| PRODUCT DETAILS | | The merely very good. (Paul A.M. Dirac is to Robert Oppenheimer, as W.H. Auden is to Stephen Spender or genius before talent): An article from: American Scholar | | | The merely very good. (Paul A.M. Dirac is to Robert Oppenheimer, as W.H. Auden is to Stephen Spender or genius before talent): An article from: American Scholar
This digital document is an article from American Scholar, published by Phi Beta Kappa Society on January 1, 1997. The length of the article is 4150 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
From the supplier: Physicist Robert Oppenheimer and poet Stephen Spender had much in common. Both had great talent and were acutely aware of it. Both befriended genuises in their fields that they admired greatly: Paul A.M. Dirac and W.H. Auden. Neither Oppenheimer, nor Spender, could emerge from the shadow of their friends' geniuses.
Citation Details Title: The merely very good. (Paul A.M. Dirac is to Robert Oppenheimer, as W.H. Auden is to Stephen Spender or genius before talent) Author: Jeremy Bernstein Publication: American Scholar (Refereed) Date: January 1, 1997 Publisher: Phi Beta Kappa Society Volume: v66 Issue: n1 Page: p31(9)
Article Type: Biography
Distributed by Thomson Gale Manufacturer: Phi Beta Kappa Society
Price: $5.95
The merely very good. (Paul A.M. Dirac is to Robert Oppenheimer, as W.H. Auden is to Stephen Spender or genius before talent): An article from: American Scholar
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The merely very good. (Paul A.M. Dirac is to Robert Oppenheimer, as W.H. Auden is to Stephen Spender or genius before talent): An article from: American Scholar
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