View Full Version : Why do physicists love hiking?
CyberShot
Aug10-11, 01:19 PM
Like, seriously. What's the deal? Einstein almost lost his life hiking up a mountain, and almost every physicist I know is obsessed with hiking and is always posting such pictures on Facebook.
Is it just part of their curiosity for nature, and they sense of awe they get traveling through the wilderness?
Anyone else noticed this?
Funny you post this now. I'm not what I would call a physicist - I just have a BS - but I'm about to go on a nice backpacking trip to the Olympic Peninsula coast...:smile:
Ben Niehoff
Aug10-11, 01:55 PM
Because we study Nature and we want to be in it.
Insanity
Aug10-11, 02:10 PM
Not a physicist either, BS in bio and chemisty, but I've probably have backpacked 300 miles through Isle Royale in Michigan, and a portion of the Appalachians, as well as some other areas in Michigan. Additionally a decent canoe trip through the Boundary Water Canoe Area Wilderness in Minnesota, I think about 60 miles. Close encounter with black bears there. Close encounters with moose on Isle Royale. When I was in scouts, we camped out usually one weekend a month or every other month. Plus one or two weeklong camping events in the summer, white water rafting twice through the New River Gorge National River in North Carolina.
I've logged a fair number of days in the wilderness.
Why? I enjoy it.
Observing nature up close like that gives you insight that you can't get working and living in a city I think.
f95toli
Aug10-11, 02:26 PM
Like, seriously. What's the deal? Einstein almost lost his life hiking up a mountain, and almost every physicist I know is obsessed with hiking and is always posting such pictures on Facebook.
Is it just part of their curiosity for nature, and they sense of awe they get traveling through the wilderness?
Anyone else noticed this?
Same reason everyone involved in superconductiviy research like climbing (physicists AND chemists)...
Nearly everyone, that is, I am a very rare exception:shy:
pergradus
Aug10-11, 02:35 PM
Well it's simple and easy enough for out of shape people, and still a good way to get of the lab or from in front of a computer.
Willowz
Aug10-11, 02:52 PM
Probably helps with the thinking process. Plus the scenery.
You do not have to spend your precious time to learn that sport, may be?
FlexGunship
Aug10-11, 04:33 PM
[...]almost every physicist I know is obsessed with hiking and is always posting such pictures on Facebook.
I think it's the dichotomy of our artificially manufactured understandings and their most natural interpretations.
Who can appreciate a clean floor more than the janitor?
Because deep down, none of us really believe that raising the altitude of some object (such as our bodies) is actually work, so we have to see for ourselvesa that work = our mass times gravity times the height displacement. Then we have to constantly remind ourselves of this fact.
Drakkith
Aug10-11, 06:39 PM
I assume it is the same reason that I enjoy walking/running around my block for 1-2 hours in the middle of the night sometimes. Good exercise, nice weather, and gives me plenty of time to think while I walk and listen to music. I work 3-11 pm so I am almost always up until 6ish am.
dydxforsn
Aug10-11, 10:22 PM
Definitely because it helps to open up the thinking process and it is more fun to think while walking than to think all in one place..
flyingpig
Aug10-11, 10:34 PM
No, but they do love to ride bikes.....
brewnog
Aug11-11, 01:48 PM
Why do quantity surveyors like reading books?
Hiking, can be free, or can cost, can be easy or hard, near or far, together, alone, I feel a song coming on...
FlexGunship
Aug11-11, 02:29 PM
Hiking, can be free, or can cost, can be easy or hard, near or far, together, alone, I feel a song coming on...
http://www.hikingfunstore.com/hiking-music-009.html
And something for you, Evo:
http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcT8S7J5BD9LPOs2FqlD3EM8WFesFjuYh sUToIVY64MPfn6xxSh1
Hiking kitty.
(After ruining your fun in the "intellectual pleasures" thread, I owe you a few cute cat pictures.)
http://www.hikingfunstore.com/hiking-music-009.html
And something for you, Evo:
http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcT8S7J5BD9LPOs2FqlD3EM8WFesFjuYh sUToIVY64MPfn6xxSh1
Hiking kitty.
(After ruining your fun in the "intellectual pleasures" thread, I owe you a few cute cat pictures.):!!) Kitty!
Ivan Seeking
Aug11-11, 02:54 PM
Like, seriously. What's the deal? Einstein almost lost his life hiking up a mountain, and almost every physicist I know is obsessed with hiking and is always posting such pictures on Facebook.
Is it just part of their curiosity for nature, and they sense of awe they get traveling through the wilderness?
Anyone else noticed this?
There is one physicist of note lately who likes surfing.
If you spent your life in a lab, you might need to get out too. :biggrin:
Moonbear
Aug11-11, 11:02 PM
A lot of people enjoy hiking. Physicists are people too. :wink:
As Evo pointed out, hiking is one of those things that people of all abilities can do...anything from a short hike on a relatively flat trail to a more challenging hike over steep and rocky terrain...and you can do it either alone or as a social activity with a group. You can do it for the exercise, you can do it for the scenery, you can do it for the conversation with the people you bring along, you can do it because there's a good pub at the end of the trail. So, it's an activity with pretty broad appeal to a lot of different people with different tastes.
A lot of people enjoy hiking. Physicists are people too. :wink:
Exactly! I just got back from my trip, the tent was right about here...
47°50'27.04"N, 124°32'19.60"W
The place is unbelievable - anyone would love it, physicist or not.
Pythagorean
Aug13-11, 09:01 PM
It's opposite, people who hike have stronger neurogenesis and are more likely to be smart.
Exercise and diet will make you smarter than any iPhone app.
My tent was here the other night:
http://i55.tinypic.com/2nar1b6.jpg
42°47'40.93"N 1° 3'53.61"E
Almost at the highest point of the hike
http://i56.tinypic.com/2q3xhkl.jpg
42°47'23.78"N 1° 2'31.47"E
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