The scientific genius Richard Feynman wrote the famous "Stop it, Mr. Feynman" and won the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to quantum electrodynamics. award. His "Lecture Notes on Physics" is a must-have textbook for college physics students.
Feynman once described in his article "The Value of Science" an extremely strong and wonderful feeling of discovery that he experienced. He marveled that people who are immersed in thinking have such magical imagination. , and wrote a very imaginative poem "I Stand on the Beach" to record the feeling of that electric moment.
Before this poem, the author wrote a paragraph, proposing that the imagination of scientific thinking is no worse than mythology, and even more attractive. He said this:
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Then Richard Feynman stood on the beach by the sea, fell into deep thought, and wrote a hearty and imaginative poem: (The following poem is accompanied by a picture, and the text below the picture This is my personal understanding:)
How about this? This imagination is enough to open your mind!
Finally, the author sighed:
This shows that even if It is behind profound science, and it also requires imagination and passion as behind literary creation!