The Nobel Prize in Physics 1965
Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, Julian Schwinger, Richard P. Feynman
Julian Schwinger's speech at the Nobel Banquet in Stockholm, December 10, 1965
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Your
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen
No words of mine can adequately acknowledge the unbounded
courtesy and hospitality that my wife and I have been accorded
during this remarkable occasion. But I should like to comment
briefly on the welcome recognition of the work done independently
by Japanese and American scientists during and immediately after
the great conflict that racked these two nations more than twenty
years ago. Who can estimate how much farther physics might be
today had world events permitted direct contact and unimpeded
research, instead of the reality of those agonizing years. I need
not dwell on the total intellectual as well as physical
destruction that future conflagrations might bring. It is a
bitter irony that man's curiosity, and his hard-won control over
nature, should be turned against man. One must bow before the
wisdom of Alfred Nobel, who saw clearly that contributions to the
sciences and to literature needed to be supplemented by positive
actions for peace. Let us hope that the proud nations of the
earth can profit from the great example of our host country,
for
Nu spela skällorna, där härar lysts av
brand.
Jag tackar.
From Les Prix Nobel en 1965, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1966
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1965