I have many female friends who were inspired to go into theoretical physics because of Chris Isham's...... lect.. well they all thought he was rather sexy let say.
I have also sat in on many of Chris Isham's Theoretical physics lecture at IC and I wonder how he would present this theory in a lecture, if at all. Purly theoretical, speculative attempts to explain observed phenomonon come along all the time (cold dark matter, string theory, etc, etc, etc) and they are not usually taken seriously as 'physics' until the rest of the scientific community have had chance to find holes of disprove it.
I wont be bothering to learn how to do the sums until this has been done for a while. But maybe for the first time it will be possible to show a mathmatical proof of this theory, it explaining all observables in our universe and all...
I have seen this happen before in an organisation I have worked for. It happened when a second Cisco network (installed by a large well known company) was joined to an existing one and the routing protocol problems of the new network corrupted the existing one. Solution was to disconnect the two and force the external company to rebuild the new network from scratch.
I have many female friends who were inspired to go into theoretical physics because of Chris Isham's ...... lect.. well they all thought he was rather sexy let say.
I have also sat in on many of Chris Isham's Theoretical physics lecture at IC and I wonder how he would present this theory in a lecture, if at all. Purly theoretical, speculative attempts to explain observed phenomonon come along all the time (cold dark matter, string theory, etc, etc, etc) and they are not usually taken seriously as 'physics' until the rest of the scientific community have had chance to find holes of disprove it. I wont be bothering to learn how to do the sums until this has been done for a while. But maybe for the first time it will be possible to show a mathmatical proof of this theory, it explaining all observables in our universe and all...
I have seen this happen before in an organisation I have worked for. It happened when a second Cisco network (installed by a large well known company) was joined to an existing one and the routing protocol problems of the new network corrupted the existing one. Solution was to disconnect the two and force the external company to rebuild the new network from scratch.