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by btilly
6063 days ago
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Among other things Fred Hoyle (at least learn to spell his name!) was the H in the classic B2FH paper that elucidated the processes by which various elements were created in stars, and explained the relative distribution of different isotopes in the universe. In my opinion that paper is on the list of the 10 most important discoveries in science in the last century. See http://bentilly.blogspot.com/2009/09/what-makes-it-science.h... for the rest of that list. |
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Thank you for this most kind and substantial observation. In my defense, Hoyle used to joke of himself like that since concieving his steady-state cosmology where matter constantly flowed out of a "hole"; his autobiography "Home is Where Wind Blows" is also a good read.
In my opinion that paper is on the list of the 10 most important discoveries in science
Took cosmology course (with very distinguished cosmologist) and heard of that in passing. Since then forgotten, sorry (It was that important to me, maybe as a footnote to the αβγ mechanism. Of course this says more about my ignorance than importance of Hoyle's legacy).
So then, I view Hoyle as a crank out of my ignorance, you view Penrose as a crank out of your apparent ignorance. Further discussion would not be a rational argument.