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  • The Crime of Reason and the Closing of the Scientific Mind

    Fri, Nov 13, 2009 @ 02:00 PM

    USC Viterbi School of Engineering

    Conferences, Lectures, & Seminars


    Professor Robert B. Laughlin (1998 Nobel Prize in Physics)
    Stanford University delivers the 2009 Munushian Seminar. "There is increasing talk about the disappearance of technical knowledge from the public domain, both because it is a security danger and because it is economically valuable. I argue that this development is not anomalous at all but a great historic trend tied to our transition to the information age. We are in the process of losing a human right that all of us thought we had but actually didn't - the right to learn things as we can and better ourselves economically from what we learn. Increasingly, figuring out important things (as opposed to unimportant ones) for yourself will become theft and terrorism. Increasingly, reason itself will become a crime."Prof. Laughlin earned an AB in mathematics from UC Berkeley in 1972 and a
    PhD in Physics from MIT in 1981. He served two years in the US Army.
    After MIT he went to the Bell Labs theory group and from there to the
    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, where he still consults. He joined
    the physics faculty of Stanford in 1984. He is a member of the National
    Academy of Sciences and has won many prestigious awards, including the
    Oliver E. Buckley Prize, and Earnest O. Lawrence Award, the Benjamin
    Franklin Medal for Physics and the Onsager Medal. He shared the 1998 Nobel
    Prize in Physics for his theory of the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect.

    Location: Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center (GER) - 124

    Audiences: Everyone Is Invited

    Contact: Eric Mankin

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