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Hawking Hawking: The Selling of a Scientific Celebrity (2021)

door Charles Seife

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393635,033 (4.1)1
"Confined to a wheelchair and surrounded by an entourage of nurses, Stephen Hawking was a symbol of the power of mind over matter. The public adored him, and the media compared him to Newton and Einstein. Appearing at concerts, on The Simpsons, and even on the edge of space, he was an icon who captured the imaginations of audiences all over the world. It didn't seem to matter that his fans had only a tenuous understanding of his contributions, or that the scientific community scoffed at much of his work. Somehow, Hawking had managed to transform himself into the world's most brilliant man. In Hawking Hawking, science journalist Charles Seife shows how. Examining Hawking's work his fraught relationships with his wives, lovers, and children, and his obsession with celebrity and fame, Seife demonstrates that Hawking's true genius lay not in his talent for physics but rather manipulation. Hawking worked tirelessly to cultivate his image as the epitome of rationality, a man of childlike simplicity, who could probe the vast recesses of space with his mind. But beneath the façade was a figure who was at best complex, at worst, conceited, selfish, and sexist. When he was wrong, as he was more often than not, he recast his failings as scientific victories. He distracted from his many character flaws with wit, charm, and self-deprecation. He convinced audiences of his authority on topics about which he knew little. And when, unable to produce his "theory of everything," his status began to slip away, he used his students as tools to recapture his former glory. But for all the suffering he caused others, it was Hawking who suffered most of all. So extreme was his need to remain in the spotlight that he often played the role of the victim, whether by allowing confidence men to sell books under his name or enduring physical abuse at the hands of his second wife. To make matters worse, as his celebrity grew, he found himself increasingly estranged from his wives and children, even as he struggled to preserve his image as a family man. And though he bristled at any mention of his heroism, wanting to be remembered for his mind, not his body, Hawking accepted that his ALS was at the core of his persona and begrudgingly allowed audiences and the media to marvel at his perseverance and stoicism. In the end, Hawking was a genius because we wanted him to be one, and so did he. Provocative and controversial, Hawking Hawking upends everything we thought we knew about the world's most beloved scientist, shining light on the true nature of fame and the intoxicating effects of genius"--… (meer)
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Toon 3 van 3
Ich habe bereits einige Bücher über Stephen Hawking gelesen, aber diese wissenschaftliche Biographie ist mit Abstand der beste Text bisher. Der Autor nähert sich dem Phänomen Hawking respektvoll und anerkennend, ohne in Verehrung zu verfallen. Neben einer umfangreichen Darstellung von Hawkings Leben zeichnet sich das Buch insbesondere auch durch kritische Worte zur Vermarktung des "behinderten Genies" aus. Absolut herausragend sind die Erklärungen zu Hawkings wissenschaftlicher Arbeit, sie sind fundiert und verständlich und übertreffen teilweise die Darstellungen in Hawkings eigenen Büchern. Ein großartiges Buch! ( )
  glglgl | Apr 4, 2023 |
I bought and read this book based on the enthusiastic recommendation of Peter Woit, the outspoken critic of string theory who runs the blog Not Even Wrong. In this unauthorized biography of Stephen Hawking, Charles Seife did a remarkable job of retaining my interest. (Remarkable, because pop science is a genre with which I've not had a lot of luck in the past.) It was fascinating to learn more about the man Stephen Hawking, warts and all. And Seife's descriptions of Hawking's cosmological results seemed clear and not dumbed down.

I subtracted half a point from a perfect 5-star rating because of repetition, one of my pet peeves. I think Seife felt he had to repeat some things because he had decided to tell Hawking's story (roughly) in reverse chronological order. That decision was not as annoying as it might have been, but I think the book would have been better without that gimmick. ( )
  cpg | Jun 8, 2021 |
I received this book as an advance copy. Thank you

I enjoyed this book and find Stephen Hawking a fascinating person. I will be quite honest though, there were many sections that I had to skim over simply because I don't have enough science background to truly appreciate some sections in the book. For example: Here is one paragraph, "The geometric properties of Einsteinian, Lorentzian spacetime are very different from those of the ordinary, Euclidean space that we're used to. The formula to measure distance in spacetime (which I can't copy since my computer doesn't have the right keys) has a minus sign next to the time coordinate, t, and this means that the manifold of spacetime behaves in a way that defies ordinary geometric expectations. This sign difference forces a departure from the ordinary, Euclidean geometry that we're used to; spacetime is not a manifold whose geometry is Euclidean, but Lorentzian instead." Gulp, I was a liberal arts major way back when, and basic geometry was an issue for me, never mind Euclidean or Lorentzian!
In fairness, there is an equal mix about his personal life and his professional life. The personal aspects I found very interesting.
This book was also written in a very interesting way. It started at the end of his life and worked back. I decided I might have more luck understanding some of the science if I started when he was young and followed as he learned more, so I read the book backwards. Admitting my ignorance, he probably outpaced my understanding of math and science shortly after toddlerhood, haha.
Nonetheless, I did enjoy it. ( )
  cjyap1 | Mar 27, 2021 |
Toon 3 van 3
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"Confined to a wheelchair and surrounded by an entourage of nurses, Stephen Hawking was a symbol of the power of mind over matter. The public adored him, and the media compared him to Newton and Einstein. Appearing at concerts, on The Simpsons, and even on the edge of space, he was an icon who captured the imaginations of audiences all over the world. It didn't seem to matter that his fans had only a tenuous understanding of his contributions, or that the scientific community scoffed at much of his work. Somehow, Hawking had managed to transform himself into the world's most brilliant man. In Hawking Hawking, science journalist Charles Seife shows how. Examining Hawking's work his fraught relationships with his wives, lovers, and children, and his obsession with celebrity and fame, Seife demonstrates that Hawking's true genius lay not in his talent for physics but rather manipulation. Hawking worked tirelessly to cultivate his image as the epitome of rationality, a man of childlike simplicity, who could probe the vast recesses of space with his mind. But beneath the façade was a figure who was at best complex, at worst, conceited, selfish, and sexist. When he was wrong, as he was more often than not, he recast his failings as scientific victories. He distracted from his many character flaws with wit, charm, and self-deprecation. He convinced audiences of his authority on topics about which he knew little. And when, unable to produce his "theory of everything," his status began to slip away, he used his students as tools to recapture his former glory. But for all the suffering he caused others, it was Hawking who suffered most of all. So extreme was his need to remain in the spotlight that he often played the role of the victim, whether by allowing confidence men to sell books under his name or enduring physical abuse at the hands of his second wife. To make matters worse, as his celebrity grew, he found himself increasingly estranged from his wives and children, even as he struggled to preserve his image as a family man. And though he bristled at any mention of his heroism, wanting to be remembered for his mind, not his body, Hawking accepted that his ALS was at the core of his persona and begrudgingly allowed audiences and the media to marvel at his perseverance and stoicism. In the end, Hawking was a genius because we wanted him to be one, and so did he. Provocative and controversial, Hawking Hawking upends everything we thought we knew about the world's most beloved scientist, shining light on the true nature of fame and the intoxicating effects of genius"--

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