Let's stay for a moment with your enthusiasm for chemistry and, at the same time, take a leap into another world: you are fascinated by traditional Tibetan folk art. How do you bridge the gap between chemistry and art?
It's important to recognise that analytical chemistry plays a role in all spheres of life. One of many possible applications of analytical chemistry can now be the analysis of pigments of Tibetan works of art. Perhaps chemical experimentation is my very own personal way of occupying myself with these marvellous Tibetan scrolls and of trying to understand them. I am sure that there are links between chemistry and art. However, I also believe that it is important to recognise the differences between them. Because it is the breadth of experience which is so important to us. It is a little like food, and the enjoyment of it. To have St. Galler Olmabratwurst (fried sausage) for lunch every day is utterly boring, no matter how good it tastes!
When you were young you played the cello and even wrote music. How would you characterise the connection between chemistry and music – provided that there is such a connection in your opinion?
A famous philosopher once said that if you only understand chemistry then you don't really understand that either. In order to understand complex issues in a certain field you need a broad perspective. Music is a wonderful means of opening people up. In my opinion, it is very important to have a wide range of interests so that you can penetrate deeply into the fundamentals of a specific field. You can only gain an in-depth understanding when you also have a breadth of vision. However, in a certain way music is nothing other than spectroscopy. Music is acoustic spectroscopy, and what I did in analytical and physical chemistry was spectroscopy as well. That may sound a little strange to you now, but when looked at closely, one can see that analytical and musical spectroscopy are mathematically connected. As you can see, there are a lot of things that chemistry and music have in common. As I have mentioned before though, I find it more interesting in way, how the two fields complement each other in their differences.
What is more important for you personally: creativity and imagination, or knowledge?
Creativity is what constitutes man. I would even go so far as to say that without creativity, we are dead as people. There is no doubt that in a certain way, imagination is more important than knowledge. However, a creative person may very soon encounter gaps in his or her knowledge when they let their imagination run freely. If you reach certain limits in the actual implementation of your imagination, you will be very motivated to gain new knowledge so that you can progress. Therefore it's of central importance for us to educate ourselves further, when we see that it makes sense, in order to support our practical activities.
Professor Richard R. Ernst, how much, in your opinion, is measurable scientific success dependent on the personality of the scientist?
I think scientific research is something very personal. Because the individual researchers' inspiration and creativity is of central significance for the results. You can see the difference between a top level researcher and the equally high quality equipment that you develop and produce here at BUCHI. Your instruments can be programmed so that they work with a unique and infinitely repeatable precision. I do not believe that it is possible to program a person with the same precision. Therefore the personality of a researcher will always cause some surprises in the results.
After completing your doctorate you worked for Varian Associates in California on the development of industrial nuclear resonance spectroscopy. What motivated you to go to the States at that time?
After graduating from the ETH I was completely demotivated and depressed. I had enough of the university and wanted to get out into the industrial world and do something practical and useful in 'real' life. That was the reason for my breaking out of the ivory tower into the industrial world. I had five very interesting years in the States prior to my return to the ETH in 1968. But the time after returning to Switzerland was a great shock for me and my family. Because I did two things which, in my view, one should never do. But we all make mistakes in our lives! Firstly, I returned to the same laboratory, where I obtained my doctorate and secondly, I moved back to the old brick house with my mother. That was bound to go wrong! After about nine or ten months I had a nervous breakdown. My nerves couldn't take it anymore and I wasn't able to work. Then I finally picked myself up again in very small steps. That was really a miracle. Somehow I managed that, together with my family. After that difficult time, there followed a very busy and productive phase for me at the ETH, which finally led to the Nobel Prize in 1991.
Do you think that you could say that the university lecturers are responsible for the design of the global future?
University lecturers educate young people. These then proceed to work in positions where they have a lot of responsibility – for example, at BUCHI. The top aim of a university education should therefore be to instill a sense of responsibility in the students. In this way, through our students, we university lecturers have an impact on the future.
In 2005 the Dalai Lama paid a visit to the ETH. In his speech he explained the causes of fear and anxiety from a Buddhist point of view - i.e. that they arise from a mistaken understanding of reality. Knowledge, or in his words 'wisdom', could lead to freedom and happiness. How do you see the connection between knowledge, freedom and happiness?
(long pause) Regarding the word 'knowledge' or 'wisdom', I would prefer to use the word 'experience'. Because I believe that the point is more the ability to recognise the interdependencies in our world. In my view, when you understand these interdependencies, a kind of freedom will ensue. Perhaps this freedom could be compared with the feeling you get when you sit in an airplane, high above the clouds, and you can understand, from this elevated perspective, what goes on down below. You gain a bit of independence and perhaps, in that way, get a little closer to happiness. I must say however, that for me the notion of responsibility is of greater importance than that of freedom. Because I believe that ultimately it is the responsibility with which we treat our fellow beings that leads to a happy life. I am convinced that the Dalai Lama would agree with this view.
What helped you more on your way to receiving the Nobel Prize: good or bad fortune?
(he laughs) I think you need both because what led me to the Nobel Prize was the tension between failure and winning. However, what is absolutely essential, irrespective of the goal you want to reach, is the perseverence to carry on even after you have encountered some bad fortune. I am just a 'stubborn' guy and don't give in so easily! I feel that this strong determination to overcome difficulties is important for winning such a prize.
Can you still remember the moment when you were informed that you would receive the Nobel Prize?
Yes of course, that moment is still completely fresh in my memory. I was in a plane on a flight from Moscow to New York. In the clouds above Scotland, the captain came to me and asked: "Are you Mr. Richard R. Ernst?" And I answered: "Yes, but please leave me alone, I'm trying to catch a little sleep". He replied that perhaps now was not the right time to sleep, as I had just won a prize – the Nobel Prize no less! You can imagine that I was suddenly wide awake! The joy was beyond words! These were really wonderful moments on this flight from Moscow to New York. But I have to say – despite of my happiness – these were not easy moments. Because I would have liked to share the prize with two other researchers. But there was nobody besides myself, in reality I had won this prize by myself and that was not easy for me during the first hours and minutes of my success.
On June 18, 2010 you will again be welcoming a world famous personality as your guest. Your foundation, the 'Richard R. Ernst Lectures', will present Kofi Annan with the gold medal. What is the background to this award and what is your relationship with Kofi Annan?
This lecture was organized for the first time in 2009. The idea was that top scientists would be honored at the ETH for very specific achievements. However, I then found that there should be more weight given to the general relationship with society. It is a fact that Kofi Annan, as former representative of the UN, plays a extremely important role on the world stage. I believe that we cannot resolve the world's current problems without strong international organizations such as the UN.
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