Richard P. Feynman, Teacher
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One of the principal purposes of this article is to consider
Dick Feynman in his role as teacher. Let me not keep
you in suspense about my conclusion. I think Dick was a
truly great teacher, perhaps the greatest of his era and
ours. That's not to say he was always completely
successful, as he himself emphasized in his preface to The
Feynman Lectures on Physics. I would contend that
these lectures often failed at the level of their superficial
intent: If his purpose in giving them was to prepare
classes of adolescent boys to solve examination problems
in physics, he may not have succeeded particularly well;
if his purpose in creating those three red volumes was to
provide effective introductory college textbooks, he may
not have succeeded, either. If, however, his purpose was
to illustrate, by example, how to think and reason about
physics, then, by all indications, he was brilliantly
successful. Perhaps this is why the books are genuine
and lasting classics of the scientific literature and why his
lectures left an enduring trace on those fortunate enough
to have heard or read them. His achievement as a teacher—and as an inspiration and model for other teachers—was based on nothing less than seeing all of physics with fresh new eyes.
[1] D. Goodstein,et al. Thermodynamic study of the ^{4}He monolayer adsorbed on Grafoil , 1974 .