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Principal Scientific advisor
to the Government of India
Dr.R Chidambaram in conversation
Interviewed at Amritapuri
Transcribed by Mr.Vyas Mohan, PGDJ Student , Amrita School of
Journalism.
Can you just briefly tell us about you know your visit? Can
u tell us what has inspired you?
Here of course I met Dr. Venkat Rangan on Friday and he was nice
enough to invite me to come here and it was a great privilege
to meet Mata Amritanandamayi and hear about the various things
from Her -Her great wisdom, Her great compassion. I am most impressed
by the way she is looking at the problems of the poor. A tremendous
education network has been set up under her leadership, starting
from schools and now it has gone to engineering education, medical
education and also research. And I am also very much impressed
by the quality of the research scientists who are working in this
organization.
How do you find the dedication of the research scientists
here compared to other places like this?
See here of course I had a look at the research labs which are
focusing on wireless technologies and also some aspects of information
security and the work is world class. And the latest technologies
are being tried out. Of course it’s not surprising, Dr.
Venkat Rangan himself has –that is his area of specialization.
So to look at the products that are being developed like the controlled
microwave oven, which is through a cellular phone, to the remote
connection of the campuses using wireless technologies. Or even
for a backed wireless… using wireless technologies to connect
remote seismic stations. So quite a large number of research projects
have been taken up from leading oganisations like Department of
Atomic Energy, Space, DRDO, and some industries, which I guess
are very well for the future in this sector which is the telecom
sector- the IT and Telecom sector, I would say. There are other
areas, which are of course not located here, which relate to biotechnology
and medical and all that, and in which very quick advances are
being made.
As a scientist, how do you see Amma?
Because She is from a backward community and has studied only
up to the fourth standard…
The spiritual aura about her is remarkable. In the sense, as a
scientist, I am more into Advaita Vedanta- the one which is consistent,
I would say, with modern science or modern physics. But one does
realize that the other forms, apart from the Jnanamarg are very
important. Bhakti is very important. I remember when I went to
the United States in 1964, normally they call you and ask you
to give lectures and they are tutored by the teachers to ask you
questions. And when they ask you about the so many images of God
and do you think there is God in them and all that. So I said
I’ll draw a picture on the board and you tell me what it
is. Of course, these are all high school students so I a put a
thick dot and put a circle and put a small dot. They said hydrogen
atom. I said “Are you sure its hydrogen atom?”. “Yes
sir one proton and one electron”. And then I said, “But
what is the size of a hydrogen atom?”. Then they knew one
hamstring- but what I have drawn here is to be several feet in
diameter. Then why do you call it the Hydrogen atom? Then they
said “Look you can’t picturise a hydrogen atom on
the board”. And I said same thing happens in our Hindu temples.
Not that we don’t realize the abstract -If you have the
intellect to imagine everything in the abstract. But then, her
view of world, her compassion, - I am now talking about Mata Amritananda
Mayi, her conciousness of the poverty in India and the need to
bring back our scientists from abroad in order to develop our
own country- because India can be developed only by Indians. On
the one hand, the modern facilities that you see in the hospitals
like in Cochin where there is no (film?) , everything is electronic
and digitalized. And at the other end, knowing the importance
of Ayurveda and thinking of starting a college in Ayurveda. The
importance of the holistic approach, which was there in the traditional
Indian medicine. She is able to synthesise these two very remarkably.
And the ease with which she carries on a conversation with a high
level scientist and an ordinary individual with the same kind
of attitude. So those are the remarkable things I feel about Mata
Amritananda Mayi.
What do you personally feel about Her?
Personally as I said, I have a concept of God as that of a physicist.
Because, what is it that makes you believe about the stability
of nature’s law? What makes you think that the Schroodinger
equation will be valid day after tomorrow? That if you ask any
scientist, he would believe- if that is the concept of god. All
physicists will tend to agree. Beyond that it gets differentiated.
To some extent, it depends upon the level of your intellect, to
some extent, on the way you have been brought up, and your cultural
surroundings. But surely for a scientist, there can be no differentiation
at that level.
Harnessing innate talent: A new perspective
As you know, there was a paper a couple of years back by Subbayya
Arunachalam in current science, talking about the stagnation of
the research publications from India. Whereas China which was
much below us has begun to go up. Now, my feeling is that this
is related to the question you have asked. In fact I have proposed
the theorem once. The number of research publication from a lab
is independent of the number of senior scientists and is directly
proportional to the quality and number of research students. Because
they are the ones who do the detailed work. And the fact that
they are not getting attracted to the careers in science is a
matter of worry. Of course India’s development is to some
extent, related to the fact that these bright young students have
gone into jobs in industry or in management apart from those who
went abroad. So, now, we must create an ambience to keep the most
talented in science in careers in science and for that we have
to do two things. One is that you must create centres of excellence
in which you can provide high class undergraduate education and
secondly in some fashion the most talented in science must be
assured a career in science.
A career, if they take up in science, because I know people who
have won gold medal in physics Olympiad, but they are taking up
careers in electrical engineering. And, the same thing is happening
in Chemistry and Biology and of course in Mathematics. So, in
some fashion, we have to-this is my suggestion- which we are trying
to see how to do that –if you are very talented in science,
so that your parents or guardians or peer behaviour does not distract
you from a career in science, you must assure some kind of a mean
career. But actually, it is …. Game. There are some jobs
in science in the country in the future and we are trying to see
the right guys will go and fill it up. And if you do the selection
properly, nobody has to guarantee them anything. These are the
people who are the brightest in science. The only thing you have
to do is to keep them in science. Of course, the others should
go into engineering. Same thing you should do also to people who
have finished their engineering course.
Those who are very talented in engineering, research and technology
development, we must keep them there -not allow them to take up
jobs. So, one of the suggestions I have made which hopefully is
catching, is that the companies when they go for their placement
interviews, the brightest among the young guys they hire, those
who have this talent for engineering research and development,
give them company salaries but let them do research, under a professor
for whom they have respect, in a broad area of interest to the
company. Don’t ask them to solve company problems. That
becomes to some extent, may become a little uninteresting to the
young fellow. This young fellow, who for a higher salary, would
have gone for a company job would now be doing research with a
professor and is no different from any student of the professor.
An Indian industry has to realize that information exchange among
academics is very free. A professor from abroad will tell you
exactly what he is doing. But let a company technologist go and
ask him-doors are closed because of IPR apprehensions. So, this
is a thing which came out of our academia-industry interactions.
For the scientist at the Plus Two level and a people with talent
for engineering research at the B. Tech M. Tech level.
There are two things-teaching and research and you must give
quality education and that I see happening. And Dr. Venkat Rangan
told me how as long as you are affiliated to Anna University,
you are rank no. one among all the colleges which were affiliated.
That should continue. And in select areas - of course you cannot
do research in every area along with teaching - in select areas,
I think this university should try to excel. And this one area
that you have selected is extremely good and is important for
India. As we were discussing with Mata Amritanandamayi, while
we have done Ok in IT Software, more in the service, from the
company side, services and solutions, but if we take Atomic Energy
and Space a very high level of software is done there, but then,
that is not commercial. But we must get our industry more interested
in IT hardware, Telecom hardware and increase academia - industry
interactions so that India becomes a leader in this field. If
you concentrate only on software, it is like building a super
structure without a foundation. That is not going to help us in
the long run. See, many of these companies, 95% of their services
are exported abroad which really means that the hardware sector
has not developed in the country. Where as it is exactly the opposite
in the case of China. They provide software services almost on
par with India, most of it is consumed within the country. So,
we have to strike a balance between software and hardware.
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