“十一”十三陵骑行

前天(10.2)骑车去的十三陵,现在有空记录一下。

流水帐:

早上九点从保福寺桥出发,经过健翔桥上G6辅路,11:15左右到达昌平城区。骑得较为轻松,只是中间有一段路跟一个人飙车花了不少力气。这次骑行的平均速度达到了20码,虽然我主要是跟骑,但是看来跆拳道的练习还是很有帮助,第二天腿部并没有明显的酸胀感。

误闯高尔夫球场:

在环水库骑行的时候,已是中午,无意中进入了一个入口,骑了一段时间发现竟然有种世外桃源般的感觉——路边栽满了各种果树,然后眼前全是起伏有致、异常平整的草坪。当我们看到一个旗杆标志的时候才意识到这是个高尔夫球场。最后,球场的管理人员看到了我们,将我们请出了球场(貌似我们的到来要使那个门卫的奖金给泡汤了)。

定陵机场:

去定陵的路上发现了这个机场,貌似是华北电网巡视用的。


[转载]Scientist: Four golden lessons

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v426/n6965/full/426389a.html

Steven Weinberg*

When I received my undergraduate degree — about a hundred years ago — the physics literature seemed to me a vast, unexplored ocean, every part of which I had to chart before beginning any research of my own. How could I do anything without knowing everything that had already been done? Fortunately, in my first year of graduate school, I had the good luck to fall into the hands of senior physicists who insisted, over my anxious objections, that I must start doing research, and pick up what I needed to know as I went along. It was sink or swim. To my surprise, I found that this works. I managed to get a quick PhD — though when I got it I knew almost nothing about physics. But I did learn one big thing: that no one knows everything, and you don’t have to.

Another lesson to be learned, to continue using my oceanographic metaphor, is that while you are swimming and not sinking you should aim for rough water. When I was teaching at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the late 1960s, a student told me that he wanted to go into general relativity rather than the area I was working on, elementary particle physics, because the principles of the former were well known, while the latter seemed like a mess to him. It struck me that he had just given a perfectly good reason for doing the opposite. Particle physics was an area where creative work could still be done. It really was a mess in the 1960s, but since that time the work of many theoretical and experimental physicists has been able to sort it out, and put everything (well, almost everything) together in a beautiful theory known as the standard model. My advice is to go for the messes — that’s where the action is.

My third piece of advice is probably the hardest to take. It is to forgive yourself for wasting time. Students are only asked to solve problems that their professors (unless unusually cruel) know to be solvable. In addition, it doesn’t matter if the problems are scientifically important — they have to be solved to pass the course. But in the real world, it’s very hard to know which problems are important, and you never know whether at a given moment in history a problem is solvable. At the beginning of the twentieth century, several leading physicists, including Lorentz and Abraham, were trying to work out a theory of the electron. This was partly in order to understand why all attempts to detect effects of Earth’s motion through the ether had failed. We now know that they were working on the wrong problem. At that time, no one could have developed a successful theory of the electron, because quantum mechanics had not yet been discovered. It took the genius of Albert Einstein in 1905 to realize that the right problem on which to work was the effect of motion on measurements of space and time. This led him to the special theory of relativity. As you will never be sure which are the right problems to work on, most of the time that you spend in the laboratory or at your desk will be wasted. If you want to be creative, then you will have to get used to spending most of your time not being creative, to being becalmed on the ocean of scientific knowledge.

Finally, learn something about the history of science, or at a minimum the history of your own branch of science. The least important reason for this is that the history may actually be of some use to you in your own scientific work. For instance, now and then scientists are hampered by believing one of the over-simplified models of science that have been proposed by philosophers from Francis Bacon to Thomas Kuhn and Karl Popper. The best antidote to the philosophy of science is a knowledge of the history of science.

More importantly, the history of science can make your work seem more worthwhile to you. As a scientist, you’re probably not going to get rich. Your friends and relatives probably won’t understand what you’re doing. And if you work in a field like elementary particle physics, you won’t even have the satisfaction of doing something that is immediately useful. But you can get great satisfaction by recognizing that your work in science is a part of history.

Look back 100 years, to 1903. How important is it now who was Prime Minister of Great Britain in 1903, or President of the United States? What stands out as really important is that at McGill University, Ernest Rutherford and Frederick Soddy were working out the nature of radioactivity. This work (of course!) had practical applications, but much more important were its cultural implications. The understanding of radioactivity allowed physicists to explain how the Sun and Earth’s cores could still be hot after millions of years. In this way, it removed the last scientific objection to what many geologists and paleontologists thought was the great age of the Earth and the Sun. After this, Christians and Jews either had to give up belief in the literal truth of the Bible or resign themselves to intellectual irrelevance. This was just one step in a sequence of steps from Galileo through Newton and Darwin to the present that, time after time, has weakened the hold of religious dogmatism. Reading any newspaper nowadays is enough to show you that this work is not yet complete. But it is civilizing work, of which scientists are able to feel proud.

*Department of Physics, the University of Texas at Austin, Texas 78712, USA. This essay is based on a commencement talk given by the author at the Science Convocation at McGill University in June 2003.

献给好人的奏鸣曲

刚刚看完窃听风暴,查了一下豆瓣记录,离我第一次看这部伟大的影片刚好时隔一年。去年看的时候心潮澎湃,现在依然,虽然跟上次一样,看完已经很晚,但这次一定得记录点自己的感受了。

艺术,真的能够唤起人内心中的善良吗?或许是一种有效的手段,但前提是,他要是一个好人,有自己的价值观,有思考能力和判断力。在这个腐朽的体制中,他早就产生怀疑,只不过缺少一个推手——那个具有强大人格魅力的作家。

柏林墙倒了,作家终于看到了自己的作品被精彩的演绎,但汉普部长仍然位居高位,我们的英雄HGW-xx/7(卫斯勒) 却做着普通的不能再普通的工作。结局的时候真希望作家能够走上前去与HGW打个招呼,不过看来是我太俗了,人作家有自己的想法。最后,卫斯勒说:这是写给我的书。我快哭了!

好人应该有好报,什么是好报?是好人变得有权势有地位?还是坏人全部死光光?我还是太肤浅!权势和地位是客观的,就像一件物品,谁去拥有它无关于一个人的好坏。我不知道最后卫斯勒是否满意自己的生活,但他肯定自豪于自己当年的选择,因为历史也选择了这条路。

优秀的人是骨子里的优秀,无论在哪个体制里,都是优秀者!(这是我去年写在豆瓣上的短评。)

明理

理论这个东西接受多了,而又缺乏实践的话,往往会使人成为书呆子,顶多只会解释一些既定的、在理论框架内的一些东西,倘若能够举一反三,修正一下,解释一些新现象,那就算是很牛B了。孰不知,每个时代的理论都会有它的局限性,但是宇宙永远是那个宇宙,现象永远是那个现象,无论你用哪个理论框架去套它。

明理,应该真正的亲身去体会这个道理,去冥思苦想这些个可恶的“为什么”,真正懂得其中的奥妙,这样才能以不变应万变,轻松接受各种千奇百怪的解释。这也是独立思考的基础。

圣人是明理的。马克思创造马克思主义之前就懂得了社会发展的规律,某些人不具备马克思的见解,那么误学误用他的思想是再也正常不过了。爱因斯坦创造相对论之前就已经想明白了这个问题,只不过后来用数学表达出来了罢,您可以在数学上修缮它那粗糙的原始表达,但您未必就真懂相对论!

以上今天听讲座的一些感受。

暴骑白羊沟——记蛋疼的一天

本来想的是今天自己一个人去刷四环,也就67公里。结果昨天把这个想法一说,很多人感兴趣,那么多人当然不可能都去刷四环了,哪有五一节集体外出吸尾气的。于是就在科苑星空上找了一条入门路线:清华园 – 上地 – 北清路 – 温阳路 – 阳坊 – 葛村 – 流村 – 白羊城 -白羊沟。来回大概120km左右。

我们八点从保福寺桥出发,一共六个人,一辆山地,一辆公路,其余的是普通车。总体来说,这条路线还是比较简单的,进入温南路之前都比较平缓,骑行较为轻松。

在进入温南路之后,自行车道的路况非常差,而机动车道上全是疯狂的卡车和挂车。而且从这段路开始就有一个比较长的缓坡。我当时都快骑虚脱了,屁股还被震得生疼,而且时不时还被旁边飙过的卡车扬一身尘土。以至于当时骑过一个该拐弯的路口很远才发现有点不对劲,于是从另一条路拐回去,这硬生生导致我们多骑了16km!最主要的失误就是没有在路线图上重点标出这个不是很明显的拐弯口。

到了流村后就是白羊沟风景区的入口,然后就是坑爹的4km,全是爬坡,足足爬了一个多小时。不过回来的时候就爽了,一路下坡,到门口用时20min。

风景还是不错的。

慢慢地变得踏实

经过几天疯狂的自习,今天考完了介观。这门课对我来说是相当有难度,说实话,即使考试结束了,也是有很多地方没有搞懂。但是这几天的高强度复习,让我隐约找到了两三年前那种静心学习的状态。

反思一下自己的大学的学习,大一大二比较努力,大三大四过得不是一般地水。一般专业课程都是在大三大四,而我又知道这些课好过得很,没有怎么用心学,根本没有在脑子中形成一些基本概念和基本图像,现在回想起来,真是懊悔不已!大一大二都是一些公共基础课程,俺是用心学了的,但仍然忘得差不多了,主要是该在大三大四用的时候没有积极主动去温故。

然后到了物理所,惰性仍然未改。虽然放低了心态,正视了差距,但是羞愧的心情依然挥之不去。认识了一个又一个的牛人,一交流、一对比,才发现大学的后两年自己基本上是没有怎么进步,反而变得更加浮躁了,还有什么资本好自以为是的呢?更可怕的是,比你牛的人,反而比你更踏实、更努力!

我该做的,就是让自己做事不拖拉、不打折,该完成的任务按时完成,该推导的公式认真推导,不要那么急躁,一点一滴的积累。慢点,但是要让时间花得有价值!

一句话,踏实做事,比什么都重要!

让自己快乐

刚刚去游泳了,真爽!一种很好的减压方式,帮助忘却烦恼。因为你不放松的话,就浮不起来了~

每天多找些开心的事情来做,充实自己;每天在心情最好的时候给妈妈打电话,不要总是让她担心;每天善待自己的朋友和兄弟,因为在自己心情低落的时候,他们中的一些人会陪在你的身边。

每天精力充沛的对待学习,和牛人们讨论作业;每天抽时间读一些有爱的书籍,让自己的心胸开阔一点。少关注点技术,多培养点人文精神。

一定要让自己快乐,快乐的过完这五年,完成质的蜕变。

More than money

上周非诚勿扰出了一个超级火爆的男嘉宾,美籍华人安田,在哈佛念的本科。此人表情夸张,动作搞怪,但这些不羁的外表并遮挡不了他深邃的思想。最近,有细心的网友将去年同样毕业于哈佛的一位男嘉宾的表现和安田的表现进行对比,并制作了视频。so,原来他们同样具有积极向上的娱乐精神,同样具有强烈的社会责任感,同样看重另一半对于金钱的态度。

说实话,我很欣赏这种气质,但是这是不是我能够具有的呢?我一直想着买这个,买那个,一直想有更多的钱,一直对于拒绝茅仔叫我去挂靠的建议耿耿于怀,一直想着在读研的时候做什么能够赚点外快。so,我是真没有资格去拥有这种气质和精神。

想着这样感觉是挺好的——不用太考虑钱,够用就行,然后去实现自己的理想,做自己喜欢的事情。马云说,下一个时代的创业者的目标就是去满足社会的需求,解决社会的问题。就是,创业的终极目标并不是为了赚钱,而是为了实现一种价值。

那么,我的人生理想是什么,终极目标是什么?

为什么而努力?

今天10点半下自习,走在只有一个人的天桥上,北京的春风还是那么寒冷刺骨,当然还夹杂着令人作呕的沙尘。原来孤独是这种感觉,大二的时候也曾常常体会。一次比一次彻底的失败,仍打消不了我追求关怀的渴望。

想想自己为什么而努力?为了自己和妈妈更好的生活,这是最终的目标,没有别的了。所以,别总是为其他人而过度神伤,伤害了自己,耽误了前程,没有人会替你交学费。

所以,我要对自己好一点,每天买水果吃,每周去打球,最好还能去游泳,认真学习,认真科研,建立起自己的精神家园和心灵港湾,别总是那么容易受到干扰,那种撕心裂肺的伤心真是承受不起。

今天晚睡了

昨天喝的咖啡貌似现在还在作祟,G7果然是给力啊,今天一整天都是昏昏沉沉不在状态。我这种土鳖以后还是少喝咖啡为妙。

开学刚好一周,状态还行。由于这个学期有几门课是早上的第一节,所以就不得不早起了,早起的感觉就是一天的时间真长,唉,看来我以前是堕落惯了。这学期的几门课还是非常有难度的,具体细节就不表了,只说一下一些自己的感受。只要精力充沛、计划得道,我还是能够很认真的背单词、看文献、读教材的。但是,这样的好景往往不长,有很多小事都能够把我刚刚建立起来的小小的信心给击毁,难道是我对自己的要求太高,还是自己真的是太弱了?不管怎么说,还是努力学习吧,做得多了,即使走的是弯路,也总会有收获。

博客已经荒废了几个月了,其实一直是想写来着,live writer里存了几篇没有写完的草稿未发,现在看看应该也不会去补全再发了,因为已经没有了那时的心境。当时想的是要在博客里多发些自己思考的东西,可能一下子想写很多,又组织不好,写着写着就成了烂尾文。回顾一下以前写的东西,大二和大三的一部分时间还是写了比较多的自己的东西,那段时间也是自己成长最快的时候。自从09年1月用了Linux以后,博客主要就成了技术备忘录了,以至于现在当我把这种文章移到wiki里以后,都不知道自己要在博客里写些什么。

其实,写什么真的无所谓,这个东西就是给自己看的,但要用心。