The stuff I learned from you guys (everything from 4HWW, juicing, kettlebells, and cold showers to name a few) has helped me a lot in every area in my life.My work life is easier, my hair is thicker, my body is lean, and I’m feeling happy.I didn’t have role models or mentors in my life to help me through tough times. “...I realized a new principle, which was that I'm not responsible for what other people think I am able to do; I don't have to be good because they think I'm going to be good.”
. . Growing in size and complexity . ― Richard Feynman, quote from The Pleasure of Finding Things Out: The Best Short Works of Richard P. Feynman “You see, one thing is, I can live with doubt and uncertainty and not knowing. There is no crime, debt In the meantime though, until he takes me up on that, I will look out for interesting people I meet in everyday life! trillions apart . I think many of us deep down feel pressure to “be famous” or “make an important discovery” (although we rarely admit it). We absolutely must leave room for doubt or there is no progress and there is no learning. David Simon – co-founder of the Chopra Center. I would love to ask him what he thought were the best methods one could use to change the world Alexander Hamilton: Despite being an orphan, he become one of the most influential founding fathers, yielding incredible influence over the economic policies/future of the country.Jeff Bezos: Founded the world’s largest and most successful e-Commerce company, a field I’m really passionate about.Was it Feynman’s classes that were so popular that non-students would sneak in just to hear the lectures? and also…he’d prob not eat…or sit still long enough to talk to. It was forwarded to me by Brew Johnson and Feynman’s makes me want to be a better teacher and, ultimately, a world-class parent (you’ll see what I mean). before any eyes could see . In this candid interview Feynman touches on a wide array of topics from the beauty of nature to particle physics. .
You cannot expect old designs to work in new circumstances.
I always worked from the assumption that gurus/heroes can be incredibly wrong, which I assume tim ferris and seth godin can be incredibly wrong too. . Even just by looking at him makes me leap for joy. ― Richard Feynman, quote from The Pleasure of Finding Things Out: The Best Short Works of Richard P. Feynman . “I won’t have anything to do with the Nobel Prize . And a question requires doubt. Do what you like / enjoy, forget being famous or being on wikipedia.Ben Franklin would top my list. But there is no certainty. Have you seen the video of his lecture: The Sir Douglas Robb Lectures, University of Auckland, 1979Chuck Norris… “the four hour body – a guide to become chuck norris “should the title be Gustavo Rol first of all and Aleandro Jodorowsky among all those who are aliveIs there a specific reason for the order buttons being gray instead of the usual orange on the 4-hour-chef site? I would ask him how he can be in the matrix of life and yet somehow above it. He single-handedly changed the world to a degree 99.999999% of people have no idea about. He’s extraordinary.Toshitsugu Takamatsu, Vera Rubin, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, MLK, Charles Darwin, Feynman, Alan Turing, Benjamin Franklin, Susanna Clarke, Alan Moore, Esther Dyson, Barack Obama, T. Ferriss…Ghandi, Jesus, Ghengis Khan and Adolph Hitler would make for an interesting evening…Paul Graham and just try to learn as much wisdom as possibleI don’t like people’s tendency to deity gurus or heroes. I didn't have time to learn, and I didn't have much patience for what's called the humanities; even though in the university there were humanities that you had to take, I tried my best to avoid somehow to learn anything and to work on it.
“did learn a lesson: The female mind is capable” For forty years, John Bahcall and Ray Davis were engaged in a single extraordinary experiment -...A Brilliant Madness is the story of a mathematical genius whose career was cut short by a descent into madness. “I think it’s much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong.” At a time when British society faces ever-increasing challenges, there is a hidden community in the English countryside who seem to have found the answer to a harmonious life. Richard Feynman (1918 – 1988) was a professor, educator, writer, and physicist who won the Nobel Prize in 1965 for his work in quantum electrodynamics (demonstrating that history could and does have all possible histories and eventualities).