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What Do You Care What Other People Think?

What Do You Care What Other People Think?
What do you care what other people think.jpg
2001 paperback edition
Author Richard Feynman
Country United States
Language English
Subject Autobiography, Biography
Genre Non-fiction
Publisher W. W. Norton (US)
Publication date
October, 1988 (US)
Media type Print (Hardcover & paperback) also audio book
Pages 256 pp (US hardcover edition) & 256 pp (US paperback edition)
ISBN (1988 hardcover edition), (2001 paperback edition)
OCLC 18224735
530/.092 B 20
LC Class QC16.F49 A3 1988
Preceded by Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!

"What Do You Care What Other People Think?": Further Adventures of a Curious Character (1988) is the second of two books consisting of transcribed and edited, oral reminiscences from American physicist Richard Feynman. It follows Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!

The book, prepared as Feynman struggled with cancer, was the last of his autobiographical works.

The first section presents a series of humorous stories from different periods of his life, while the second chronicles his involvement on the Rogers Commission investigating the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. In one chapter, he describes an impromptu experiment in which he showed how the O-rings in the shuttle's rocket boosters could have failed due to cold temperatures on the morning of the launch. This failure was later determined to be the primary cause of the shuttle's destruction. This part of the book was dramatized on the screen as The Challenger Disaster, a TV movie by BBC/Science Channel.

The book is much more loosely organized than the earlier Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! It contains short stories, letters, photographs, and a few of the sketches that Feynman created in later life when he had learned to draw from an artist friend, Jirayr Zorthian.

Of note is the story of his first wife, Arline, who was diagnosed with tuberculosis. She died while Feynman was working on the Manhattan Project; the book's title is taken from a question she often put to him when he seemed preoccupied with his colleagues' opinions about his work, which echoed his earlier words to her.

The book concludes with "The Value of Science," an address he gave at the 1955 autumn meeting of the National Academy of Sciences.


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