| ndm4@cornell.edu
532A Clark Hall
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1. I am trying to put the subject of quantum computation together in a way
that will make sense to computer scientists unfamiliar with quantum mechanics,
physicists unfamiliar with computational complexity theory, and
philosophers of science with an interest in quantum foundations. A book,
2. My interest in quantum computation has
grown out of a longstanding interest in foundations of quantum
mechanics. My recent writings on
quantum information and related foundational issues can be found
at the Cornell eprint arXiv. Several older
essays on quantum mysteries for a more general audience (and much
else) can be found in my collection
Boojums All the Way Through, Cambridge University Press, 1990.
Here are the slides from a lecture on
Spooky Actions at a Distance?
3. I have a longstanding interest in the pedagogy and conceptual
foundations of special relativity, having taught it on and off to
Cornell students not majoring in science or mathematics for the past
thirty years. For examples see the American Journal of
Physics 65, 476-486 (1997) and 66, 1077-1080
(1998), and the relativity section of Boojums. My new book
on special relativity for the general reader,
It's About Time: Understanding Einstein's
Relativity was published by Princeton University Press in
September, 2005. (In 1968 I published
Space and Time
in Special Relativity.
Since then I have learned much about
teaching the subject.) Here are the slides from a
physics colloquium on a purely geometric way to
extract Minkowski's space-time diagrams straight from Einstein's
postulates.
4. I have participated in the controversy between
scientists and sociologists who study the growth of scientific knowledge,
trying, with limited success, to explain to each side why the other
thinks they are idiots. See, for example, my "Reference Frame" column in
the October 1997 issue of Physics Today. My critical review of the major
introductory text in the field appeared in Social Studies of Science
28, 603-647 (1998), together with a response from the
authors. I have given an assessment of these exchanges in my
contribution to
"The One Culture", J. A. Labinger and H. Collins
eds., University of Chicago Press, 2001.
5. I have devoted a fair amount
of intellectual effort to thirty "Reference Frame" columns on a variety
of topics that have appeared sporadically in Physics Today starting
in 1988. Occasionally I expand them into (or condense them out of) lectures.
Here, for example, is an expanded version of a column on questions for the 22nd
century, given in
Zurich
in June, 2005.
I devote a lot of energy to writing
(Diary
of a Nobel Guest) and even to writing about writing
(Writing
Physics).
6. I work hard at the piano, particularly
Beethoven and Mozart.
7. I have written
verses to accompany the world premiere of Mark G. Simon's
"Carnival of the Subatomic Particles," a suite of 13 short musical
portraits of subatomic particles, scored for flute, clarinet, violin,
cello, and piano. A version of the verses, including 12 Onegin
stanzas in praise of the Standard Model, can be found in the July
2007 issue of Physics Today.
8. I have just learned that some people do not believe that I am the
same N. David Mermin as
the coauthor, with Neil Ashcroft, of
Solid State Physics. I am. Although the book is still in its
1976 first edition, two thirds of it consists of eternal verities,
and there is no time, even in a full-year course, to get to the
remaining third. Indeed, the first German translation appeared in
2001 and the first French translation, in 2002. (The Polish,
Russian, and Japanese translations appeared a few years after the
book itself.)
Here is a nearly complete list of my
publications
Last modified: September 18, 2008