This is Ernest Rutherford, the father of nuclear physics.

Rutherford

I like him because I’m a bit of science geek. I also admire the way he shows logic as nothing without ideas. At its best, cience can be beautiful.

It can surprise you, throw things up at you that you might not expect. You have to be ready for them so you can sieze the chance to move things forward – and suddenly everything you know is wrong. Time to think around some corners.

Once upon a time, he was shooting alpha particles through gold foil. Everthing they thought they knew about atoms should have meant that they all came out the other side – but they didn’t.

Every now and again, something pushed some back. This was totally perplexing since conventional wisdom on atoms said this wasn’t possible. It took a piece of pure, unadulterated genius thinking to make the leap that atoms must have a concentrated nucleus. It was herecy, but it had to be true.

He wasn’t looking for it, but he’d discovered the foundation of modern physics. A wonderful marriage of observation and creative thought.

And that’s why great science inspires me as planner. You can’t avoid doing hard work – you have to do the rigour bit, there are no short cuts. But hard work isn’t enough. You need an open mind, you need to be able to look at things in a slightly different way. That’s planning to me.

I wanted to be good at science, but I couldn’t do the maths.  I still like solving puzzles though. That’s another reason I like what I do, sometimes in my own small way, I get to feel a little bit like Rutherford probably did.

By the way I’m off out to Leicester today. I’m having a meeting less than a mile from my old University (not the poly. I’ll be seeing the students malingering about, and no doubt I will feel very, very old.

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11 responses to “Hero Number 1”

  1. Rob @ Cynic Avatar

    Rigid flexibility

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  2. lauren Avatar

    yes!! same works in art!! you have to keep yourself open to things fucking up, in order to know how to fix them! it’s all part of what i call craft, but you prefer to call rigour 🙂

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  3. lauren Avatar

    i’m really enjoying the shape of your ‘recent posts’ list too….

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  4. NP Avatar

    Rigid flexibilty – like that.
    Lauren, I’ve got to learn morea about art, it may help me become a bit less geeky

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  5. lauren Avatar

    NP, that is the greatest misconception ever.

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  6. Rob @ Cynic Avatar

    Yes NP … have to agree with Lauren, the rest has done you good, the posts are tops.
    I also have to agree with Lauren that being into art DOES NOT MAKE YOU LESS GEEKY – but it does colour your mind and imagination which is why art and science are a wonderful combination.
    Pity I failed both at school!

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  7. Cleaver Avatar

    It’s one of my biggest academic regrets that I pursued neither science nor maths past high school.
    As I get older I’m less and less tolerant of sloppy thinking, both in myself and in others (and particularly in briefs), and it’s been my experience that people with scientific backgrounds are much more rigorous reasoners.
    Wordy types like me too often focus on the language at the expense of the idea it’s expressing.

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  8. NP Avatar

    Sorry if that wasn’t clear – I meant that I wanted to learn more about art so I’m less geeky than now. I don’t know enough about it and want to know more.
    Art is anything but geeky.

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  9. Rob @ Cynic Avatar

    It isn’t you who wasn’t clear … trust me, but don’t think artists aren’t immune from geekiness because they’re not – it just manifests itself in other ways.
    However science and art are the ultimate combination to create fresh communication relevance for consumers and I just wish people didn’t look at them as mutually exclusive camps.
    Great post …

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  10. NP Avatar

    Thanks. Wanted to make sure – Lauren must have been pretty pissed off if she took it the wrong way.
    Anyway, shouldn’t you be in bed?

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  11. lauren Avatar

    pissed off? are you kidding? i’m a proud artgeek!
    lots of people like to think they’re cool when they’re artists, but really, most of us are a bunch of nerds. (like any field, really). put it this way, ‘i’m an artist’ has never got me laid.
    however, i agree with rob, that knowing about art will expand your mind and your imagination and that’s pretty damn cool.

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