An Open Letter to the Next Generation
A Physicist's Lessons Learned
James Patterson
Professor Emeritus
Florida Institute of Technology
Melbourne, FL
Starting as an undergraduate student and ending as a department head, I had a career in physics that spanned approximately a half century. While, on the whole, I enjoyed my various roles as student, professor, and department head, I suppose a reviewer of a proposal I wrote got it right when he said I had had a relatively undistinguished career. Then why you may wonder, should you listen to me? For one thing, I think my career was fun. Physics is so interesting that I believe it is rewarding at whatever level you can perform. My teaching often energized me; I wrote papers that interested me, if few others; and I met many interesting people. However, I wish I had maximized my opportunities. Obviously, because I had a long, uninterrupted physics career, I must have done a few things right. But that is another story.
Retirement has given me time for introspection, and I think I have figured out a few reasons why I was not more successful. Such insights are of little use to me now, but perhaps they may be helpful to some of the younger generation.
James D. Patterson, Physics Today, July 2004, p. 56.







