Into the Impossible With Brian Keating
Science:Natural Sciences
This is a replay of the discussion with Hakeem Oluseyi on the controversy surrounding the naming of the James Webb Space Telescope. It continues! Today the New York Time published an opinion piece entitled: How Naming the James Webb Telescope Turned Into a Fight Over Homophobia: Did the former head of NASA discriminate against gay people? One physicist tried to rebut the accusation, only to find himself the target of attacks.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/19/us/james-webb-telescope-gay-rights.html?
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is NASA’s next great flagship observatory. It’s set to continue — and extend — the illustrious scientific tradition established by the Hubble Space Telescope, while peering deeper into the universe and observing what Hubble could not. But who was James Webb? Considering the controversy surrounding his legacy, I wanted to explore the allegations against him with my friend Hakeem Oluseyi and answer the question: Why was the James Webb Space Telescope named after him?
Hakeem claims that some allegations wrongly accused an innocent man who was, among more well-known achievements, a hero of diversity and inclusion in American government. He worked with Lyndon Johnson and John F. Kennedy to use NASA facilities in America’s southern states to promote racial integration and equal opportunity in employment
Hakeem Oluseyi is an American astrophysicist, cosmologist, inventor, educator, science communicator, author, actor, veteran, and humanitarian. Oluseyi was named a Visiting Robinson Professor at George Mason University in 2021, a distinction by which the university recognizes outstanding faculty. In 2021, he published an autobiography titled: A Quantum Life: My Unlikely Journey from the Street to the Stars co-authored with Joshua Horwitz. His memoir tells the inspiring unlikely hero’s journey story from dealing drugs to dishing out the hardest of hardcore science communication and inspiration! Hakeem’s best known scientific contributions are research on the transfer of mass and energy through the Sun’s atmosphere; the development of space-borne observatories for studying astrophysical plasmas and dark energy; and the development of transformative technologies in ultraviolet optics, detectors, computer chips, and ion propulsion.
LinkedIn: LinkedIn.com/impossible to post a job for FREE
Athletic Greens, makers of AG1 which I take every day. Get an exclusive offer when you visit https://athleticgreens.com/impossible AG1 is made from the highest quality ingredients, in accordance with the strictest standards and obsessively improved based on the latest science.
Connect with me:
A production of http://imagination.ucsd.edu/
Support the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/drbriankeating
Produced and Edited by Stuart Volkow P.G.A
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Freeman Dyson (#301)
What’s the Matter of Everything? Particle Physicist Suzie Sheehy on the INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast (#300)
Eric Weinstein & Dan Green: Can New Physics Be Tested? (#299)
Part 2 of 2: David Friedberg is All-In on Science (#298)
Part 1 of 2: David Friedberg is All-In on Science (#297)
Dan Green Physics is NOT In Crisis! (#296)
Aliens are NOT here! With Sarah Scoles (#295)
Aliens are Out There! Lisa Kaltenegger (#294)
Putting Einstein to the TEST: Jim Gates (#293)
Do We Live in a Mirror Universe? Oliver Philcox (#292)
This Book Sent Galileo To JAIL! (#291)
Is There A MIND Behind the Big Bang? Luke Barnes on Brian Keating’s INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast (#290)
SETI and Beyond: A discussion with Brian Keating, Paul Davies, Jim Benford and Mat Kaplan - Replay (#289)
The Problem With General Relativity with Prof. Brian Keating and Event Horizon Host John Michael Godier: Part 1 of 2 (#288)
The Year in Astronomy & Physics! (#287)
A Look Back on 2022 in Science With Brian Keating and Special Guest Eric Weinstein (#286)
What's Important for the 2nd Half of Your Life? James Altucher & Brian Keating Part 2 of 2 (#285)
Does Dark Matter Exist? Stacy McGaugh (#284)
Laser Fusion: Is it Hype? Professor Charles Seife (#283)
Ambition, Accolades, Life Advice, and the Paradox of Striking Graduate Students: Brian Keating and James Altucher in Conversation (#282)
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Sasquatch Chronicles
The Confessionals
Radiolab
Sasquatch Odyssey
Science Friday