Stories of the eccentricities of Paul Dirac (1902 to 1984), the British physicist whose eponymous equation predicted the existence of antimatter, abound.
Dirac was notoriously taciturn. When he first visited the institute led by pioneer of quantum theory Niels Bohr in Copenhagen in the 1930s, his reported utterances consisted almost entirely of three phrases: “Yes”, “No” and “I don’t mind”.
Later, he became more flexible. When astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar expounded his views, Dirac repeatedly interjected with “Yes”, but explained: “When I say ‘yes’, it does not mean that I agree; it means only that you should go on.”
In 1929, Dirac sailed from the US to Japan with Werner Heisenberg. During the trip, Heisenberg spent the evenings dancing while Dirac looked on, puzzled. Eventually, Dirac asked his friend why he…