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17 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Let's Talk a Little About the History of Science Because Jagdish Mehra Wrote the Book On it
My dad ,Jagdish Mehra, passed away on September 14, 2008 . He was Richard Feynman's only official biographer . He authored and edited a lot of books! Jagdish Mehra was awarded both the Humboldt and Leibniz prizes for physics. He lectured all over the world . He knew these scientists of the twentieth century personally. He interviewed more physicists and men and women of...
Published on September 18, 2008 by Neil Mehra

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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Technical Tedium in a Factual Forest
This book may be OK if you like heaps of incomprehensible equations amidst piles of insufficiently edited facts about Feynman's life. I largely agree with the "Zero stars" reader, although I guess the book has merit for its probable factual/theoretical completeness. Feynman's life and science were so fascinating that any book about this, even poorly written,...
Published on August 18, 1999


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17 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Let's Talk a Little About the History of Science Because Jagdish Mehra Wrote the Book On it, September 18, 2008
My dad ,Jagdish Mehra, passed away on September 14, 2008 . He was Richard Feynman's only official biographer . He authored and edited a lot of books! Jagdish Mehra was awarded both the Humboldt and Leibniz prizes for physics. He lectured all over the world . He knew these scientists of the twentieth century personally. He interviewed more physicists and men and women of letters than anyone . I know because I was there - Mead , Huxley , Galbraith, Macleish , Rao, C P Snow. He chronicled what he called "The Golden Age of Theoretical Physics". He lived for his work and he worked hard. I remember watching a lecture of his at the University of Texas- the hall was packed,standing room only . You could hear a pin drop as this brilliant man , armed with first hand knowledge and an array of stunning equations, held the room in the palm of his hand.He had what the great thinkers of his time said about him -the gift of " Historical Insight ".But that gift came with a huge price attached to it ! He suffered from heart disease and diabetes because he burned the candle at both ends. He knew them all- Heisenberg , Fermi ,Pauli ,Dirac ,Bohr, Feynman , Holton , Oppenheimer , Bethe, Dyson , Enz , Lamb ,Salam , Schwinger ,Sudarshan, Wigner , Wheeler , Weisskopf , Weisner, Prigogine , Casimir , Teller and Gell-Mann . It is widely known that Mehra was instrumental in Prigogine receiving the Nobel Prize! Nobody else was everywhere at once illuminating the scientific accomplishments of these physicists.These Nobel laureates enjoyed my father's company and valued his work too because no one else was chronicling in scholarly detail their accomplishments. So when I read some of these cheap shot reviews by people who are not as classically educated,witty,erudite and just plain intelligent as my dad I get a little riled up . He worked so hard to complete his History of Science and he was very proud of his Feynman biography . Let's face it - Mehra is the one that is most quoted and used as a source more than others because he was more insightful and thorough in detail.The inaccuracy of the "Library " review galls! Mehra's assistance was a source Gleick used for his second hand book.After all it was Mehra who Feynman selected to be his scientific biographer. I too am what Feynman called "A chip of the old block" - a tiny chip at that but I would argue that my dad wrote a pretty good book about the thought process of a great physicist in "The Beat of a Different Drum". He did not like to be edited , but that was about his ego - he always thought he said it better and more precisely than others . I don't think Gleick's book is very good at all . John and Mary Gribbin do a very fine job of writing and editing their wonderful Feynman biography -"Richard Feynman-A Life in Science". If you want something highly insightful but a little easier to read than Mehra and better written than Gleick, I'd turn there . I 'll bet those who found the math tedious didn't really understand its elegance and those who found the prose too detailed and factual didn't really get the value of precision . We are not going to get another historian of science like Dr. J anytime soon. Another part of the story that I think is very important is the fact that Dr. Mehra knew Richard Feynman for thirty years and Feynman really enjoyed my dad's brilliant conversational abilities. That intellectual interaction began at Caltech in 1958 and developed over the years. It was Hans Bethe who would almost twenty-five years later ask my dad to help Gleick ( who was four years old when Mehra and Feynman were batting around math problems and physics equations like ping-pong balls, who never knew Feynman personally and certainly had not had deep discussions of QED with him) with a biography he was attempting . Hans Bethe knew the esteem Feynman held for Mehra and so James Gleick got valuable information from my dad -long after the story was over and had already been written, of course . Mehra's intention was to write a a detailed scientific biography complemented by his personal knowledge of Feynman's life and work and exhaustive interviews of eighty sources-something that no one else could really do and and something that no one else has ever done!! This is important work and deserves to be read by every student of Physics. As Oppenheimer said it would take a "modern day Sophocles" to chronicle the History of Quantum Theory. That is indeed correct and that is what Jagdish Mehra did .
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Science and Life -- in that order, October 15, 2006
By 
David Keirsey (Carlsbad, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There are two type of reviews of this book. Those who were interested in the man from a personal, non science perspective and those who know science, are interested and can read and understand Feynman's scientific work. Those who interested in the more entertaining books on Feynman, e.g., Gleick, and some of Feynman's own books should tread on this book lightly for it includes mathematical and scientific analysis you cannot get from the other books. On the other hand, Jagdish Medra does an excellent job in reciting some of the personal stuff between him and his father, which were crucial in forming both Feynman's personal and scientific personality. This is the only book you will get that. Mehra did not include some of the more interesting andecotes that are in Feynman's books, so it is not a complete biography despite its length and breath. If you are interested in some of Feynman's reasons for his ideas and the context of those ideas, then you must read this book. If you are not interested, for example, in Maupertuis, Lagrange, Hamilton ideas on minimum action -- you might have to skip large parts of the book because Mehra recounts Feynman's ideas in detail (including all his equations).
I have found the best way to understand science and personality (Feynman was of a temperament Inventor Rational) is to read detailed biographies of the principles -- Jagdish Mehra did excellent job with this biography, you can pick up the other details of Feynman in his own books. I am sure Richard would give Mehra five stars.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great, but only for a certain audience, August 5, 2001
By A Customer
Jagdish Mehra is, to be sure, not one of the great literary stylists, and his notion of historical writing is to throw in every available fact and save evaluation and historical analysis for a later date. Fair enough, I say: his is not the final word on Feynman, nor does he think so. Feynman's contribution to Quantum Electrodynamics is the central problem for any real biographer, and here Mehra is on stronger grounds. By its very nature, the book is steeped in math, and you will need to be up on calculus and Fourier expansions, not to mention the basic points of QED to read it with profit. It is good, solid history of science, but hardly a page-flipper for reading on the beach this summer.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very detailed bio of a great physicist, March 27, 2000
By 
Rajarshi Ray (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Beat of a Different Drum: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Hardcover)
I read this book about Feynman with great interest and I found it better than Gleick's book. Some people might not like the amount of detailed info about all sorts of Feynman trivia but how can a true fan of his not be delighted with all this great stuff! The technical parts are very thorough and detailed; it was well beyond anything you find in "popular" books like Gleick's. In that sense this is not really for general readers but there is enough interesting stuff for the interested layman too. I highly recommend this very thoroughly researched masterpiece!
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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Technical Tedium in a Factual Forest, August 18, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Beat of a Different Drum: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Hardcover)
This book may be OK if you like heaps of incomprehensible equations amidst piles of insufficiently edited facts about Feynman's life. I largely agree with the "Zero stars" reader, although I guess the book has merit for its probable factual/theoretical completeness. Feynman's life and science were so fascinating that any book about this, even poorly written, has got to have some value!
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Life AND SCIENCE of Richard Feynman, July 3, 1996
By A Customer
This review is from: The Beat of a Different Drum: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Hardcover)
The one-line summary of Mehra's book emphasizes that, while books such as SURELY YOU'RE JOKING, MR. FEYNMAN! and GENIUS give anecdotes from the life of Richard Feynman, only THE BEAT OF A DIFFERENT DRUM gives details of Dr. Feynman's scientific contributions. For anyone uninterested in such details, the equations can be ignored and an excellent biography remains.
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19 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Surely you are joking !, December 31, 1999
By 
Neil Mehra (Wellesly , ma) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Beat of a Different Drum: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Hardcover)
I am writing in response to the "zero star"review from from an unidentifiable source in Redondo Beach ,Ca. and some seconding chimpanzee in Sydney,Australia. Firstly , you are not "a physicist too" ! You can't even understand the mathematical representation of Feynman's science .Dr. Mehra is a physicist who has intimate first hand knowledge of all aspects of the history of quantum theory. Mr Redondo is probably confusing "physicist" with "physical therapist". A word of advice to Redondoman : Learn the Science;learn the value of details;learn the English language and when you lecture at Oxford "too" then you "too" will appreciate the specificity of carefully researched and personally corroborated biography [quite unlike the James Gleick general, sophomoric,second hand effort]. Redondoman you and the Sydney Chimp are "too" AWFUL to dignify further discussion . Dr. Mehra has produced a prodigious quantity and profound quality of work. Read it !
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's a legendary account of Feynman's thinking topology., September 10, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: The Beat of a Different Drum: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Hardcover)
Jagdish just blew me away with his clear and expressive writing style. He brought me the real Richard Feynman I've been seeking. I've read all books on Richard Feynman and I rate Mehra's book as the best. I'm a Physicist and I will write an equation on honour of RF - this feeling was brought on by this book
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10 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars An awful compendium, December 7, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Beat of a Different Drum: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Hardcover)
The book is already out of print, which perhaps indicates a
collective wisdom of the technical readership. As others (e.g.,
"zero stars") have pointed out, this is a carelessly compiled
assortment of facts. And it is too bad, because Feynman
deserves a fine technical biography. There do exist
excellent books on Feynman's life and work. Gleick's "Genius"
is a masterful personal biography (Gleick is a fine writer
for the technically literate; e.g., see his "Chaos").
Schweber's "QED and the men who made it" is an excellent
historical presentation of QED, in which of course Feynman
plays a major role. But Mehra's book fails in all aspects.
In particular, the technical parts are disorganized and
full of errors. I gave up half way through the book in disgust.

Feynman's technical work went well beyond QED and
the introduction of path integral methods. It was
so broad that few scientific biographers could have done
it justice. Mehra failed. Pais didn't try.
Schweber has covered Feynman's early contributions well.
But there is much good writing on (and by) Feynman.
If you want to know more about Feynman's life and personality,
see "Genius", along with Ralph Leighton's wonderful 2-volume
retelling of Feynman's stories and his "Tuva or Bust".
Also, see the 1990 memorial issue of Physics Today, devoted to
his work style and relationships with his colleagues.
Feynman was often described as a "teacher's teacher," and
the 3 volume "Lectures" demonstrate that well. Feynman's
no-nonsense, intuitive approach also comes out in his
1960-era monographs "Quantum Electrodynamics" and "Theory of
Fundamental Processes", which, though written before
the Standard Model, still give a fine introduction to relativistic quantum mechanics.

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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Port in Any Storm, January 31, 2008
By 
A Reader (California USA) - See all my reviews
This book isn't for everyone. What the-3-star-and-1-star (hoping-for-zero-stars) reviews describe is true.

I just find the unedited style somehow comforting. It make me feel less lonely.
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