Yorkshire Post

Hawking boldly went where no one had ever gone before

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I’M LOOKING out of my window at the universe and thinking about how Stephen Hawking brought its mystery and potential into the minds of ordinary people.

The hugely popular physicist and cosmologis­t, whose death has been announced, not only created world-altering theories about how our solar system works, but taught us all to question life itself.

Not just the big questions regarding black holes, dark matter and the theory of time, but about how our actual time on this planet counts.

His public persona was characteri­sed by his appearance, his electric wheelchair and the speech synthesise­r he relied on to communicat­e.

Yet his disabiliti­es did not define him. When he developed a form of motor neurone disease as a young man, doctors told him that he had just two years to live.

That he passed away at the age of 76 proves not only that science can be wrong, but even the most painful and lifelimiti­ng of conditions can be overcome.

“My expectatio­ns were reduced to zero when I was 21,” he once said. “Everything since then has been a bonus.”

His approach was pragmatic – he supported assisted dying for terminally­ill disabled people – and he raised the bar in terms of adaptive technology to help those others with speech and mobility conditions to live a decent, functionin­g life.

And his three adult children, now with children of their own, are proof that disability does not have to stand in the way. the honorary degrees, the internatio­nal prizes for science. Yet it’s not widely known that when he took his undergradu­ate degree in natural science, at University College, Oxford, he did not sail through his studies to an automatic First. As a borderline candidate, he had to undergo a rigorous viva examinatio­n by eminent academics to prove himself.

This should be remembered. He acknowledg­ed imperfecti­on. And he never pretended to have all the answers – pointing out that the known universe is expanding in a snowball effect to an unknown conclusion. However, he showed humans the tools we need to work towards a series of logical possibilit­ies.

Above all, I think he took the fear out of science. His instantly-recognisab­le voice was a powerful tool in this. The synthesise­r removed all the usual barriers of social class and education associated with “clever people”. Youngsters especially, responded to the short, sharp sentences he used to communicat­e; I’d wager that my teenage son and his friends couldn’t name one other world-famous physicist.

And his sense of humour was sharp. He made guest appearance­s on cult American TV shows

starred alongside David Walliams and Matt Lucas on

and played poker with Einstein and Newton on

His critics accused him of narcissism because he happily courted publicity, yet his ability to shoulder jokes at his own expense reminded us all not to take ourselves too seriously.

And, yes, some of us might not have made it to the end of his multi-million selling 1988 book

but its ideas have helped to form our popular understand­ing of space.

Countless Hollywood sci-fi films and time-travelling episodes of owe their existence to his theories, and the theories which have followed his theories.

From him, we learned that human life is fragile and transitory against the backdrop of time and space. Perhaps we don’t always acknowledg­e it as such, but this wider understand­ing helps us to come to terms with some of the terrible conflicts which humans inflict upon each other on Earth.

His was, after all, a very secular kind of belief. There were never any comfortabl­e solutions with Hawking. However, in his avowed atheism, he showed us how to construct an argument and stick to it.

If you look out at the universe tonight, don’t imagine him as a star; he would have told you to stop indulging in romantic nonsense.

Instead, take his own careful words as his obituary: “I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken-down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark.”

Professor Stephen Hawking was not afraid of the dark. In fact, it is probably fair to say that he was not afraid of anything.

 ??  ?? Professor Stephen Hawking was not just a great scientist, who worked on black holes and the Big Bang, but a great communicat­or of science to the public.
Professor Stephen Hawking was not just a great scientist, who worked on black holes and the Big Bang, but a great communicat­or of science to the public.
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