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Star: Stephen Hawking 'mulling' Waterloo move

AlvinofDiaspar

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From the Star:

Stephen Hawking 'mulling' Waterloo move

Jul 16, 2008 04:30 AM
Comments on this story (3)
Greg Mercer
Torstar News Services

WATERLOO–Could the world's most famous physicist be headed for Waterloo?

A report out of Britain suggests Stephen Hawking is considering an invitation to come work at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics.

The theoretical physicist already plans a visit to the city next year, following his public criticism of the British government's cuts to research funding.

But he's also being encouraged to move to Ontario by his University of Cambridge colleague Neil Turok, the mathematical physicist who will take over as Perimeter's executive director on Oct. 1. Perimeter confirmed last night that it has made a standing offer to Hawking.

"The door is certainly wide open," said John Matlock, Perimeter's director of external relations and outreach. "It would be absolutely wonderful to have him."

Turok is leaving Cambridge after failing to persuade university authorities, research councils and sponsors to spend $40 million to expand its Centre for Theoretical Cosmology, which he heads, into a Hawking Institute.

By comparison, Waterloo's Perimeter Institute has about $600 million in funding.

Turok wants Hawking to stick around after he comes to Waterloo as a visitor in 2009.

"He plans to visit me in Ontario next year for a month or so, and we would certainly welcome him coming for longer," Turok told Britain's Telegraph newspaper.

Sam Blackburn, Hawking's graduate assistant, told the paper: "I think Prof. Hawking is mulling it over but a move isn't imminent. He would not make plans to permanently move to a place he hasn't visited yet, but he is open to it."

Blackburn warned that Hawking was "obviously a man of few words, so the first we would probably know of it is when he packs his bags."

The addition of Hawking to Perimeter's staff of top physicists would be a major coup for the research institute, founded in 1999 by Mike Lazaridis, founder and co-CEO of Research In Motion, which makes the BlackBerry.

Hawking's name is widely known outside the world of physics and he has often spoken about the importance of letting average people access and understand his research.

Hawking, who has Lou Gehrig's disease, has appeared on television shows from Star Trek to The Simpsons. He's written many books, including the popular science bestseller A Brief History of Time.

"Like Einstein, he has crossed over into popular culture," Matlock said. "He's a celebrity."


The Record of Waterloo Region

http://www.thestar.com/News/Ontario/article/461065
 
I think the rumour about Hawking moving to Waterloo has turned out to be a rumour, and nothing more. He is coming to visit the Institute, though.
 
PUHLEASE! Sounds to me like Mr. Hawking is fishing for a raise.

[If I whine and threaten long enough, I'll get what I want.]

Seems to work a lot these days, in our Entitled Days.
 
Dichotomy:

Stephen Hawking has earned his reputation as one of the foremost cosmologist of our times. How does your esteemed self a) compare to his achievements and b) be more worthy of a raise?

Since we're on the topic of entitlement, perhaps you could inform me what driving anywhere whenever one wants to, regardless of the broader societal costs constitute?

AoD
 
Full disclosure: I read and greatly enjoyed a Brief History of Time.

Who said it has anything to do with Mr. Hawking? Perhaps his 'handlers' or 'sponsor's are agitating? I don't know; neither do you.

I doubt very very much he would be seriously considering the move, as stated in the article. At best, it could be a negotiating tactic.

Or do you think esteemed scientists are above that?
 
Who said it has anything to do with Mr. Hawking? Perhaps his 'handlers' or 'sponsor's are agitating? I don't know; neither do you.

You said:

Sounds to me like Mr. Hawking is fishing for a raise.

Sounds like you know just what his intents are quite well. Certainly, well enough to contradict yourself in a back-to-back posting.

AoD
 
PUHLEASE! Sounds to me like Mr. Hawking is fishing for a raise.

[If I whine and threaten long enough, I'll get what I want.]

Seems to work a lot these days, in our Entitled Days.

what are you? a socialist?
 
^ You should really learn to read. There's 600 million reasons to come here.

Turok is leaving Cambridge after failing to persuade university authorities, research councils and sponsors to spend $40 million to expand its Centre for Theoretical Cosmology, which he heads, into a Hawking Institute.

By comparison, Waterloo's Perimeter Institute has about $600 million in funding.
 
The rumour was, in part, generated due to the significant cuts made in scientific research budgets in the U.K., which has upset many scientists there.

One certainly does not become rich doing cosmology. Writing a popular book might help to generate financial security for someone with a special insight into a field of inquiry, a family and a disability.
 
Damn fat-cat theoretical physicists with their yachts and their super-model trophy wives but still always wanting more. Makes me sick.
 
Yeah, you'd think that stuff was reserved for those biologists who sequence their own genome.
 
Damn fat-cat theoretical physicists with their yachts and their super-model trophy wives but still always wanting more. Makes me sick.

he probably wants a gold plated wheelchair like larry flynt has. actually in his case, he probably wants it made from strange matter. isn't that why they built the large hadron collider at cern in the first place?
 
Well, we can all have a good laught today, but read the Post's editorial take on the issue, which is apparently a non-starter, like I said.
Set aside the issue of what Mr. Hawking's real accomplishments are, at 68, what would he really be bringing to Waterloo?
 
Prometheus:

LHC is, first and foremost meant to track down Higgs boson; beyond that, it should be capable of generating and detecting certain low energy species of putative Supersymmetry particles, which would be great for physics beyond the Standard Model.

AoD
 

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