


Today, gentle readers, we are showcasing the life and times of remarkable American Physicist Shirley-Ann Jackson (b1946), who this year will celebrate her eightieth birthday after a lifetime of intellectual accomplishment. But we’ve picked her out because there is a deeper message for ourselves as members of the Evidence Based, Reason Modulated (EBRM) community, a lesson we could all learn, even some of the members of our exalted Editorial Board.
Shirley’s life and work are admirably described in these two links we have so thoughtfully provided; one from Wikipedia[1] and the other from Shirley’s own alma mater, MIT.[2] Suffice it to say, her career glittered.-Doctorate at MIT, on to years of cutting-edge research at the prestigious Bell Labs, then service as a fully-paid-up member of the Great and the Good at places like Rutgers, the US NRC and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute[3] among others. So far, so good. But now comes the lesson-and it’s humbling for those with eyes to see. Read this, which we have unashamedly pinched from the MIT section of her biography: it dates from the Autumn of 1964:
In the midst of working on her first physics problem set, she emerged from her room and noticed all the other first-year women on her floor out in a common area, doing theirs together. “If you know anything about MIT, you know that working the problem sets is a big deal,” she says. “So I gathered up my paperwork and said, ‘May I join you?’ One of them looked up and said, ‘Go away.’“I said, ‘I’ve done half the problems already and I know how to do the other ones.’“And another girl said, ‘Didn’t you hear her? She saidgo away.”
For Shirley Ann Jackson was Black, Ladies and Gentlemen. And the other people around her were, wait for it, white. Now we at LSS are nothing if not Men of the World, knowing humanity for what it is, its little ways so to speak. And we might expect such attitudes from certain persons who-erm, how to put this gently?- are perhaps less educated, and perform more physically based labour. The sort of bore with the beer belly and the big opinions you find in many a pub, in fact.. But we do not expect it from our own, either, at this time, nor at any other. You go to MIT to learn physics, not to rehearse the petty cruelties of exclusion. Just because we have a degree or two does not mean we are free of the blind spots, intellectual weaknesses and mental laziness. Not necessarily anyway. “Physician heal thyself” comes from Luke, though the saying is much older. It’s a truism for the holder of any Doctorate or other advanced qualification. And that means us.
[1]Shirley Ann Jackson – Wikipedia
[2]The Remarkable Career of Shirley Ann Jackson | MIT Technology Review
#science #physics #MIT #race prejudice #learning


























