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ab-irato | 11 years ago
Most biographies of scientists focus on their character and personal life rather their work.
There are very few technical biographies, even of highly technical people. Readers won't understand the work of the scientist any better after reading through one of them.
Quantum Man[0] by Lawrence Krauss specifically aims to be a solution to this regarding Richard Feynman. And even in this case the exposition needs to be so terse that only the highly technical reader will fully understand most aspects of Feynman's work in the correct context.
Do you know of any biography of Dirac that edges on "if a little too technical"? I would love to read that.
[0] http://www.amazon.com/Quantum-Man-Richard-Feynmans-Discoveri...
pvitz|11 years ago
[1] http://www.aip.org/history/ohilist/4575_1.html
ab-irato|11 years ago
pseudolus|11 years ago
http://www.amazon.com/Dirac-Scientific-Biography-Helge-Kragh...
matthewmcg|11 years ago