Lies 3: Princeton, Chicago, Stanford, etc. Enter the Scene



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: "OsherD"
Date: 11 Nov 2007 01:40:57 PM
Object: Lies 3: Princeton, Chicago, Stanford, etc. Enter the Scene

From Osher Doctorow

So why do Princeton, Stanford, Chicago, CalTech (barely), MIT
(barely), U. Texas Austin, U. Maryland, Johns Hokpkins U., Rutgers U.,
U. Virginia, George Mason U., U. Florida northern branches, U. C. San
Diego, West Point or Annapolis or Air Force Academy, break with the
usual Dunce nature of USA Research Universities in physics,
mathematics, engineering?
Princeton University differs from the Princeton Institute for Advanced
Study (the Einstein Institute, sometimes called) although the latter
is physically located on the campus of the former (but not subject to
the governance of the former). Literally speaking, the Institute is
a Non-Conformist organization of Creative Geniuses. Princeton U.
gets influenced by the Institute's nature, results, and people. End
of story for Princeton.
Chicago and Stanford have similar ideas and explanation to
Princeton's, while Rutgers is near enough to Princeton to be
influenced by them. MIT was sufficiently influenced by Princeton to
get in the top list, but its Engineering Bureaucracy (an almost
"hereditary" feature of Engineering especially related to
Engineering's close ties with Multinational Corporations and their Big
Corporation and Big Government allies) keeps it barely in the top
list, which also happened with CalTech.
U. C. San Diego, Johns Hopkins U., U. Maryland, U. Virginia, and
George Mason U. of Fairfax Virginia, were arguably influenced by the
Navy and other Armed Forces, as of course are West Point, Annapolis,
Air Force Academy. The Navy's central base in the southern half of
California is at San Diego.
U. Florida northern branches seem to have influenced by Paul Dirac,
who came to Tallahassee State U. after he retired from Cambridge U. in
the U.K. I think that U. Texas Austin also was influenced from
there, and was helped considerably when Steven Weinberg and several of
his associates moved from Harvard to U. Texas Austin. By the way,
Harvard used to be one of the top places until they recently fired
their Anti-Terrorist President, but the signs of Conformity were bad
even as far back as when Steven Weinberg taught there.
There are a few Universities in the USA where one or two Individual
Creative Geniuses are found but which didn't make the above list of
mine as the best (and only plausible for attendance) USA Research
Universities. Arizona State U. has had David Hestenes for a long time
as probably its sole Creative Genius representative, and a few other
Universities have comparable people in the USA without being on the
top list of mine. I don't recommend that anybody attend those
Universities, however, unless you can somehow bring along two dozen or
so of your friends to keep out the student and faculty brainwashing.
Osher Doctorow
.


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