Friday, May 3, 2013

Feynman


I noticed that this is my 501 st posting on Chairnotes! My best days always include working out something or learning something and posting about it. I am trying to steer my activities to encourage these behaviors. Thanks for sticking around.

I'm a bit of an insomniac. But I'm not one of those toss and turn, stress about how much sleep I'm losing insomniacs. I get up, get dressed and enjoy an hour or two of peace and quiet with no phone ringing and no meaningful work. I indulge in lots of rambling thoughts in these wee hours.
Recently, I've been spending nights listening to lectures and stories by Richard Feynman. He was one of the great minds in physics of the twentieth century, and his ramblings fit perfectly with my mood. Then, over breakfast, I retell his stories. If you haven't heard Feynman speak, he sounds like my Uncle Jay from New York, but stick with it, because like Jay, his brilliance comes along unexpectedly.
This one blew my mind.



Here is one of my favorite talks, and it's about trees, so I figure it fits.


I've bought a new drawknife the other day, shocking, I know.
It's a Barton #7. Barton is one of the only makers that used a geometry that distinctly lends itself to use bevel up. I have always liked the large gap between the blade and the handles, it makes seat carving a snap.
Many of the Bartons are quite large, but this one is just right.
The steel in this knife is superb and I was so excited when I sharpened it, that Claire suggested that I name it "Feynman", and so it is.

2 comments:

  1. if you've got the time, there's the QED lectures that he gave in New Zealand. these pretty much cover the gamut of reality, (other than gravity.)

    those are at:

    the Q&A sections at the end are worth sticking around for.

    ReplyDelete
  2. bugger, the link got eaten by something
    the URL again:http://vega.org.uk/video/subseries/8

    ReplyDelete