Nature 426, 389 (27 November 2003)
Scientist: Four golden lessons
STEVEN WEINBERG
Steven Weinberg is in the Department of Physics,
the University of Texas at Austin, Texas 78712, USA. This essay is based on a
commencement talk given by the author at the Science Convocation at McGill
University in June 2003.
When I received my undergraduate degree about a
hundred years ago the physics literature seemed to me a vast, unexplored ocean,
every part of which I had to chart before beginning any research of my own. How
could I do anything without knowing everything that had already been done?
Fortunately, in my first year of graduate school, I had the good luck to fall
into the hands of senior physicists who insisted, over my anxious objections,
that I must start doing research, and pick up what I needed to know as I went
along. It was sink or swim. To my surprise, I found that this works. I managed
to get a quick PhD though when I got it I knew almost nothing about physics. But
I did learn one big thing: that no one knows everything, and you don't have to.
Another lesson to be learned, to continue using my oceanographic metaphor, is
that while you are swimming and not sinking you should aim for rough water. When
I was teaching at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the late 1960s, a
student told me that he wanted to go into general relativity rather than the
area I was working on, elementary particle physics, because the principles of
the former were well known, while the latter seemed like a mess to him. It
struck me that he had just given a perfectly good reason for doing the opposite.
Particle physics was an area where creative work could still be done. It really
was a mess in the 1960s, but since that time the work of many theoretical and
experimental physicists has been able to sort it out, and put everything (well,
almost everything) together in a beautiful theory known as the standard model.
My advice is to go for the messes that's where the action is.
My third piece of advice is probably the hardest to take. It is to forgive
yourself for wasting time. Students are only asked to solve problems that their
professors (unless unusually cruel) know to be solvable. In addition, it doesn't
matter if the problems are scientifically important they have to be solved to
pass the course. But in the real world, it's very hard to know which problems
are important, and you never know whether at a given moment in history a problem
is solvable. At the beginning of the twentieth century, several leading
physicists, including Lorentz and Abraham, were trying to work out a theory of
the electron. This was partly in order to understand why all attempts to detect
effects of Earth's motion through the ether had failed. We now know that they
were working on the wrong problem. At that time, no one could have developed a
successful theory of the electron, because quantum mechanics had not yet been
discovered. It took the genius of Albert Einstein in 1905 to realize that the
right problem on which to work was the effect of motion on measurements of space
and time. This led him to the special theory of relativity. As you will never be
sure which are the right problems to work on, most of the time that you spend in
the laboratory or at your desk will be wasted. If you want to be creative, then
you will have to get used to spending most of your time not being creative, to
being becalmed on the ocean of scientific knowledge.
Finally, learn something about the history of science, or at a minimum the
history of your own branch of science. The least important reason for this is
that the history may actually be of some use to you in your own scientific work.
For instance, now and then scientists are hampered by believing one of the over-simplified
models of science that have been proposed by philosophers from Francis Bacon to
Thomas Kuhn and Karl Popper. The best antidote to the philosophy of science is a
knowledge of the history of science.
More importantly, the history of science can make your work seem more worthwhile
to you. As a scientist, you're probably not going to get rich. Your friends and
relatives probably won't understand what you're doing. And if you work in a
field like elementary particle physics, you won't even have the satisfaction of
doing something that is immediately useful. But you can get great satisfaction
by recognizing that your work in science is a part of history.
Look back 100 years, to 1903. How important is it now who was Prime Minister of
Great Britain in 1903, or President of the United States? What stands out as
really important is that at McGill University, Ernest Rutherford and Frederick
Soddy were working out the nature of radioactivity. This work (of course!) had
practical applications, but much more important were its cultural implications.
The understanding of radioactivity allowed physicists to explain how the Sun and
Earth's cores could still be hot after millions of years. In this way, it
removed the last scientific objection to what many geologists and
paleontologists thought was the great age of the Earth and the Sun. After this,
Christians and Jews either had to give up belief in the literal truth of the
Bible or resign themselves to intellectual irrelevance. This was just one step
in a sequence of steps from Galileo through Newton and Darwin to the present
that, time after time, has weakened the hold of religious dogmatism. Reading any
newspaper nowadays is enough to show you that this work is not yet complete. But
it is civilizing work, of which scientists are able to feel proud.