• 5 months ago
(Adnkronos) - La fisica è una materia ‘stilosa’ che attrae trasversalmente diverse generazioni grazie alla capacità di linguaggio accattivante utile a spiegare cose complicate in maniera semplice. Il professor Vincenzo Schettini ne ha parlato con Giulia. La riflessione del professor Vincenzo Schettini sulla sete di conoscenza che, al giorno d’oggi, può essere soddisfatta grazie all’accesso immediato alla rete. L’intervista con Giulia per parlare anche dell’esperienza de La Fisica Che Ci Piace in tv. Può il professor Vincenzo Schettini de La Fisica Che Ci Piace avere altre passioni oltre alla fisica? Ebbene sì, scopriamolo con Giulia…potrebbe servire un interprete a portata di click!

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00:00The first thing is determination, it is fundamental, you have to be determined in life.
00:14Curiosity, because in reality it is a skill to be used particularly today.
00:18Leonardo da Vinci would have gone to a wedding with our period,
00:21because a period in which to be curious means to be ahead.
00:25And then thirst in general, the metaphorical sense of thirst, of never stopping, of not content.
00:31Writing, because literature in this makes us feel less alone.
00:36The fact of not being the first, let alone the last, to live certain emotions,
00:40to suffer certain situations, makes us feel included.
00:44Second skill, respect, respect for the environment in particular,
00:49which is a very hot topic for our generation and for all mankind.
00:53I often talk about it in my poems, I talked about it in the last book.
00:57The third skill is certainly empathy, that is, the sensitivity in this linked to understanding the other.
01:06And writing, in my opinion, is important in this, because it allows you to sometimes dress someone else's clothes,
01:12to put yourself in their perspective, as Italo Calvino says in the Banone d'Ampante,
01:16to climb a tree to look at things from a different point of view.
01:20To adapt, then to study, this is very important, because otherwise we go nowhere, and to be interested.
01:28But what do I know? I'm reviving school.
01:32To look ahead, not too much to the present,
01:37respect for the environment and respect for different ideas,
01:43without marrying them, but fighting them, respecting them.
01:47To be able to save, so to speak, to be able to use what you already have.
01:53To learn to recycle correctly, which does not only mean making the difference,
01:57which we should have learned to do more or less 25 years ago.
02:00And to buy less crap, this is, in my opinion, the most important thing of all.
02:04Less consumption, less things, less stuff, we already have everything.
02:09I was inspired by this figure of change that must be there in the face of the future,
02:20of women who will have to, at least in my heart, cover loads of power,
02:25which is not happening today.
02:27I wish all the girls of today to become women of power of tomorrow,
02:30because they have the sense of motherhood.
02:33So this sense of motherhood that leads you to have a son or not,
02:37leads you to protect the human species.
02:39I guided the boys through the message of energy,
02:42because if that is a word, a physical greatness that is measured in joules, etc.,
02:48taught at school 20 years ago in a way,
02:50today it must be taught as a let's use it,
02:53because what Lavoisier called the transformation of energy
02:57becomes practically 80% of the work of the present and the future.
03:01In the end, I stimulated them to understand that in life you have to get up from your chairs,
03:08walk and go against your life in an active and non-passive way,
03:13so give yourself to do, as I always say, do things.
03:16In particular, bringing poetry, bringing the poetry of Alda Meridi,
03:20which is a poetry mainly of love,
03:22the poetry of a woman who loved so much and has been loved so much throughout her life.
03:26And in my opinion, as much as love has become a pop theme,
03:29a theme that, as always in today's history on social networks, is very widespread
03:35and is often treated even superficially,
03:37it is the driving force of everything we do in life.
03:40Literature, but an even more elitist genre than that of poetry,
03:43can convey important messages,
03:47can be a powerful tool in the hands, especially of young people,
03:50and in the hands of those who want to launch messages,
03:54such as environmental messages,
03:58or from a political point of view, to say,
04:00stop the war, stop genocide, to invoke peace.
04:04And this is something that, unfortunately, is forgetting
04:07when the pen is the most important tool.
04:10Those who write well inevitably organize their thoughts better,
04:13those who think well live better, live well.
04:16I don't know, I have no idea actually.
04:20I'm here to talk about my experience and above all about what I do.
04:23I hope this thing is somehow useful.
04:25I have seen that for many this thing is useful,
04:28as it is always useful to share a different path,
04:32a particular story.
04:35With the ability that only young people can have
04:41and be supported by those who marry that ability.
04:45Well, today I inspired young people to be the changemakers of tomorrow
04:49with my charisma, because I am an extremely charismatic person,
04:52in short, I think I have passed many extraordinary ideas today to young people.
04:56I think I have inspired them with my speed of thought,
04:59which has always distinguished me,
05:01and which I hope in some way has helped them,
05:03and then with my optimism, because I am an incurable optimist,
05:06and despite what we are experiencing,
05:08I believe that, in short, we have room to hope.
05:12Bye, love you, a kiss.

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