The Fields Institute Turns Twenty-Five 170725 Final book with covers | Page 25
CHAPTER 1
Where it All Began
W.F. Shadwick
“I asked [Jerry Marsden] if he would be willing to be the Director.
There was a long pause, and then he said, ‘Providing we can keep
the science separate from the bullshit, I’d be very interested’.”
The Fields Institute was my idea.
When all this began, I was an NSERC University Research
Fellow and an Associate Professor in the Pure Mathematics
Department at the University of Waterloo. I had recently
turned thirty-four.
I was about to spend the next six years leading a much
more senior group of people on a journey with no roadmap
and no indication that we could ever reach our destination.
The outcome was an excellent illustration of George Bernard
Shaws dictum about progress—“the reasonable man adapts
himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying
to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends
upon the unreasonable man.”