Early Years

Feynman family: http://ysfine.com/feynman/fphoto.html

- Richard Phillips
Feynman
was born May 11, 1918 to Melville and Lucille Feynman. His sister,
Joan, followed later, March 31, 1928.

Richard and Joan at the beach: http://ysfine.com/feynman/fphoto.html
- Richard's life was
charted for science
before he was even born. Melville decided while the child was still in
the womb that if the baby was a boy he would grow up to be a scientist.
Richard, in fact,
was a boy and his precocious young mind caught on quickly to his
father's earliest scientific teaching. His
father's practice of teaching Richard to ask investigative questions
began a lifetime devoted to the wonder and mystery of the universe.
- It was this process,
learned early in
life, of questioning and observing, the classic scientific method, that
Richard credited his discoveries by. As he stated in an
address to
science teachers in 1966,
" I think it is very
important--at least it was to me--that if you are going to teach people
to make observations, you should show that something wonderful can come
from them. I learned then what science was about: it was patience. If
you looked, and you watched, and you paid attention, you got a great
reward from it--although possibly not every time. As a result, when I
became a more mature man, I would painstakingly, hour after hour, for
years, work on problems--sometimes many years, sometimes shorter times;
many of them failing, lots of stuff going into the wastebasket--but
every once in a while there was the gold of a new understanding that I
had learned to expect when I was a kid, the result of observation. For
I did not learn that observation was not worthwhile (What Is Science?)."
- In high school,
Richard's aptitude
for learning was most evident. He excelled at math, building a solid
foundation for his physics career ahead. In fact, he won first prize in
the New York University math competition in his final year in Far
Rockaway high school (Wikipedia).
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