Chapter 367

3Joan SmithWho is the greatest scientist of the 21st century? This question that was destined to be debated, with the advent of Joan Smith, like Einstein in the twentieth century, could not have been more controversial.

Her great breakthroughs in unified field theory and string theory, especially the success of her subsequent design experiments, earned her the Nobel Prize in Physics that year.

Subsequently, in recognition of her efforts in the field of microscopic fields, chemical labeling, and isotope confirmation, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences decided to award her another Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Later, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was deservedly awarded to her for successfully isolating the effective cell-programmed apoptosis gene and transcribing RNA, which saved the lives of thousands of cancer patients.

As the first scientist to win the Nobel Prize three times in different fields in a decade since its inception, it is impossible to overstate the praise given to her.

But the amazing thing is that she turned out to be a Chinese. Not to mention why she chose to use such an ordinary English name to publish various papers, this Chinese identity alone has attracted endless doubts and slander for her.

No scientist wants to believe that a fairly young junior like her can achieve such leapfrog results in three different fields from scratch in ten years, even if the latter two are more of a leader.

The more common suspicion is that she is nothing more than a vase made by the Chinese government, adding the work of one or several huge scientific research organizations to her in keeping with the tradition of Nobel Prizes not being awarded to groups, and to win international credit for large-scale research on government behavior.

Her response to it was, no. After the scientist became famous, she did not live in seclusion, but frequently participated in various international conferences, and used her impeccable talent and literacy to silently refute all conspiracy theories.

Originally, she would become the national idol of the new generation of all Chinese, because she never went abroad to further her studies during her studies, in other words, she was born and raised in China, which greatly boosted everyone's confidence at the juncture of China's development.

But history is always strikingly similar. In his later years, Newton became obsessed with theology, looking for the sustenance of the initial impulse, and ultimately achieved nothing scientifically.

Einstein tried his best to unify the field, but in the end he did not come up with a systematic theory. This talent, who was supposed to be as great as them, turned to an ethereal theoretical study after winning the supreme honor.

It's called time travel. 3Joan SmithWho is the greatest scientist of the 21st century? This question that was destined to be debated, with the advent of Joan Smith, like Einstein in the twentieth century, could not have been more controversial.

Her great breakthroughs in unified field theory and string theory, especially the success of her subsequent design experiments, earned her the Nobel Prize in Physics that year.

Subsequently, in recognition of her efforts in the field of microscopic fields, chemical labeling, and isotope confirmation, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences decided to award her another Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Later, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was deservedly awarded to her for successfully isolating the effective cell-programmed apoptosis gene and transcribing RNA, which saved the lives of thousands of cancer patients.

As the first scientist to win the Nobel Prize three times in different fields in a decade since its inception, it is impossible to overstate the praise given to her.

But the amazing thing is that she turned out to be a Chinese. Not to mention why she chose to use such an ordinary English name to publish various papers, this Chinese identity alone has attracted endless doubts and slander for her.

No scientist wants to believe that a fairly young junior like her can achieve such leapfrog results in three different fields from scratch in ten years, even if the latter two are more of a leader.

The more common suspicion is that she is nothing more than a vase made by the Chinese government, adding the work of one or several huge scientific research organizations to her in keeping with the tradition of Nobel Prizes not being awarded to groups, and to win international credit for large-scale research on government behavior.

Her response to it was, no. After the scientist became famous, she did not live in seclusion, but frequently participated in various international conferences, and used her impeccable talent and literacy to silently refute all conspiracy theories.

Originally, she would become the national idol of the new generation of all Chinese, because she never went abroad to further her studies during her studies, in other words, she was born and raised in China, which greatly boosted everyone's confidence at the juncture of China's development.

But history is always strikingly similar. In his later years, Newton became obsessed with theology, looking for the sustenance of the initial impulse, and ultimately achieved nothing scientifically.

Einstein tried his best to unify the field, but in the end he did not come up with a systematic theory. This talent, who was supposed to be as great as them, turned to an ethereal theoretical study after winning the supreme honor.

It's called time travel. 3Joan SmithWho is the greatest scientist of the 21st century? This question that was destined to be debated, with the advent of Joan Smith, like Einstein in the twentieth century, could not have been more controversial.

Her great breakthroughs in unified field theory and string theory, especially the success of her subsequent design experiments, earned her the Nobel Prize in Physics that year.

Subsequently, in recognition of her efforts in the field of microscopic fields, chemical labeling, and isotope confirmation, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences decided to award her another Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

Later, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was deservedly awarded to her for successfully isolating the effective cell-programmed apoptosis gene and transcribing RNA, which saved the lives of thousands of cancer patients.

As the first scientist to win the Nobel Prize three times in different fields in a decade since its inception, it is impossible to overstate the praise given to her.

But the amazing thing is that she turned out to be a Chinese. Not to mention why she chose to use such an ordinary English name to publish various papers, this Chinese identity alone has attracted endless doubts and slander for her.

No scientist wants to believe that a fairly young junior like her can achieve such leapfrog results in three different fields from scratch in ten years, even if the latter two are more of a leader.

The more common suspicion is that she is nothing more than a vase made by the Chinese government, adding the work of one or several huge scientific research organizations to her in keeping with the tradition of Nobel Prizes not being awarded to groups, and to win international credit for large-scale research on government behavior.

Her response to it was, no. After the scientist became famous, she did not live in seclusion, but frequently participated in various international conferences, and used her impeccable talent and literacy to silently refute all conspiracy theories.

Originally, she would become the national idol of the new generation of all Chinese, because she never went abroad to further her studies during her studies, in other words, she was born and raised in China, which greatly boosted everyone's confidence at the juncture of China's development.

But history is always strikingly similar. In his later years, Newton became obsessed with theology, looking for the sustenance of the initial impulse, and ultimately achieved nothing scientifically.

Einstein tried his best to unify the field, but in the end he did not come up with a systematic theory. This talent, who was supposed to be as great as them, turned to an ethereal theoretical study after winning the supreme honor.

It's called time travel. (End of this chapter) cat flutter Chinese