Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Nigerian scientist Philip Emeagwali.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Philip Emeagwali is a Nigerian computer scientist. He won the 1989 Gordon Bell Prize for price-performance in high-performance computing applications, in an oil reservoir modeling calculation using a novel mathematical formulation and implementation. He is known for making controversial claims about his achievements that are disputed by the scientific community.
I wanted to become a mathematician, physicist or astronomer.
The 65,536 processors were inside the Connection Machine.
One out of every 100 American men is HIV positive. The rate of infection has reached epidemic proportions in 40 developing nations.
Because I believe that humans are computers, I conjectured that computers, like people, can have left- and right-handed versions.
It is smarter to borrow from nature than to reinvent the wheels.
Nelson Mandela and Malcolm X came out of prison stronger.
When I enrolled in college at age 19, I had a total of eight years of formal classroom education. As a result, I was not comfortable with formal lectures and receiving regular homework assignments.
The Connection Machines owned by the United States government laboratories were made available to me because they were considered impossible to program and there was no great demand for them at that time.
Due to financial reasons, I dropped out of school after eight years of formal schooling.
Adversities such as being homeless and going to prison has made many people stronger.
My focus is not on solving nature's deeper mysteries. It is on using nature's deeper mysteries to solve important societal problems.
I have expertise in five different fields which helps me to easily understand the analogy between my scientific problems and those occurring in nature.
I preferred to study those subjects that were of interest to me.
During the week that I arrived in the United States, I saw an airport, used a telephone, used a library, talked with a scientist, and was shown a computer for the first time in my life.
The labs were happy that I was brave enough to attempt to program it and the $5 million computer was left entirely to my use. I was their human guinea pig.
Briefly, to program it requires an absolute understanding of how all 65,536 processors are interconnected.
I dropped out of high school four times between the ages of 12 to 17.
The hardship of living in a refugee camp made me psychologically strong.
Our lives sometimes depend on computers performing as predicted.
The hardships that I encountered in the past will help me succeed in the future.
The Connection Machine was the most powerful supercomputer in the world. It is a complex supercomputer and it will take forever to completely describe how it works.
Because I am not formally trained in the medical sciences, I can bring in new ideas to AIDS research and the cross-fertilization of ideas from different fields could be a valuable contribution to finding the cure for AIDS.
Nigeria is a West African nation of over 100 million energetic people. It is endowed with lots of natural resources but lacks human resources.
First, I identify an analogous problem in nature and borrow from it.
The greatest grand challenge for any scientist is discovering how to prevent the spread of HIV and finding the cure or an effective vaccine for AIDS.
Eighty percent of Americans with HIV do not know they are infected.
Scientists try to discover or unravel the mysteries of nature. Some of the problems we are trying to solve have been solved in nature.
It took me 1057 pages to describe the hundreds of mathematical equations, algorithms and programming techniques that I invented and used.
The greater opportunity enabled me to make important discoveries and inventions.