All three volumes of The Feynman Lectures on Physics now online
Caltech and The Feynman Lectures Website joined forces in fall 2013 to create an online edition of The Feynman Lectures on Physics in three volumes: Volume 1, Volume 2 and Volume 3.
Caltech and The Feynman Lectures Website joined forces in fall 2013 to create an online edition of The Feynman Lectures on Physics in three volumes: Volume 1, Volume 2 and Volume 3.
The FBI files of noted physicist, esteemed author and Nobel prize winner Richard Feynman have been released as a result of a Freedom of Information Actrequest by Michael Morisy of MuckRock.com.
In July 2009, Microsoft Research released Project Tuva, based on the famed Messenger Lectures presented at Cornell University in 1964 by the late Richard Feynman, an American physicist and California Institute of Technology (Caltech) professor who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965 for his contributions to the development of quantum electrodynamics. Bill Gates, Microsoft chairman, made the lectures freely available to the public to encourage people to learn about science via a Silverlight-enhanced video player that presents the original, BBC-recorded videos of the seven physics lectures. The videos are searchable and include linked transcripts, notes, and interactive extras, originally including academic commentary on the first of the lectures.
Now commentary on all seven lectures has been added by Robert Jaffe, Jane and Otto Morningstar Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Jaffe first met Feynman early in his academic career.
I would encourage anyone interested in maths, physics or engineering to watch The Character of Physical Law, Feynman’s seven-part lecture series recorded at Cornell in 1964. The BBC recorded the seven lectures as part of the Messenger Lectures series.
The lectures covered the following topics:
The Kurzweil Accelerating Intelligence website that covers relevant major science and technology breakthroughs has reprinted Danny Hillis' paper Richard Feynman and The Connection Machine. The paper was originally published February 1989 in Physics Today.