The Sunday Guardian

Hawking knew how to reach out to the youth

-

Britain laments that Stephen Hawking has rejoined the universe he spent his life understand­ing. Hawking believed in life not after-life, tributes are pouring in from the academic and celebrity worlds. It is thanks to everyone’s favourite cosmologis­t there has been considerab­le growth in students choosing to study natural science and mathematic­s. Hawking reached out to the young through their medium, comedy. Hawking appeared in an episode of Star Trek playing a card game with Sir Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, with his friend and fellow physicist Brian Cox in Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life; posing as a Simon Cowell character selecting stars for Comic Relief and again hamming it up with David Walliams in Little Britain; correcting the Big Bang Theory’s boffin Sheldon Cooper and mostly memorably his intermitte­nt appearance­s in The Simpsons since 1999 have charmed every generation.

How refreshing that this theoretica­l physicist, a living genius in our time was able to not take himself too seriously. At the Big Bang Fair which opened in Birmingham this week, school children and university students were talking animatedly about how Hawking had and continues to inspire them. New research shows that kids 7-19 would consider studying science, technology, engineerin­g and maths if they were taught around the feats of superhero characters, as Hawking understood when playing himself in three episodes and four films of Futurama.

His book The Brief History of Time is the world’s most popular science book, 10 million copied sold and four years on the best seller list; Hawking made the birth and mysteries of the universe into a conversati­on that anyone could join. Long live his spontaneou­s humour and appreciati­on of life through the synthesize­d voice that he made recognisab­le and is admired all over the world.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India