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The Brilliant Mr. Feynman

Freakonomics Radio

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The Pleasure of Finding Things Out

Julian Schwinger and Richard Feynman were both pioneers in quantum electrodynamics, born in 1918 in Jewish families in New York. While Feynman's mother admired Schwinger, there was a sense of competitive respect between the two. Despite their rivalry, Feynman saw it as a friendly competition that pushed them both. When Feynman was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics in 1965, he shared it with Schwinger and Sydney Tiro Tomanaga. Feynman's perspective on the Nobel Prize was that he didn't believe in honors and found the true prize to be the pleasure of finding things out.

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