Reflections by an Eminent Chemist: Gerhard Herzberg and Bryce Crawford (cutaways and graphics)
- 1990-May-26
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Transcript
00:00:00 Edited in just a shot of you nodding your head, listening, that's something.
00:00:08 I was shaking my head. I don't remember.
00:00:12 Well, one thing that you mentioned just in passing, and I didn't want to ask you about it on camera,
00:00:20 but you said that some of your biggest boo-boos came from internal rotations.
00:00:24 Are there any anecdotes you'd like to tell us about that?
00:00:27 No.
00:00:28 We're not taping this.
00:00:31 The one paper that is inexcusably bad,
00:00:36 I mean, while I was just saying that that nickel carbonyl assignment was all wrong,
00:00:43 but I make no apologies for that.
00:00:45 That was made at the time when I think I did get some KBR prisms,
00:00:50 but we didn't have the low frequency infrared, you see.
00:00:54 It was a respectable try at the time, even if it was all wrong.
00:00:59 But the one paper that is inexcusably bad, and it was my own damn stupidity,
00:01:06 is one on hindered rotation, and we just won't talk about it.
00:01:11 I'll admit it, but I'll be damned if I'm going to give you the quote.
00:01:14 I'll tell you a story about Linus Pauling that's appropriate to this sort of thing.
00:01:19 I was out at Caltech.
00:01:21 I took a split sabbatic when I spent half the year out at Caltech,
00:01:26 and so I sat in on Linus's lectures.
00:01:28 He's a good lecturer, by the way.
00:01:30 You have to sort of check up on him as he goes along, but that's all right.
00:01:36 But there was one lecture, and he sort of set the lecture aside
00:01:42 because who was the X-ray crystallographer out at Caltech?
00:01:47 There was an older man than Linus who was Dickinson.
00:01:50 Yeah, Roscoe Dickinson.
00:01:52 Roscoe Dickinson had passed away,
00:01:57 and Linus was spending half the lecture period, I think,
00:02:01 telling us about Dickinson and the work that he did in really early X-ray crystallography,
00:02:09 chemical X-ray crystallography anyway,
00:02:12 and what a remarkably good job he did.
00:02:16 He said, you know, Dickinson is the only crystallographer I know
00:02:21 who has never published an error, an erroneous paper.
00:02:26 And you know those Caltech students.
00:02:28 One of them was right on it, you see.
00:02:30 Dr. Pauling, did you say that Dr. Dickinson was the only crystallographer
00:02:35 who's never published an error?
00:02:37 And, of course, Linus was right with it too,
00:02:39 and he kind of smiled and says, that's right, the only one.
00:02:43 And, of course, when class adjourned, it just adjourned to the library
00:02:46 and started going through all of Linus' published papers, you see.
00:02:50 They found it.
00:02:53 We all of us have something wrong in the literature somewhere,
00:02:56 all of us who've ever done anything.
00:02:58 Oh, of course.
00:02:59 The only thing is that, you see, you have your CH2,
00:03:02 but you went back and corrected it.
00:03:04 So you can laugh about it.
00:03:06 The same way I can laugh about my ethylene paper that I was filling you in on
00:03:11 because I had a totally wrong idea,
00:03:13 but it came out with one of the nicest papers I've done, you see.
00:03:17 But I didn't correct my paper on hindered rotation.
00:03:23 That scoundrel Ken Pitzer corrected it.
00:03:26 Oh, the Ken Pitzer?
00:03:27 Mm-hmm.
00:03:28 Oh, yes.
00:03:29 Ken is a very good guy, you know,
00:03:31 and he told me well in advance that he didn't agree and that he had this paper,
00:03:36 and I said, well, what's wrong with my paper?
00:03:38 Well, he couldn't find out.
00:03:40 And to this day, he never has spotted one.