*** Proof of Product ***
Exploring the Essential Features of “Physicists on Wall Street and Other Essays on Science and Society – Jeremy Bernstein”
Presents new information on the great physicist Werner Heisenberg’s life and travels
Gives a truly accessible explanation of how hedge funds work
Reveals previously unpublished information on the South African nuclear weapons program
Table of contents (16 chapters)
Front Matter
Pages i-xii
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Economists
- Options
Pages 3-7 - Black-Scholes
Pages 9-14 - The Rise and Fall of the Quants
Pages 15-22
Scientists
- Heisenberg in Poland
Pages 25-34 - The Orion
Pages 35-42 - Tales from South Africa
Pages 43-45 - A Nuclear Supermarket
Pages 47-55 - Ottavio Baldi: The Life and Times of Sir Henry Wotton
Pages 57-69
Linguists
- The Spencers of Althorp and Sir William Jones: A Love Story
Pages 73-86 - All That Glitters
Pages 87-105 - In a Word, “Lions”
Pages 107-110
Fiction and Stranger than Fiction
- The Pianist, Fiction and Non-fiction
Pages 113-120 - Rocket Science
Pages 121-132 - The Science of Michel Thomas
Pages 133-146 - Topology
Pages 147-154 - What the #$*!?
Pages 155-157
Back Matter
Pages 159-182
About this book
Over the years, Jeremy Bernstein has been in contact with many of the world’s most renowned physicists and other scientists, many of whom were involved in politics, literature, and language. In this diverse collection of essays, he reflects on their work, their personal relationships, their motives, and their contributions. Even for those people he writes about that he did not know personally, he provides important insights into their lives and work, and questions their character, their decisions, and the lives they led.
In the first three essays, Professor Bernstein looks at economic theory and how some physicists who developed interesting economic models based on derivatives and hedge funds almost led to the country into bankruptcy. In later essays, he discusses a suspect visit to Poland by the great Heisenberg during the Nazi era, a visit that there is almost nothing written about.
Included also are essays on ancient languages and a nuclear weapons program in South Africa that was supposedly dismantled. In one particularly humorous essay, he describes how an ill-conceived manned spaceship to be powered by an atomic bomb was being developed by some of the country’s most powerful intellects. The project never got off the ground.
Dipping into these pages is like rummaging around in the mind of a genius who has a potpourri of interests and an abundance of fascinating experiences. Bernstein has not only rubbed elbows with some of the finest minds in world, he has worked and played with them. He has sometimes mourned with them and laughed at them. His sharp wit and even sharper analysis make for a fascinating read.
Authors and Affiliations
New York, USA
Jeremy Bernstein
About the author
Many readers will recognize Bernstein (Cranks, Quarks & the Cosmos, LJ 1/93) as the noted science essayist for the New Yorker for the past 30 years. He has also contributed essays to Scientific American and The Atlantic Monthly. He wrote A Theory for Everything (Copernicus, 1996) which collected some of his essays as well as Hitler’s Uranium Club 2e (Copernicus, 1996) and Secrets of the Old One: Einstein, 1905 (Springer, 2006).
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