The more I get to hear about medals other than Nobel, I get more confused about why the Nobel has been placed at the apex of such awards, including the ersatz Nobel, for economics.
James
Bates Clark prize, The Economist says
is a little tougher to get than the Nobel for economics; I am no one to argue.
Fields Medal is for mathematics and is awarded to mathematicians not more than
40 years old – a Nobel with an age limit! Obviously tougher than Nobel. Abel
prize – Its only competition is Fields Medal, scat Nobel!
Now
I come to Boltzmann
Medal. Though my go-to-newspaper in the morning is The Hindu, (I am an armchair commentator and the paper’s leisurely
pace suits me) I must point out that it slipped. The news of Prof. Deepak Dhar
being awarded Boltzmann medal was carried in one of the interior pages.
In
my humble opinion, it must have headlined the front page.
Why
so? I have, at my very layman level with no chance of climbing up the ladder,
fallen in love with statistics and it is this love that makes me appreciate the
foundations of big data, AI etc. And, Prof. Dhar becomes a part of my narrative,
just as E. C. G. Sudharshan did when he was spurned by physics Nobel.
We
did not thump our chest when an India-origin achiever, Prof. Manjul Bhargava’s was awarded the Fields Medal some years ago, whose Indianness skips a generation. SASTRA
Deemed-to-be University did confer its own award on Prof. Bhargava, notably earlier than he being awarded the Fields. Chalk up one for SASTRA. Where was GoI earlier to Fields? In hiding
somewhere!
Prof.
Akshay Venkatesh is one more such case - we will not celebrate an accomplishment till the same is acknowledged by a foreigner. Such inferiority/superiority (I do not know which) complex! Though, like Prof. Bhargava, Prof. Venkatesh too was awarded SASTRA Deemed-to-be University's award earlier than he got his Fields, his achievement did not get the rousing reception in Indian
media – recall how the media went gaga over Venky’s Nobel award.
Such
felicitations did not happen with Subramanian Chandrasekhar, the redoubtable
Lahore born physicist who won the physics Nobel some fifty years after he
postulated what came to be called Chandrasekhar
Limit, and also the Abel prize winner S. Varadhan of Courant Institute, New
York.
I am
now forced to conclude that there are factors other than Indianness that occasions
such chest thumping by Indians in India. Indians abroad couldn't care less. It could be that Prof. Dhar spent his career in Indian
institutions, TIFR, Mumbai and IISER, Pune. Forget that the citation awarding
him the prize mentioned his work as a Ph.D student at California Institute of
Technology, the US west coast citadel of cutting-edge science and technology.
However,
it is more than that. Just for this post, I scoured the Net and found that
Boltzmann Medal does not carry any cash award. Be honest with yourself – the first
thing that hits you in the face from the newspaper in October of every year is
the crores of rupees the Nobel award carries.
Moreover,
Boltzmann does impose the condition that downgrades the award – it cannot be
conferred on anyone who is already a Nobel Laureate. This beggars belief. Why
would a Boltzmann even indirectly imply that it is lower than a Nobel? It says
to everyone and her cousin that once a Nobel has been awarded, all other awards
lose their shine. The polar opposite of successful salesmanship! When you think someone deserves felicitation by you, why would anyone else facilitating him/her, earlier or later matter?
This
is how Boltzmann loses out to Nobel. We, as poor as we are, are enamoured of
money; perhaps because we ARE poor. A hungry person appreciates even a single
morsel of food.
Prof.
Dhar’s prize does not satisfy us, as Indians. Hence, the news about his winning
a prestigious prize is consigned to inner pages.
Sad.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
2 comments:
Yes. What you have expressed is right. Also, we Indians always give more importance to money and fame and not to knowledge and experience!
Thank you Mr. Subramanian ... money is what attracts us, to the exclusion of almost anything else ...
Raghuram Ekambaram
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