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n a
lecture hall of a university in England sits a professor. He is on the
platform giving a talk, but his voice sounds slightly strange. That is
because this professor has a disease which prevents him from speaking,
so when he speaks he had to use a computer and a voice box. When he
answers questions, it takes about two minutes. Not only does he have to
type out the answer on a computer, but he also gets the computer to
translate it into sounds. Why do people come to his lectures since he is
difficult to understand? The answer is that he is one of the top three
physics experts in his particular field. His special subject is the
beginning of space, matter, and time.
he
case of Professor Stephen Hawking is one example of the many disabled
people who have achieved success in their chosen field of work. He was
born in 1942, took his doctor's degree in physics, and did research at
Cambridge University in England. By the age of 21 he had already begun
to notice that it was difficult to move around without falling over.
Although he had a disease of the brain which was getting worse, he
decided to continue with his research and his writing. He had to find
ways that would make it possible for him to speak, read and write, even
though he could later only move the fingers of one hand. In 1988 his
book "On History of Time" became a best-seller.
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