Stephen Hawking Warns
About Global Warming
June 22, 2006 — By Alexa Olesen, Associated Press
BEIJING — Stephen Hawking expressed
concern about global warming Wednesday even as he charmed and provoked a
group of Chinese students.
Before an audience of 500 at a seminar in Beijing, the celebrity
cosmologist said, "I like Chinese culture, Chinese food and above all
Chinese women. They are beautiful."
The audience of mostly university students and professors and a smattering
of journalists laughed and applauded.
Asked about the environment, Hawking, who suffers from a degenerative
disease, uses a wheelchair and speaks through a computerized voice
synthesizer, said he was "very worried about global warming."
He said he was afraid that Earth "might end up like Venus, at 250 degrees
centigrade and raining sulfuric acid."
The comment is a pointed one for China _ which is the second largest
emitter of the greenhouse gases that are blamed for global warming, after
the United States. Experts warn that if emissions aren't reduced the
world's glaciers could melt, threatening cities and triggering droughts
and other environmental disasters.
An occasional visitor to China, Hawking was in Beijing to attend a
conference on string theory, an area of physics that attempts to explain
and model the universe.
Hawking's ability to explain abstruse scientific concepts to laymen has
given him a worldwide following. In China, whose communist government
regularly preaches that scientific prowess is crucial to the country's
future power, Hawking has near-superstar status.
When he was wheeled onstage 20 minutes into the event, the audience rushed
forward, taking pictures with their mobile phones.
Many stood and craned to see him better throughout the talk and one man in
the fifth row watched Hawking through binoculars.
Xu Fanrong, a 23-year-old student at the Chinese Academy of Sciences'
Institute of Physics in Beijing, praised Hawking's pithy and humorous
remarks during the one and a half hour event. He said Hawking's appearance
could help inspire more young Chinese to study physics.
"Our country needs science," said Xu. "No basic science means no basic
technology and no economic development."
Other speakers at the seminar included Edward Witten, winner of the Fields
Medal in mathematics in 1990; David J. Gross, winner of the 2004 Nobel
prize for physics; and Harvard University physics professor Andy
Strominger.
Despite the stellar academic credentials of his fellow speakers, Hawking
stole the show, fielding questions about his life as well as science.
Asked by one Chinese student how he would describe himself, Hawking said:
"Optimistic, romantic and stubborn."
"In the world there's only one like him. I very much respect his
personality and strong spirit," said Liu Fei, 24-year-old doctoral
candidate at the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Physics.
Hawking told the students that although he was very limited physically by
his disability, his mind was "free to explore back to the origins of the
universe and into black holes."
Source: Associated Press