Peter Scott, Professor of Physics: Recollections of UCSC, 1966-1994
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Peter Scott, Professor of Physics: Recollections of UCSC, 1966-1994, is the edited transcript of a single interview conducted by Randall Jarrell on June 27, 1994. Scott received his B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley, his M.A. from the University of Michigan, and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. He then taught as an assistant professor for three years at Stanford University. Attracted to UCSC because it represented an alternative to what he characterized as the machine-like educational atmosphere of UC Berkeley, Scott arrived at UCSC in 1966.
In this oral history, Scott describes his early history at UCSC, both in the
physics board of studies and at Stevenson College. He relates a delightful opportunity
to teach innovative seminars for sophomores at Stevenson College, among other
anecdotes. He discusses the groundbreaking research undertaken by UCSC undergraduate
and graduate students in physics, particularly the Dynamical Systems Collective.
Finally, he offers brief assessments of controversial issues within the University
of California, such as the UC management of Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos
Laboratories, the narrative evaluation system, and tenure review. Above all,
Professor Scott is a proponent of UCSCs interdisciplinary approach to
education, remarking that, You cant really write a thesis or write
a story or create something that is not about something else.
Scotts research interests have included experimental work on the optical
and microwave spectra of impurity ions in crystals. In the late 1970s he became
interested in dynamical systems, especially those exhibiting chaotic behavior,
such as dripping faucets and various types of mechanical systems. Although he
retired in 1994, Scott continues to teach courses for the physics board of studies
on occasion. He also remains interested in nonlinear dynamical systems.
Peter Scott is also well-known in the UCSC and Santa Cruz community as an environmental
activist, becoming involved over the years in efforts, along with his wife Celia,
to preserve open space lands (the Santa Cruz North Coast, the Pogonip, the Gray
Whale Ranch) and to work to facilitate the awareness of our remarkable natural
surroundings by members of our community. In recent years he has focused on
transportation issues, with particular efforts toward reducing our dependence
on the automobile. His other creative interests include songwriting, singing
in choral groups and woodworking.