Although American physicist Richard Feynman won the Nobel prize in 1965, it was his books of anecdotes (" Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" and "What Do You Care What Other People Think?") and his appointment to the presidential Challenger disaster inv
Feynman liked to remind physicists that they were not nearly as close to discovering the meaning of it all as they sometimes believed.
To keep himself "focused on Life's important questions," twenty-five year old Erik Madsen created a collection of writings from a handful of great thinkers.
This Feynman fan site (part of the Feynman Web Ring) has a message forum, and good collection of Feynman anecdotes.
In 1979, Feynman delivered a series of lectures introducing his Nobel-prize winning concepts of quantum electrodynamics (QED) to the physics department of Auckland University, New Zealand.