Wednesday, 04 November 2009 08:57

Meeting a Nobel Prize Winner

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My  hands are shaking.The coffee is on the table, but I cannot drink it because my hands are stuck to the microphone. I tell myself this reaction is normal, i’m about to meet a Nobel Prize winner (Mr. Edmund Phelps , 2006 winner in Economic sciences).
I say to myself, ‘Andrea, relax, at the end of the day he is just a teacher’. I finally manage to leave the mic and enjoy my coffee. In the meantime the questions are running through my mind. It’s ok… now it’s my turn. The anchorman gives me the floor, and as I stand up I’m feeling pretty relaxed. My questions go smoothly and everyone laughs as I tell my joke about how my mother is proud of her son talking to a Nobel Prize winner.
After this the topic get serious: ‘how to change the European mindset?’. A mindset which is against involving young people. A mindset which sees anybody  taking leadership, any entrepreneur, as a bad guy, not as a role model.
Mr. Phelps seems to agree and enjoys the question… and the answer? Well in order to change the mindset it takes time, generations, culture and education.
Pretty easy, isn’t it?
My Second question, was much more personal: “How did they tell you that you won the Nobel prize? Was it a phone call or did they send you an e-mail?”
He gets personal: “Nice question, I’ve never told it to anybody”. He gets more and more personal imitating the Secretary of the Sveridge Riskbank: “He called me early in the morning, at about 6 AM, and told me about that. I’ve asked him whether I was the only winner ”.
Cool! He is a down to earth guy, just like the rest of us!
Last modified on Tuesday, 30 November 1999 00:00
Andrea Gerosa

Andrea Gerosa

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1 comment

  • Comment Link Music Search Engine Monday, 01 March 2010 09:24 posted by Music Search Engine

    Thanks. I am much interested in the matter. I totally respect people who win Nobel Prizes whoever they are and whatever kind of people they may seem. The only thing that matters is that they are undoubtedly talented and prominent. I once happened to come across an interview with Edmund Phelps in which he mentioned that it was time for a realignment of global priorities, not pandering to the purveyors of self-interested greed...

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