2 April 2008 - 23:32Neil Turok: 2008 TED Prize wish: An African Einstein
Sometimes it seems the world is just stuffed with good men and women.
Official Spiel: Accepting his 2008 TED Prize, physicist Neil Turok speaks out for talented young Africans starved of opportunity: by unlocking and nurturing the continent’s creative potential, we can create a change in Africa’s future. Turok asks the TED community to help him expand the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences by opening 15 new centers across Africa in five years. By adding resources for entrepreneurship to this proven model, he says, we can create a network for progress across the continent — and perhaps discover an African Einstein.
My Spiel: This is an honest, good man, who is doing something effective by creating a postgraduate institution for learning in Africa in mathematics and asking TED to create 15 more institutions in other fields.
What really struck me in watching this video is how many brilliant TED speakers have come from an impoverished area, found a way to escape into higher education via Europe or the U.S. and then returned home to help their kinsmen with some brilliant, innovative idea. When they returned they carried contacts, knowledge and skills they could have never attained by staying home. I hear of the “brain drain” from time to time, and I can only think that if there is a chance, any chance, to return home and help their old neighbors with their new skills that many will choose to do so and have in fact done so.
When you watch the video pay particular attention to the equation he shows that summarizes all of the fundamental physics we know to be true in the universe. Note how few names go with each piece of the equation: Schroedinger, Feynman, Einstein, etc. There are a few men, men far brighter than I or, with my apologies you, that change the way we define the universe or the structure of society and livingness. We waste these precious resources in impoverished nations by starving them with lack of opportunity.
I am sitting in a darkened room at work at 9:30pm on a Wednesday, surrounded by robotic parts and wiring diagrams, and wondering how I could possibly channel anything I do into something as significant as Neil Turok’s work.
Well, any young/brilliant/inspired/hopeful/unappreciated/other folks out there with a fire for robotics, drop me a line- I’ll show you my robots. It’s a start.
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