Why is there no Native Chinese Nobel Laureate? | |
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Oct 10, 2007 03:23 | |
| French scientist Albert Fert and Peter Grunberg of Germany won the 2007 Nobel Prize in physics for the discovery of giant magnetoresistance, the Nobel committee announced on October 10th. After reading this piece of news, I can't help pondering why there is no native Chinese Nobel Prizewinner. Once upon a time, the Chinese people have created splendid Chinese Civilization. Compass, gunpowder, printing and papermaking testify the former glory of the "Giant Oriental Dragon". What's wrong with Chinese people? Has Chinese people's creativity diminished? Why did America own almost half of the population Nobel Laureate? A headache! |
Oct 10, 2007 05:04 | |
| For the Nobel Literature Prize, I think that those Chinese writers' works do not cater to the westerners. Another reason is that Chinese is hard to learn and understand. For the Nobel Prize of Science, we have to admit that China is inferior to those developed nations in the world. |
Oct 10, 2007 05:33 | |
| Individual freedom of thought creates new ideas from individuals. This is now starting to happen in China. Innovation needs all of the above to succeed. Dodger. |
Oct 10, 2007 22:01 | |
| Good point6, Dodger Although this is now starting to happen in China, I feel the pull of the 'traditional' customs and culture holding everything back from any real change. If you mention the pollution crisis in China. people here still almost refuse to accept that it is real. I think Chinese science is catching up to the west (look at their manned space projects). I think their engineering abilities are superior to the west. Also their writing does not cater to the Euro-American world of Nobel Peace Prize credentials, therefore cannot compete. Too much is lost in the translation, as the Chinese people like to remind me. __WINDENERGY__ |
Oct 10, 2007 23:09 | |
| Be patient. China's time is coming. |
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