Richard Feynman, the renowned physicist and Nobel prize winner, was a master problem solver. He relished a new challenge. From fixing radios for his entire neighbourhood in New York when he was a child to pranking colleagues by unlocking their high-security safes when he worked on the Manhattan Project. From describing physics in a simple way for students and laymen to understand to pioneering the field of quantum computing. No problem was too big or small, he loved them all.
My Twelve Favourite Problems
My Twelve Favourite Problems
My Twelve Favourite Problems
Richard Feynman, the renowned physicist and Nobel prize winner, was a master problem solver. He relished a new challenge. From fixing radios for his entire neighbourhood in New York when he was a child to pranking colleagues by unlocking their high-security safes when he worked on the Manhattan Project. From describing physics in a simple way for students and laymen to understand to pioneering the field of quantum computing. No problem was too big or small, he loved them all.