Claudia Alexander: NASA Scientist Dead at 56
I just read about this. From the article:
"Claudia brought a rare combination of skills to her work as a space explorer," Charles Elachi, director of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in the NASA statement. "Of course, with a doctorate in plasma physics, her technical credentials were solid. But she also had a special understanding of how scientific discovery affects us all, and how our greatest achievements are the result of teamwork, which came easily to her. Her insight into the scientific process will be sorely missed."
She was also a steampunk writer, celebrating her love of science fiction
"Claudia brought a rare combination of skills to her work as a space explorer," Charles Elachi, director of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in the NASA statement. "Of course, with a doctorate in plasma physics, her technical credentials were solid. But she also had a special understanding of how scientific discovery affects us all, and how our greatest achievements are the result of teamwork, which came easily to her. Her insight into the scientific process will be sorely missed."
She was also a steampunk writer, celebrating her love of science fiction
One of them apparently had a crush on her and showed up at hour house (we live in the mountains above Sacramento) "because he was in the neighborhood" at about 9 pm on Valentine's Day one year... Not sure what he was hoping for...
Creep was so weird he was pulling his hair out in clumps by the fistful while I stared at his nerdy ass.
Then he left.
I would rather have direct disagreement than PC talk, though, so you get a point for that.
Jan, a woman
I feel compelled to object to "loose talk".
If the greatest achievements are large engineering projects, of course, teamwork is more than essential. To design and produce a large rocket, an airliner or a GW power generator takes huge well lead teams. Do I need to point the obvious: thousand people produce more than an individual.
Socrates converted philosophy from the study of nature to the study of human life. The list of such innovators or discoverers we remember is fairly long. We "remember" Homer, Dante, Shakespeare, Michelangelo and Verdi (just to name my favorite artists).
What is a great achievement? Do we remember the great teams from a couple of centuries or a couple of millennia ago? We are lucky if we remember their leaders.
In my opinion, the "greatest" achievements are outstanding contributions of individuals.
So, please, define your terms, Mr. Elachi, before you spew bromides.
If you want to encourage more people to pursue a STEM career without relying on PC arguments (appealing to reason and self-interest and self-esteem instead), I encourage and appreciate you steering people to my book, How To Be a Rocket Scientist:
http://howtobearocketscientist.com
It is true we need more "interesting" people in technical fields, because interesting problems are solved by interesting people!
If that's her only achievement worthy of consideration, besides some nebulous "social" function...
Yeah. Maybe, oh just maybe, she had her carrier as some token for "affirmative action"...