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- <text id=92TT1294>
- <title>
- June 08, 1992: Reviews:Books
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 08, 1992 The Balkans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 88
- BOOKS
- Einstein's Inspiring Heir
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By LEON JAROFF
- </p>
- <p> TITLE: Stephen Hawking: A Life in Science
- AUTHORS: Michael White and John Gribbin
- PUBLISHER: Dutton; 304 pages; $23
- </p>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: He is bound to a wheelchair, but his mind
- explores the universe.
- </p>
- <p> He is almost totally paralyzed, speechless and
- wheelchair-bound, able to move only his facial muscles and two
- fingers on his left hand. He cannot dress or feed himself, and
- he needs round-the-clock nursing care. He can communicate only
- through a voice synthesizer, which he operates by laboriously
- tapping out words on the computer attached to his motorized
- chair. Yet at age 50, despite these crushing adversities,
- Stephen Hawking has become, in the words of science writers
- Michael White and John Gribbin, "perhaps the greatest physicist
- of our time." His 1988 book, A Brief History of Time, has sold
- 1.7 million copies around the world.
- </p>
- <p> Hawking's choice of career was most fortunate, for himself
- as well as for science. Rejecting the urging of his physician
- father to study medicine, Hawking chose instead to concentrate
- on math and theoretical physics, first at Oxford and then at
- Cambridge. But at age 21 he developed the first symptoms of
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) -- also known as Lou
- Gehrig's disease -- a disorder that would inevitably render him
- paralyzed and incapable of performing most kinds of work. As the
- authors note, theoretical physics was "one of the very few jobs
- for which his mind was the only real tool he needed."
- </p>
- <p> He has used that tool with consummate skill. While still
- a graduate student, Hawking became fascinated by black holes,
- the bizarre objects created during the death throes of large
- stars. Working with mathematician Roger Penrose and using
- Einstein's relativity equations, he developed new techniques
- proving mathematically that at the heart of black holes were
- singularities -- infinitely dense, dimensionless points with
- irresistible gravity. He went on to demonstrate that the entire
- universe could have sprung from a singularity and, in his 1966
- Ph.D. thesis, wryly noted that "there is a singularity in our
- past."
- </p>
- <p> Gathering momentum as a fellow at Cambridge, Hawking
- calculated that the Big Bang, which gave birth to the universe,
- must have created tiny black holes, each about the size of a
- proton but with the mass of a mountain. Then, upsetting the
- universal belief that nothing, not even light, can escape from
- a black hole, he used the quantum theory to demonstrate that
- these miniholes (and larger ones too) emit radiation. Other
- scientists eventually conceded that he was correct, and the
- black-hole emissions are now known as Hawking radiation.
- </p>
- <p> Engrossed as Hawking is with his work, the authors say,
- "ALS is simply not that important to him." He certainly does
- not dwell on his handicap. His succinct, synthesized-voice
- comments are often laced with humor; he enjoys socializing with
- his students and colleagues, attends rock concerts and sometimes
- takes to the dance floor at discos, wheeling his chair in
- circles. But he can be stubborn, abrasive and quick to anger,
- terminating a conversation by spinning around and rolling off,
- sometimes running one of his wheels over the toes of an
- offender.
- </p>
- <p> Hawking can also be wrong. In 1985, for example, he
- brashly proclaimed that when and if the universe stopped
- expanding and began to contract, time would reverse and
- everything that had ever happened would be rerun in reverse.
- Eighteen months later, he sheepishly admitted his mistake.
- Earlier, after trashing another scientist's notion that the 19th
- century theory of thermodynamics could be applied to black-hole
- theory, he recanted and began applying it himself.
- </p>
- <p> Without his wife Jane, Hawking has always emphasized, his
- career might never have soared. She married him shortly after
- he was diagnosed with ALS, fully aware of the dreadful,
- progressive nature of the disease, giving him hope and the will
- to carry on with his studies. They had three children in the
- early stages of their marriage, and later, as he became
- increasingly incapacitated, she devoted herself to catering to
- his every need.
- </p>
- <p> After years of apparently harmonious marriage, however,
- rifts began appearing. As the accolades and awards poured in for
- Stephen, Jane -- competent and intelligent herself -- began to
- resent living in his shadow. Deeply religious, she was also
- offended by his apparent atheism. Particularly galling to her
- was his concept, enunciated first before the Pope at a
- scientific meeting at the Vatican, that the universe might be
- completely self-contained, having no boundary or edge, no
- beginning or end. If that were true, he asked provocatively,
- "What place, then, for a creator?" Still, friends were shocked
- in 1990 when Hawking abruptly ended their 25-year marriage,
- moving in with one of his nurses.
- </p>
- <p> What this book brings to the already crowded domain of
- Hawking lore is a rather successful merger of biography and
- physics. As it traces the course of Hawking's life, it pauses
- occasionally to prepare the reader for the mind-boggling
- complexities of relativity theory and the even more bizarre
- notions of quantum physics -- twin pillars on which Hawking has
- constructed his theories -- which he is currently attempting to
- unite in an all-encompassing theory. The authors characterize
- their early review of Newton's classical theory of gravitation,
- for example, as "a gentle workout in the foothills before we
- head for the dizzy heights."
- </p>
- <p> The exercise works. By the time the higher elevations are
- reached, such strange notions as Einsteinian curved space-time
- and the quantum uncertainty principle, heavy meals indeed, seem
- not so difficult to digest.
- </p>
- <p> Still, it is the man, more than the science, who dominates
- this book, with his triumph over a terrible affliction, his
- courage, his humor and his admirable lack of self-pity. As
- Hawking's computer voice declared during the final scene in a
- BBC TV show, "I have a beautiful family, I am successful in my
- work, and I have written a best seller. One really can't ask for
- more."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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