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Hawking Searching For Africa's Einsteins

nuke-alwin writes "Stephen Hawking has traveled to South Africa in search of Africa's Einsteins. The project will create Africa's first post-graduate center for math and physics. The British government has unfortunately decided not to back the project, which is hoping to fight poverty by identifying the kind of talent that can create wealth." Neil Turok is deeply involved as well; he was recently named to head the Perimeter Institute in Canada, whose server we brought to its knees this morning.

10 of 276 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Brain drain, ver 0.1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because they're not tools. I know many Indian (real India) and Chinese nationals who plan to move back to their "impoverished" countries to work and play.

  2. Re:Brain drain, ver 0.1 by yodleboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    that may be true, but i've notice that a lot of smart, wealthy successful people eventually "go home" in some sense, not always physically, of course. They may donate to local causes, invest, become involved in politics or advocacy. whatever they do, they probably would not have been able without opportunities like this.

  3. Re:Brain drain, ver 0.1 by CRCulver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A lot of people who get big corporate jobs in wealthy countries send money back to where they came from, benefitting the local economy. Go to Moroccan villages and you can see loads of fancy houses being built by people currently working in France who plan on coming home and retiring early. Software engineers from India who have come to the U.S. after training in India have gone home after a few years and founded companies with the money they saved. Cities in Romania like Cluj enjoy higher standards of living than other parts of the country because, thanks to the good education and English-language skills, people work hard abroad and then come back to indulge themselves. The list goes on and on. If you train people in a poor country, many will go and never return. However, some will make something of themselves abroad with their education and come back, which is a win for the local economy.

  4. Re:Brain drain, ver 0.1 by edisrafeht · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whether they go back home or not is not as important as providing the opportunity for these gifted individuals. They may still contribute something to the world, regardless of their location.

  5. Re:Brain drain, ver 0.1 by WaltBusterkeys · · Score: 4, Insightful

    i've notice[d] that a lot of smart, wealthy successful people And how many of those wealthy successful people were mathematicians and physicists? Smart, certainly. But wealthy?
  6. Re:Einstein is over-rated by sm62704 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Race has nothing to do with it. Look at yourself; dumb as a box of rocks.

    Put any kid of any race (say, your kid) in a third world country with little food, no medical care, and have unlearned people raise him, and don't send him to school, and he'll be just like the native Africans.

    Take one of those African kids and raise him in an enlightened industrial society and he'll excel as much as anyone. It isn't about self esteem, it's about quality of life.

    As to your own stupidity, racism is a tool of the rich to keep everyone else at each others' throats so they won't notice who's really using and abusing them, tool.

    --
    mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  7. Re:Einstein didn't create much wealth by megaditto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unfortunately, theoretical physics is not very practical and therefore does not create much wealth. You are kidding, right?

    I don't even know where to begin, but here are some counterexamples of theoretical physics being quite practical: nuclear fission reactors, fusion weapons, transistors/microchips, computers, internet, TVs, sattelites/GPS, cell phones and wireless comms, MRI and PET scans, electron microscopy, LASERs...

    See, I think you are making the same mistake of underestimating theoretical physics as the Germans did in the 1930s...
    --
    Obama likes poor people so much, he wants to make more of them.
  8. Re:Small Pool of Healthy by crazybit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Many exceptional athletes: soccer players (Didier Drogba), marathon runners, sprint runners, long distance jumpers, etc. come from Africa.

    If their eating habits didn't stop them from becoming champions, why should the same food affect possible geniuses?

    --
    - Human knowledge belongs to the world
  9. Re:Einstein didn't create much wealth by bitrex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Something like: "Theoretical physicists turn money into ideas. Engineers turn ideas into money."

  10. Re:Brain drain, ver 0.1 by eennaarbrak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    O FFS, using extreme examples like Sierra Leone to generalize about Africa is just ridiculous. I live in South Africa, and there are a lot of bright people here, both South Africans and from other African countries. We need an initiative like this - if some of the people choose to leave with their skills, so be it, but many will choose to stay and apply their knowledge here. With your reasoning: Maybe the USA should stop building universities, because we all know Noth American countries like Nicaragua and Honduras are dirt poor and just a waste of any attempt at excellence.