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Steven Hawking Considering Move To Canada

thepacketmaster learned of "...the possibility of Steven Hawking moving to Waterloo in Canada: 'A report out of Britain suggests Stephen Hawking is considering an invitation to come work at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics....But he's also being encouraged to move to Ontario by his University of Cambridge colleague Neil Turok, the mathematical physicist who will take over as Perimeter's executive director on Oct. 1. Perimeter confirmed last night that it has made a standing offer to Hawking...Turok is leaving Cambridge after failing to persuade university authorities, research councils and sponsors to spend $40 million...By comparison, Waterloo's Perimeter Institute has about $600 million in funding...The addition of Hawking to Perimeter's staff of top physicists would be a major coup for the research institute, founded in 1999 by Mike Lazaridis, founder and co-CEO of Research In Motion, which makes the BlackBerry.'"

7 of 378 comments (clear)

  1. Didn't... by clonan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    all the top phycisits start leaving Germany when things started going downhill?

  2. Re:NOOoOOOO!!! by gnuman99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your ideas are shaped not just by your capabilities, but the ideas and interactions you came up with when you were growing up.

    I believe that there is a significant percentage of population (probably around 10%) that could be just as bright as the top people in sciences, but they just took a different path. They didn't get the encouragements, or maybe they just didn't meet a friend in the 5th grade that had the same interest as them.

    There is more to whom we become than some political structure. The ultimate you is shaped MUCH closer to your personal life than even the city hall.

  3. Re:yes but there was a difference. by KillerBob · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You laugh... but I've known people who live in Maine that couldn't find Canada on a map. I could understand from the deep south, where Canada is a mythical land of igloos and Eskimos, but Maine?!? There's parts of Canada that are further south than Maine, and there was a time when that state was part of Canada, for crying out loud....

    --
    If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
  4. Re:who in their right mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am a grad student in physics at waterloo (phd) and my female counterparts do not get paid anymore than me from the uni. Where the heck did you hear this?

    Are you sure that you aren't just talking about 3rd party scholarships that are only available to women? The amount from you get from the actual university is the same for men and women.

  5. Re:yes but there was a difference. by onkelonkel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Atheism is a religion like not collecting stamps is a hobby"

    --
    None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
  6. Re:yes but there was a difference. by Jason+Earl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Historically, Muslim regimes have been very favorable to the science. That's no so much the case today, but blaming current Muslim regimes on the Koran is like blaming the industrial revolution on Christianity. It's a stretch, at best.

  7. Re:yes but there was a difference. by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not collecting stamps gives you time for a real hobby, just like atheism gives you time to do real science.

    Now, I don't say you can't be religious as a scientist. Actually I know quite a few very good scientists that believe in God. Usually, though, they take the Bible as a guideline for being a "good person", not a book telling you how the scientific parts of the world work. They understand the Bible as a guideline to live a good life, and quite frankly, it is a good book as such. Don't kill, don't steal, take a day off per week so you don't run into a burnout, and generally don't do what you wouldn't want others to do to you. That's a pretty good guideline to work with, if you ask me.

    Frankly, I wonder how many of those that want to take the Bible all literally and insist in it being the all encompassing truth really want to use it to live a better life (for themselves, but even more for those around them), and how many just want to use it as a tool to wield power over others. It's been used for that purpose far too often. I'd say, more often than for the "better person" goals...

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.