(In the context of Stephen Hawking quoting ZMM as an inspiration for his 1988 
popular science text “A Brief History of Time”) Ant McWatt referenced the 
following article, March 7th 2014:  

http://articles.latimes.com/2013/sep/08/science/la-sci-sn-stephen-hawking-new-book-20130908


John Carl commented, March 8th 2014:

Somebody copped you to the fact that Hawking is not my favorite guy - something 
to do with this statement that philosophy is dead no doubt.  Would you be happy 
over the pronouncement of the decease of your true love?


Ant McWatt comments:

John,

When Stephen Hawking’s comment that “philosophy is dead” is put in its wider 
context, I couldn’t agree more.  Philip Goff, a young philosopher at my old
Department helpfully provides this context for us:

“I don't imagine that Hawking is in a hurry to answer this philosophical 
challenge.  The opening page of his book proclaims that "philosophy is dead", 
due to the fact that philosophers have failed to keep up with mathematical 
developments in physics.  This doesn't stop him, and his co-writer
Leonard Mlodinow, indulging in some very crude philosophical discussions of
free will and metaphysical realism in later chapters.  Hawking is right to say 
that most philosophers don't understand cutting-edge physics. But it cuts both 
ways: most physicists don't understand cutting-edge philosophy.”

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/sep/30/stephen-hawking-disproved-gods-role-creation

 
Ant McWatt comments:

For anyone who has read my Ph.D., they will realise by the time they reach the 
addendum (“The MOQ & Time”) that there is a considerable amount of physics in 
the thesis – so much so, in fact, that I think it’s really more a philosophy 
major/physics minor Ph.D. than a pure philosophy one. 

Well, with that in mind, I’ll tell anyone that it is interested that most, if 
not all of the physics in the text, went over my examiners heads.  I was 
actually rather disappointed in their lack of interest in the latter as I 
thought – just like Prof. Hawking - that these people (being “professional 
philosophers”) should really be “getting a handle” on what modern science tells 
us about reality.  Anyway, I certainly lost some respect for most “professional 
philosophers” at this point.  The phrase “professional dilettante” sprang to 
mind…

No matter, "that was zen and this is now".  I haven’t read enough of Stephen 
Hawking’s philosophical work to make an opinion about it but I’d rather start 
from his intellectual position than the average philosophologist.


So Ant, what got you interested in physics?

Well, good question.  When I started my Ph.D. studies, I was sharing a 
students’ house in Liverpool with a French guy who was taking a pure
physics degree and he left his textbooks on quantum mechanics by Richard
Feynman lying around the house.  What initially caught my eye about Feynman’s 
textbooks is that the introductions had the guy pictured playing bongos! WTF!!!

This famous image of Feynman is now featured on the front cover of some of the 
newer editions of his lectures as can be seen via the following link:  

http://www.flipkart.com/feynman-lectures-physics-definitive-volume-3-2nd/p/itmdytsuajzf96vm

The same physics student also got me into the music of the rather cool Serge 
Gainsbourg and the rather lovely Jane Birkin but that’s another story…

Gitane anyone?


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