What did this man tell his President?
![]() |
|
- During the Korean War (1950-53), the Korean army was under the United Nations
command, along with the American troops and the combat units from other countries
including the United Kingdom, France, Turkey, Thailand, the Philippines, etc. The
commander of this combined UN force was an American general named Douglas MacArthur.
Syngman Rhee, as the president of his country, did not like the Korean army being controlled by a foreign general.
- One day, Rhee invited all Korean generals (not many at that time) to a lunch.
He then asked them who is the head of the Korean army. Everybody said "General
MacArthur." MacArthur was and still is a big name. However, one of them told
Rhee that the president of Korea is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces
of the country, according to the Constitution of Korea.
This man knew what Rhee wanted to hear. It is not difficult to guess who became the army chief next morning. His name was Chung Il-Kwon. He later served as the Korean Ambassador to the United States. He also knew how to talk to Americans.
-
Wigner with myself at the University of Maryland (1986).
- Eugene Paul Wigner was known as the most unapproachable person in the world.
In spite of his prestige (Nobel 1963), he was totally isolated from the
rest of Princeton.
I was able to talk to him.
- I knew what he wanted to hear.
- I told the story he wanted to hear.
- I knew what he wanted to hear.
- In 1963, Wigner received the Nobel prize for his
contributions to the symmetry problems in physics. However, the prize was not
for his 1939 paper for his little groups dealing with the internal space-time
symmetries in Einstein's Lorentz-covariant world..
I told Wigner his 1939 paper alone deserved one full Nobel prize. This was precisely what he wanted to hear. I then gave my reasoning given here. This was how I approached him.
- Eugene Wigner is alive and well in the history of physics along with
Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein. I like to be remembered as the person who
built the bridge between Bohr and Einstein, using the mathematical tools
developed by Eugene Paul Wigner.
- Click here to see how I composed the story
Wigner wanted to hear.
- Click here for the role of Wigner's 1939 paper in building the bridge between Bohr and Einstein.
- Click here to see how I composed the story
Wigner wanted to hear.
- Wigner was isolated from the rest of Princeton because nobody there was
able to tell him the stories he wanted to hear.
Arthur S. Wightman
inherited the chair of "Jones Professorship" from Wigner when he retired. Thus
Wightman was regarded as the guardian of Wigner's physics at Princeton. I knew
him well, but he once told me "Wigner is gone." However, it is safe to say
Wightman is gone.
- Who is responsible for this webpage? Click here.
- Einstein-Haus in Bern, Switzerland. I was there in 2014.
- His photo-biography
- High School Diary covering the years (1950-53) of the Korean War
- List of publications
- Princeton page
- Korean background
- World Travel
- Style page
- Einstein page
- His photo-biography