the six napoleans that all came from the same mold where the man use to work.

      I know that there are better examples than the one that I used but it is the first that came to mind and is the one that required the least typing. I suspect you misunderstand Holmes when he says stuff like 'simplicity my dear watson' which I beleive to be a sort of arrogant irony. I also suspect that you threw this out there because you wanted us all to think that you are smart, even though the only reason that you know the term Occamm's razor is because it has been popularized in many TV shows and movies(originally in Contact?). For that, I forgive you. But dont misanalyze the legend that is Sherlock Holmes

    4. Re:ALS by munrock · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would go so far as to say they're completely different.

      With Ockham's razor, once the theories that are easy to disprove are eliminated (easy as in obviously wrong and not even considered to begin with), then you choose the simplest of the remaining theories. This is because the chance that the simplest is correct is so likely as to make the expense of proving it to eliminate a negligible margin of error a wasteful endeavour. Ockham, of course, put it a lot simpler.

      The Holmes quote is a completely different thing. It advocates taking the process of elimination to completion, asserting that the remaining theory could be infinitely complex and fanciful and still be correct, simply because it is the only possible theory left.

      One would be crazy to apply Ockham's Razor to a criminal investigation. I mean if you did, you wouldn't really call it an investigation.

  19. missing requirement by chez69 · · Score: 3, Funny

    must look really hot in lab coat

    --
    PHP is the solution of choice for relaying mysql errors to web users.
  20. Fired or fried? by jd · · Score: 2, Funny

    The guy studies supernovae and black holes, and probably has user accounts on every particle accelerator out there - you think he'd lower himself to just firing someone?

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  21. Curriculum Vitae by syukton · · Score: 4, Informative

    CV is short for Curriculum Vitae, which is what a Resumé is called in Europe.

    --
    Reinvent the wheel only at either a lower cost, greater effectiveness, or your own personal enrichment and satisfaction.
  22. It's a really tough job to fill... by Cycnus · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I've recently watched a BBC Horizon episode "The Hawking Paradox" (available on BT I believe) where you see him working with his current assistant, a young French mathematician, and you must admire the patience of Hawking and the people around him to actually get communication flowing.
    Hawking's ability to use his clicker to pick-up words on his computer has deteriorated and making a sentence is a really tough job for him: you have to guess what he wants to say and watch his eyes for confirmation... it must be a maddening thing to know all that knowledge and all those ideas bottled up inside that brain that can barely communicate a few words a minute...

    With all our technology, you'd think that we could do a better job of helping people with such crippling diseases to allow them communicate more fluently.

    It's sad that this great mind may never be able to give us all it can, even if some of his ideas end up being wrong, there is still enough material there to make great advances in science.

    1. Re:It's a really tough job to fill... by knifey · · Score: 4, Funny
      The communication thing would eventually frustrate the most calm of us. I think most slashdotters could (if forced, I doubt many would choose) deal with quadraplegia. To loose even the ability to (easily) communicate must be incredibly frustrating.

      But, as for reading eye movements and guessing words etc, he's obviously after a male who's been married for years. That should get me modded down by half the population. :-).

      But seriously, eye and facial (of which, SH must be slowly loosing both) movement is a significant slice of communication and more so with people who know each other well/long. What's gotta be troublesome is communicating complex ideas like physics. Baffled as to how he can continue to work.

  23. Just remember... by jayegirl · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just remember that if you get the job, the words "My daleks are supreme" are your cue to pull the plug.

  24. Yeah, but go figure by PCM2 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Kind of a long commitment, especially considering that Hawking has ALS and could croak at any time
    You've heard him talk. For TV interviews and the like, he usually has a number of preprogrammed responses for likely questions etc. An original response to a question takes a long time for him to cue up. So go figure how long it must take him to write and edit a book (for example). This assistant position is likely to be quite demanding, not the least of which requiring a lot of patience. One to two years sounds like a relatively brief time.
    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  25. Been there, done that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was Hawking's assistant a few years ago. It's a great job, but one that I would not want to revisit. For a smart young dude it provides a great opportunity to travel and grow personally whilst dealing with some of the greatest and ost disparate minds and egos on the planet.

    As for what I had to do for him, remember that there is a team of equally dedicated nurses to attend to personal needs.

    1. Re:Been there, done that by CrankyOldBastard · · Score: 2, Interesting

      some of the greatest and most disparate minds and egos on the planet.

      And that's the real rub - his ego can be a bit, shall we say awkward. I'd expect you'd need a very thick skin to deal with him on a day to day basis, unless he's mellowed a LOT over time.

  26. No one should be above ridicule by daemonenwind · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Once you put someone - anyone - beyond all ability to be ridiculed, you put their life and opinions above the realm where people may discuss it as one of their own.

    We human beings make fun of our own. We human beings kid around, tease, and poke at each other. Did you see the American show, "Last Comic Standing"? Josh Blue, a comic on there, had a solid case of cerebal palsy, as evidenced by his constant, jerky motion.

    You know why he won?

    The guy could laugh at himself. He could laugh at us laughing at him. He could laugh at stereotypes. He could laugh.

    Maybe you could learn something about yourself from Josh.

    Nothing in this thread so far - my earlier jest included - is so spiteful and cruel that even Steven himself couldn't get a chuckle from it.

    Maybe the problem is that some people in this world take themselves and their conditions too damn seriously.

    Strike that, I'm sure that's the problem.

  27. From what I understand... by MsGeek · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...he does prefer them female and attractive. Why anyone would put a request about this here on Slashdot is a mystery to me.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  28. Actually he wouldn't say you're fired. by gijoel · · Score: 2, Funny
  29. Cheap Bastard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Obviously trying to avoid listing fees by releasing it as a "story".

    Nah. He should post it on Monster.

    He can get tens of thousands of cookie-cutter CVs that say "I studied Java, which is a lot like Cosmology. No one understands it either."

    "I did some C#, which is a lot like Creationism."

    Discuss.

  30. Playing BOFH? by dark-br · · Score: 3, Funny

    From the job offer:
     
      The Head of the Group is Professor Stephen Hawking who is disabled and communicates using a computer system and speech synthesiser. If you were accepted for the post you would be responsible for maintaining and improving this computer system as well as other pieces of support equipment.
     
    #$recorded_msg_1 = Synth.Say("Good bye");
    $recorded_msg_1 = Synth.Say("Asta la vista, baby!");
    #$recorded_msg_2 = Synth.Say("Yes, please");
    $recorded_msg_2 = Synth.Say("Go ahead punk, make my day!");

    Oh... priceless!!!