The media spin of this 6 months (10/1922-3/1923) travel diary account is interesting. Yes, visiting another country and writing that the inhabitants are dirty and dumb is not a great look. (Though poverty can, indeed, make you look dirty and dumb by wealthier standards.)https://twitter.com/washingtonpost/status/1007225549796847616 …
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And in Feynman's case, it's hard not to re-read some of those parts of "Surely You're Joking" and not get grossed out. "You Just Ask Them?" isn't pretty. And yes, one could say, it's how men talked about women at the time. Maybe that's true. But still.
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I think we're allowed to say, that Feynman's approach to women was pretty horrid by modern standards. It's not an argument about hypocrisy — it's just how he was. He doesn't deny it; he brags about it. There's something trickier there.
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It doesn't invalidate Feynman's contributions to science — but it perhaps ought to temper the "Feynman was great in every way" approach. I'm fine with saying, "Feynman was an impressive thinker, but could be a very flawed (dumb?) human being on other fronts."
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And the sexism in "Surely You're Joking" certainly means I wouldn't buy it for a young, impressionable future scientist today (male or female). It dates and mars it in the worse way. (In a way a lot of classic sci-fi is similarly dated and marred.)
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Perhaps, from a different point of view, it is important to read “Surely You’re Joking” even as a young student if someone helps you to put it in perspective, if only to see how things have marginally improved.
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The danger with "Surely You're Joking" is that there is a certain brand of smart-alecky male who identifies very strongly with Feynman's self presentation — the, "I'm just trying to have a good time, and I happen to be smart in a world full of dummies" thing.
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I think that's already a problematic aspect to Feynman (I am inherently suspicious of such narratives) and Feynman fan-boys, but when you add the casual and overt misogyny as part of that "package," it gets pretty toxic pretty quickly.
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And whenever I have a book that I think might or might not be useful for a younger person, I always want to ask, would I feel comfortable giving this to a female student? If the answer is no, then I don't want to give it to ANY student.
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