Indian scientists protest congress
speakers discrediting works of Newton, Einstein
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[January 08, 2019]
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Indian scientists
have protested about claims made at a local science conference that
rubbish the work of some of the world's greatest physicists and suggest
modern breakthroughs such as in-vitro fertilization were in fact
invented in ancient India.
In a lecture at the Indian Science Congress and posted on YouTube, one
speaker, Kannan Jegathala Krishnan said Isaac Newton was wrong about
gravity, Albert Einstein made a "big blunder" and questioned Stephen
Hawking's achievements.
Another speaker, G. Nageswara Rao, a vice-chancellor at Andhra
University in southern India, used stories from Indian epics Ramayana
and Mahabharata as proof the people of ancient India had aircraft,
test-tube babies and that stem-cell research "was done in this country
thousands of years ago".
While organizers of the congress have promised to make changes for next
year's event following the criticism, Soumitro Banerjee, a physics
professor and general secretary of non-profit Breakthrough Science
Society, told Reuters the comments lent respectability to absurd
theories.
Scientists in Kolkata and five other cities carried placards and held
silent demonstrations on Monday against the comments, he said.
"This is very harmful for the growth of scientific temper because these
ideas are being propagated through the Science Congress which gives it a
respectability," said Dhruba Mukhopadhyay, a retired professor and the
president of the BSS, said.
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People hold placards to protest against claims made by speakers,
discrediting theories of Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, at the
106th Indian Science Congress in Kolkata, India, January 7, 2019.
REUTERS/Stringer
The conference's organizer, the Indian Science Congress Association,
will soon issue a statement condemning this episode, said Premendu
P. Mathur, a general secretary at the body and a professor of
biochemistry and molecular biology.
"From next year we have decided that all the people, even top
scientists, who want to interact with anybody at the Science
Congress, would be asked to submit their abstracts, not to deviate
from their abstracts and we will place one of our members there as a
moderator."
The annual Indian Science Congress, which this year ran over five
days at a university in northern Punjab state, ended on Monday.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal; Editing by Alison Williams)
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