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  1. Oct 17, 2017 · Love After Life: Nobel-Winning Physicist Richard Feynmans Extraordinary Letter to His Departed Wife By Maria Popova Few people have enchanted the popular imagination with science more powerfully and lastingly than physicist Richard Feynman (May 11, 1918–February 15, 1988) — the “Great Explainer” with the uncommon gift for bridging ...

  2. Nov 29, 2023 · Nobel-Prize winning Physicist Richard Feynmans correspondence to his ailing wife Arline reveal intimate details about the multitudes he contained. A marriage which was opposed on all fronts; Princeton viewed it as a distraction from academic matters of more pressing importance and his mother, Lucille, feared that he would contract ...

  3. Feb 17, 1988 · Dr. Feynman's first wife, whom he married in 1941, died five years later while he was in Los Alamos. After a second marriage ended in divorce, he married Gweneth Howarth.

  4. Richard Feynman (born May 11, 1918, New York, New York, U.S.—died February 15, 1988, Los Angeles, California) was an American theoretical physicist who was widely regarded as the most brilliant, influential, and iconoclastic figure in his field in the post-World War II era.

  5. Nov 30, 2016 · Some­how, he could not help but do so, end­ing with stark­ly ambiva­lent truths he was unable to rec­on­cile with what he col­lo­qui­al­ly calls his “real­is­tic” nature: “You only are left to me. You are real.… I love my wife. My wife is dead.” Read the full let­ter below, via Let­ters of Note.

  6. Mr. Feynman leaves his wife, Gweneth; a son, Carl; a daughter, Michelle, and a sister, Joan Feynman. A memorial service will be held at a later date.

  7. May 17, 2005 · The Letters And Legacy Of Physicist Feynman Renee Montagne talks to Michelle Feynman, daughter of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard P. Feynman, who was just 24 when he began working...

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