انیشتین و سفره هفت سین


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 انیشتین و سفره هفت سین
by Anonymous Observer
04-Apr-2009
 

I came across this excerpt from Dr. Iraj Hesabi's memoirs which describes his invitation of Einstein's to a Nowruz celebration. It's pretty interesting

در زمان تدریس در دانشگاه پرینستون دکتر حسابی تصمیم می گیرند سفره ی هفت سینی برای انیشتین و جمعی از بزرگترین دانشمندان دنیا از جمله "بور"، "فرمی"، "شوریندگر" و "دیراگ" و دیگر استادان دانشگاه بچینند و ایشان را برای سال نو دعوت کنند. آقای دکتر خودشان کارتهای دعوت را طراحی می کنند و حاشیه ی آن را با گل های نیلوفر که زیر ستون های تخت جمشید هست تزئین می کنند و منشا و مفهوم این گلها را هم توضیح می دهند. چون می دانستند وقتی ریشه مشخص شود برای طرف مقابل دلدادگی ایجاد می کند. دکتر می گفت: " برای همه کارت دعوت فرستادم و چون می دانستم انیشتین بدون ویالونش جایی نمی رود تاکید کردم که سازش را هم با خود بیاورد. همه سر وقت آمدند اما انیشتین 20دقیقه دیرتر آمد و گفت چون خواهرم را خیلی دوست دارم خواستم او هم جشن سال نو ایرانیان را ببیند. من فورا یک شمع به شمع های روشن اضافه کردم و برای انیشتین توضیح دادم که ما در آغاز سال نو به تعداد اعضای خانواده شمع روشن می کنیم و این شمع را هم برای خواهر شما اضافه کردم. به هر حال بعد از یک سری صحبت های عمومی انیشتین از من خواست که با دمیدن و خاموش کردن شمع ها جشن را شروع کنم. من در پاسخ او گفتم : ایرانی ها در طول تمدن 10هزار ساله شان حرمت نور و روشنایی را نگه داشته اند و از آن پاسداری کرده اند. برای ما ایرانی ها شمع نماد زندگیست و ما معتقدیم که زندگی در دست خداست و تنها او می تواند این شعله را خاموش کند یا روشن نگه دارد."

آقای دکتر می خواست اتصال به این تمدن را حفظ کند و می گفت بعدها انیشتین به من گفت: " وقتی برمی گشتیم به خواهرم گفتم حالا می فهمم معنی یک تمدن 10هزارساله چیست. ما برای کریسمس به جنگل می رویم درخت قطع می کنیم و بعد با گلهای مصنوعی آن را زینت می دهیم اما وقتی از جشن سال نو ایرانی ها برمی گردیم همه درختها سبزند و در کنار خیابان گل و سبزه روییده است."

بالاخره آقای دکتر جشن نوروز را با خواندن دعای تحویل سال آغاز می کنند و بعد این دعا را تحلیل و تفسیر می کنند. به گفته ی ایشان همه در آن جلسه از معانی این دعا و معانی ارزشمندی که در تعالیم مذهبی ماست شگفت زده شده بودند. بعد با شیرینی های محلی از مهمانان پذیرایی می کنند و کوک ویلون انیشتین را عوض می کنند و یک آهنگ ایرانی می نوازند. همه از این آوا متعجب می شوند و از آقای دکتر توضیح می خواهند. ایشان می گویند موسیقی ایرانی یک فلسفه، یک طرز تفکر و بیان امید و آرزوست. انیشتین از آقای دکتر می خواهند که قطعه ی دیگری بنوازند. پس از پایان این قطعه که عمدأ بلندتر انتخاب شده بود انیشتین که چشمهایش را بسته بود چشم هایش را باز کرد و گفت" دقیقا من هم همین را برداشت کردم و بعد بلند شد تا سفره هفت سین را ببیند.

آقای دکتر تمام وسایل آزمایشگاه فیزیک را که نام آنها با "س" شروع می شد توی سفره چیده بود و یک تکه چمن هم از باغبان دانشگاه پرینستون گرفته بود. بعد توضیح می دهد که این در واقع هفت چین یعنی 7 انتخاب بوده است. تنها سبزه با "س" شروع می شود به نشانه ی رویش. ماهی با "م" به نشانه ی جنبش، آینه با "آ" به نشانه ی یکرنگی، شمع با "ش" به نشانه ی فروغ زندگی و ... همه متعجب می شوند و انیشتین می گوید آداب و سنن شما چه چیزهایی را از دوستی، احترام و حقوق بشر و حفظ محیط زیست به شما یاد می دهد. آن هم در زمانی که دنیا هنوز این حرفها را نمی زد و نخبگانی مثل انیشتین، بور، فرمی و دیراک این مفاهیم عمیق را درک می کردند. بعد یک کاسه آب روی میز گذاشته بودند و یک نارنج داخل آب قرار داده بودند. آقای دکتر برای مهمانان توضیح می دهند که این کاسه 10هزارسال قدمت دارد. آب نشانه ی فضاست و نارنج نشانه ی کره ی زمین است و این بیانگر تعلیق کره زمین در فضاست. انیشتین رنگش می پرد عقب عقب می رود و روی صندلی می افتد و حالش بد می شود. از او می پرسند که چه اتفاقی افتاده؟ می گوید : "ما در مملکت خودمان 200 سال پیش دانشمندی داشتیم که وقتی این حرف را زد کلیسا او را به مرگ محکوم کرد اما شما از 10هزار سال پیش این مطلب را به زیبایی به فرزندانتان آموزش می دهید. علم شما کجا و علم ما کجا؟!"

خیلی جالب است که آدم به بهانه ی نوروز، فرهنگ و اعتبار ملی خودش را به جهانیان معرفی کند.

خاطرات مهندس ایرج حسابی


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Anonymous Observer

Jaleho

by Anonymous Observer on

Why are you so attention starved that you have to be on every blog?  BTW, did you notice that no one cared about your comment, and no one responded to you even when you wrote under an anonymous identity?  All the comments were directed at Anonymous Critic, including Ari’s.  That should tell you something!


Ari Siletz

Jaleho

by Ari Siletz on

<< It is not constructive to attack this warm and touching mythological summary of the fact that one of our own did in fact hang out with these great men at a time in history when the world's eye was on phyiscs.  >>. The operative word in the above sentence is "attack." Gentler words can be used to recommend we should classify --and protect--this wonderful story as myth, and later to factually point out why we think it is a myth.

To illustrate my position, we have stories of Shah Abbas walking the streets in disguise, mingling with common folk so he can be a better ruler. This is very likely myth, but it s a valuable myth because it instructs as to what sort of government is worthy of our loyalty. Discovering that Shah Abbas didn't actually walk the streets disguised as a beggar  doesn't demean the Safavids, as long as we understand the function of the story.  

So yes, we should separate our facts from our myths--and we do, Shah Abbas to wit--but the myth isn't "BS" to be flushed. The truth in myths often outlive the facts.


Jaleho

Dear Ari you said,

by Jaleho on

<< It is not constructive to attack this warm and touching mythological summary of the fact that one of our own did in fact hang out with these great men at a time in history when the world's eye was on phyiscs.  >>

Like I said in my comment using bs-buster (I don't know why my message using Jaleho or Jaleh wouldn't get posted), it is unfair to attribute such BS to an honorable person like Dr. Hessabi. Sure, I can talk all I want about a time when I was a little kid and Einstein used to come to baby sit me because he loved my pony tail, and he used to stick out his tongue to entertain me. BTW, he used to bring his violin over for extra entertainment too! I mean, what's the use of such "warm mythological BS" when Einstein is so dead, yet it is easy to prove that a meeting described above didn't happen, and people would just laugh at it?

Types of Samsam and Anonymous Observer can write feel-good stories on their own account, not that of poor dead Dr. hessabi, or reproduce what ever garbage is written out there without a simple double check. 


Anonymous Observer

Anonymous Critic

by Anonymous Observer on

Again, everyone here has done a pretty good job in responding to you.  There are, however, a couple of more points that I would like to add.  First, minimizing the achievements of a civilization because they borrowed from other civilizations shows an utter lack of understanding of history and how human societies work.  Cultures, civilizations and even religions always build upon one another.  There is no human society or culture that has developed on this planet independently.  Zoroastrianism borrowed from ancient Eastern mythologies such as Buddhism, Judaism has borrowed from ancient Assyrian and Egyptian mythology and Zoroastrianism, Christianity is for the most parts a copy of Judaism and Islam is a mixture of the all of them. The same thing goes for cultures.  Persians borrowed from surrounding cultures, Greeks borrowed from Persians and so forth and so on.  Take the ancient Persian religion of Mithraism for example, which was a popular religion among Roman legions and which found its way into Christianity through Roman Empire’s adoption of Christianity.

Second, the uniqueness of the Iranian experience is that we are the only nation in the world that has been successful in bringing together many different cultures and ethnicities and building one people out of many.  No other country in the history of human civilization has been able to achieve such an enormous accomplishment.  Empires have come and gone, and no one nation has survived from them.  None of the great empires past and present, such as the Romans, the Egyptians, the Muslim Arabs, the Greeks, the Mongols, the Ottomans, the Soviets, the Spanish, the Portuguese, the Dutch, or the British have been able to establish one nation out of their vast empires, but we did.  And the reason for that is the exact opposite of what you claim.  It’s not the “chest beating” or “male chauvinism” or a sense of superiority.  Much to the contrary, it is our sense of equality of all people and our respect for other cultures that attracted them---us---to this great human experience.  That is what we are proud of.  As Mr. Avaznia noted below, our kings wouldn’t even remove other nations’ rulers in order to maintain stability in their conquered territories (and that was three thousand years ago—compare that with George W. Bush in 2003 and the chaos that he created in Iraq with an invasion and removal of a nation’s government).  That is why for thousands of years our people, regardless of their ethnicity, have integrated, intermarried and lived in peace with one another and called themselves Iranian.  And that is why even Alexander married a Persian woman, spoke Persian and died wearing Persian clothes.  Again, compare that with other nations where they have committed acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing against one another, and do so to this day.  That is what makes us unique, not our race or our conquests.    

 


Majid

Sam....I'm going to barrow it

by Majid on

Our good friend Samsam IIII wrote this in another blog, with his permission I'm going to copy and paste it here...

..........In the jungle , Monkey & Boozineh usualy choose the tallest tree and make the loudest noise(rant) to be noticed ............

Nuf said.

 


Anonymous Observer

Anonymous Critic

by Anonymous Observer on

I really cannot add much more to the wonderful posts by everyone else who has responded to your post.  I do, however, want to mention that this post has nothing to do about "Aryans", etc.  By all accouns, Dr. Hessaby was the farthest thing from it.  For one thing, he was a devout Muslim who had memorized the entire Quran.  And I don't know (and don't care) whether he was a Turk, Arab, Kurd, or Baluchi Iranian.  He was an Iranian, like the rest of us, and we are very proud of him.  If anything, the only person who appears to have a chip on her shoulder about race and gender is you.  No one else is talking about it.  Everyone was enjoying this tale (even if it is exagerated) until you made it a race / gender / ethnicity issue. 

As an aside, it is not a stretch to believe that as a student of Einstein, Dr. Hessaby had invited Einstein to a Nowruz event.  I can tell of a experience that I had at an Ivy League college (I was not a student there, and am not bragging), where a friend had invited me to a Nowruz party at its medical college.  Most of the faculty was invited and they had set up a Haft Sin table.  I happened to have a nice conversation around the Haft Sin with one of the professors about Persian history.  To my surprise he was very knowledegable and knew many Persian historical characters and poets by name.  I offered him a few pieces of information that I knew.  A few weeks later I saw the same professor on TV where he was being talked about as the discoverer of a revolutionary medical breakthrough (please don't ask me his name or what the discovery was about because it was many years ago and I am not a doctor).  The point is that just because Einstein was a well known scientist, it does not preclude him from attending an invitation from one of his students that had a cultural angle. 

Your comment also demonstrates the same extremism that you complain about.  While Iran's history should not all be Aryan this or Islam that, one should not dismiss everything in the middle.  In fact, paying tribute to an avergae Iranian who accomplished great scientiifc success is anything but racist. 

 


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بی نام و نشان گرامی؛

Daadaar (not verified)


Brother;

1/ History and civilization in Iran never started with Persians. The myth of Iranian history starting with the Hakhaamaneshees started with the monarchists and wrongly propagated by some people with certain interests.

2/ Iran has never been a land occupied by one single race or culture or religion or language. In certain periods of time certain elements have been dominant in this vast land.

3/ There are traces of ancient civilizations that have been discovered and are being discovered that go to seven or eight thousand years before Christ. In Sistan Shahr Sookhteh was discovered and also in Jahrom (if I am not mistaken). Believe or not, many more are coming to light as our land is not extensively excavated yet. Still, I agree with you that they were not Aryan civilizations.

4/ You are right that so-called Aryans were nomadic people with all their chracteristics when they captured the Iranian Plateau, but they had come at least one thousand years before they be able to establish a government of the type of kingdom in 700 B.C by the Maads (Kords).

5/ Iranians were great learners. They adopted many many aspects of the way of life of the people whom they came across and after they expanded their learnings. Adoption and amalgamation is the way that many nations in the early stages of their existence experience before they leap forward. There is no nation that has not adopted or learned something from other nations. Such is a nation is stagnant and will die sooner than later.

6/ If Einstein or anyone else has shown marvel at our cultural achievement does not increase our prestige and neither does decrease it. It is unfortunate that we are so much tuned to what Europeans or North Americans say about us. Let's be ourselves as we are.

7/ Purity of blood or language is not something to be proud of either. Most of us have easily mixed with other races and ethnic groups. I believe this is something to be proud of. Afghans are Iranians. Even people of India have lots of common history, mythology, linguistic links, and racial element with Iranian.

8/ Still kings of Hakhaamaneshee were kings of kings. The terms has been borrowed by Christians from them and used in a different context. They were kings of kings because when they defeated a king of a territory they would not kill him or dethrone him. Instead, they would keep him in place as a king who was to obey the King of Hakhaamaneshee. So, as there were many (at least thirty) of these types of kings in the Empire, the Hakhaamaneshee king was King of Kings in Old Persian Kheshaayathya Kheshaayathyaanaam.

Regards
Manoucher Avaznia


SamSamIIII

Ebi

by SamSamIIII on

Short & to the point as usual . Good one pal . Since to go further & discuss 4 millenium old Aryan migration into Iran proper & the difference between an empire and some banana republic city states will only legitimize the Ommatie(schmuck) mumbo . there seems to be an infatuation for letters "H" & "F" as in  human, humble , honest ,foraging, fighting and fornicating . Guess , now you know where your missing 2 pages of dictionary under F & H went ;:)) .

btw* 2500 yrs of Eran , still > 30 yrs of Ommatestan 

Cheers pilgram !!!

 

 

//www.iranianidentity.blogspot.com/

//www.youtube.com/user/samsamsia


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no, i'm not a man, like the rest of you, and sick of your pride

by Anonymous Critic (not verified) on

my boyfriend is a regular on this site, but i can't tolerate his continuous chest beating and muscle pumping, about persia this and persia that. what you guys don't understand is clear to us; your senseless arrogance was the undoing of the shah (pure aryan); and now we are hostage to another type of arrogance (pure islam).

why can't you countrymen open your eyes, exit your monkey suits for a second and see that there is a whole world above and beyond you. i don't have a problem with being proud of one's heritage, but i am sick of blind nationalism, islamism and chauvinism in all their manifestations.

the foolish iranian men have only thrown us into one fight after the other in our history; like a bunch of barbaric savages. please become civilized and understand your place in the world and stop bragging, hooting and fighting like primates.


Ari Siletz

Anonymous Critic

by Ari Siletz on

You haven't popped this Iranian's balloon. I stay happily pleased to be Iranian and proud of Dr. Hessaby's accomplishments for our country. Your reference to myth making underestimates the complex Iranian culture. Our myth making goes hand in hand with a healthy skepticism. When it is useful, we can sort out myth from fact as humbly as anyone.

Let me to demonstrate some skepticism:

According to Dr. Hessaby's website (kindly provided by Hajminator) he met Einstein in 1946 and 1948. According to other sources, Einstein's sister had a debilitating stroke in 1946. So for her to be likely to be at the meeting the gathering would  have had to take place in the March of 1946. At this time Bohr, Fermi, Shroedinger and Dirac would have been living in Copenhagen, Chicago, Dublin, and Cambridge respectively. So there would have had to have been a world physics conference in Chicago or Princeton. The 1946 theoretical physics meeting in Princeton was in November, not March and the above physiscts did not attend......etc.

We read the above biography with an awareness of its main intent which is to elevate a great man who factually did a great deal for our higher educational system. Hessaby was in fact a student of Einstein, and it is very likely that he met  the great physicists separately. It is not constructive to attack this warm and touching mythological summary of the fact that one of our own did in fact hang out with these great men at a time in history when the world's eye was on phyiscs. 


ebi amirhosseini

Anonymous Critic

by ebi amirhosseini on

Sepaas for enlightening us with your nehilistic,do zaar bedeh aash knowledge!.

 We are all humble but at the same time proud of our history like any other nation & there is nothing wrong with it.May be some of us are hot headed(including me) , you can't blame them,since their roots,culture,customs are attacked not only by foreigners,but also by their own fellow countrymen(like you?!).

I humbly can claim that I know a bit about Iran's History,since my studies are in related fields & have taught the subject for many years.I seond Hajminator on his comment & the reference links he has provided.If you need more info,let me know please.I'll give you a crash course.

If we are proud of our heritage,you cann't call us names. We are human,humble & honest;are you?!!

cheers

 Ebi aka Haaji


Hajminator

Believe on yourselves

by Hajminator on

Einstein knew more on us than we do! I’m not a specialist in ancient Persia. But, I think that what he was referring may be the 10 000 years old Aryan Hindu India civilization from which our culture is derived.

//videos.desishock.net/581397/ARYAN-HINDU-IND...
//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1768109.stm

It’s also estimated that around 8 000 BC the Eden Garden was built in Gobelki Tapeh near Kurdistan. Excavations making apparent the status coming from the rests are absolutely bluffing
//forum.nin.com/bb/read.php?31,526155,528227

In other parts of Iran, there are signs of high developed culture back to 7500 years ago. The oldest ziggurat was found in Sialk tapeh near Kashan
//www.irantravelingcenter.com/sialk_hills_kas...

The temple of Anahita is also a sign of high civilization made in 11 century CE. Ebi had posted a blog on the matter
//iranian.com/main/blog/ebi-amirhosseini-94

Ebi also posted other valuable blogs on the evidence of our 10000 years CULTURE.


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don't take that story beyond what it is: just a sweet story

by Anonymous Critic (not verified) on

we don't have a 10 thousand year old civilization. heck the ancient persians who took over that empire 2500 years ago, couldn't even sign their own names. bunch of nomadic tribes, foraging, fighting and fornicating. compared to the greek, egyptians and babylonians, they were just a group of happy-go-lucky barbarians. they wouldn't know which end of a stick was up, let alone the meaning of earth and space. had almost no writing of their own, no culture of their own and certainly no civilization of their own.

sorry to pop your balloons guys, but someone should break you the bad news. otherwise, you would keep going forever, chasing a thousand old dream, that never was. instead, grow up, wise up and see what you really are. you aren't kings of the kings, meant to rule the world, the super race of arya, you are just a bunch of schmucks, like the rest of us.

hey by the way, each and every one of you most probably has more arab, turk, mongol and afghan blood; than you can imagine. look in the mirror for god's sake. stop making myths of your couple of scientists and achievements. see the freaking thousands upon thousands of scientists that all the other nations have produced. be humble, be human and be honest.


Ari Siletz

Einstein a genius of taarof.

by Ari Siletz on

Great post. Thank you.

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Dear Faribors Malekansari, MD

by BS-buster (not verified) on

If you knew all those people that you mentioned, you'd have known that the article is a complete feel-good BS. With all the great impressions that they got, you'd have thunk that any one of those scientists would have mentioned the name of Dr. Hessabi once? And, I would like to know which Norooz was it that all those characters gathered and "Einstein as usual took his violin" to his student's house, and got so impressed with haft seen "Ke rang az roosh parid!"

And, I find it disgusting that one has to write BS on behalf of an honorable scientist like Dr. Mahmoud Hessabi to have these cheap feel-good BS.

But hey, there's no tax on BS. Maybe Iraj khan, if he really wrote those stuff about his father, can gain some election points for free.


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انیشتین و سفره هفت سین

Faribors Maleknasri M.D. (not verified)


Glory of IRANافتخار ایران
Thank you *
Bravo AO
MOMEMENT AGHA; MOMENT:
Dear anonymous: thanks for this nice and thoughtful piece.
I have enjoyed reading the article. I think specially because the names Bohr, Dirac, Schrödinger and other named persons have been familiar to me allready. First of all the name of prof. Hessabi. He was in the political party Jebhehe melli activ. after the CIA coup 1953 His majesty the last wanted him killed. But he could leave Iran for the United states. according to his scientifical competence. He could then serve america directly. I am happy beeing able to read about Prof. Hessabi and about the iranian`s traditions, once in this positiv light. I am very impressed from the deep knowledge of the Professor about the thausands of years old iranian tradition. Not only that he practisided it but he knew also the meaning of each grip and handle. Greeting


Maryam Hojjat

Glory of IRAN

by Maryam Hojjat on

Thanks for this story which shows glorious culture of iran ( Persia).

Payandeh IRAN & IRANIANS


IRANdokht

Thank you

by IRANdokht on

Dear AO 

I just read this unique story for the first time. This is a very interesting and impressive story. 

Thank you for sharing it!

IRANdokht


Anonymous Observer

Friends

by Anonymous Observer on

Thank you all for your kind words.  Just like you, I enjoyed this story, and my immediate thought was to share it with everyone.  Hajminator and Mr. Parsa are correct.  The great scientist's name who is the subject of the piece is Mahmoud Hesaby (he is an Iranian treasure).  This excerpt is from the memoirs of his son, Iraj Hessaby.  My introductory sentence was incorrect and confusing.  My apologies. Iraj Hessaby is a well known person in Iran as well.  here's a news piece about him (scroll down the page.  the story is in the middle).

//www.iran-daily.com/1384/2244/html/index.htm

Again, thank you all!


Hajminator

Dear friends

by Hajminator on

His name was Mahmoud Hessaby, you may find additional informations on his official link:
//www.hessaby.com/
Other links
//www.algana.co.uk/FamousNames/H/hessaby.htm

//www.iranchamber.com/personalities/mhessaby/...


Ali A Parsa

Which Hesaabi?

by Ali A Parsa on

Dear Anonym.

Great picece with a lot of wisdom. However, the first name of Dr. Hesaabi who was Einstein's associate was either Mahmood or Mohammad-I do not recall which, but never Iraj. I appreciate it if you or anyone correct me.

khody


Mammad

Anonymous Observer

by Mammad on

thank you for the great story.

Mammad


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Awesome find...

by KHAR777 (not verified) on

"بعد یک کاسه آب روی میز گذاشته بودند و یک نارنج داخل آب قرار داده بودند. آقای دکتر برای مهمانان توضیح می دهند که این کاسه 10هزارسال قدمت دارد. آب نشانه ی فضاست و نارنج نشانه ی کره ی زمین است و این بیانگر تعلیق کره زمین در فضاست. انیشتین رنگش می پرد عقب عقب می رود و روی صندلی می افتد و حالش بد می شود."

Perhaps Einstein’s theory (fact) "Warped Space" has it roots in "orange in the bowl of water" observation by him at Dr. Hesaabi’s Nowruz party

//www.space.com/scienceastronomy/warp_space_0...

!A.O. Thank You for the blog post


Shazde Asdola Mirza

Dear anonymous: thanks for this nice and thoughtful piece.

by Shazde Asdola Mirza on

S.A.M (an official Khar Vazir)


Hajminator

‫افتخار ایران

Hajminator


‫خیلی از خواندن این قطعه لذت بردم. چه زیبا، دکتر حسابی توضیح این قسمت از فرهنگ ما را به عالمین و انیشتن میدهد! چه دیده ای و ترز تفکری!

‫دکتر حسابی یکی از محبوبترین دانشجوهای انیشتن و معلم ۷ نسل دانشجو و پرفسور بود. تئوری «ذرات بی نهایت گسترده» ایشان افتخار ایرانیهاست. بر اساس این تئوری ذرات در تمام فضا پخش هستند و همچنین هر ذره ای بر ذرات دیگر تاثیر میگذارد. این تئوری پایه فیزیک کوانتیک است. بخاطر این تئوری، دکتر حسابی مدال افتخاری کماندر لژیون دُنور فرانسه که بالاترین مدال افتخاری علوم این کشور است را میگیرد.

‫روحشون همیشه شاد باد


SamSamIIII

Bravo AO

by SamSamIIII on

Good eyes for a great story . Finally ,read something Hessabi .

Cheers pal!!!

 

//www.iranianidentity.blogspot.com/

//www.youtube.com/user/samsamsia


bajenaghe naghi

anonymous observer jan

by bajenaghe naghi on

 this was a great story. Thank you for sharing it. is the memoir in Farsi or in English? I love to read this book.