David Plimpton
Lindorff, an occasional contributor to ThisCantBeHappening! and perhaps
the last survivor of the Radiation Lab, a top-secret World War II
project in Cambridge, MA that led to the placing of radar on aircraft,
died March 15 in Storrs, CT at the age of 89 as a result of
complications from ataxia.
Lindorff, a native of Flushing, NY, was a polymath, an artist/writer/scientist/ philosopher/analyst who, after writing an acclaimed book, Theory of Sampled Data Control Systems (Wiley,
1965), which addressed some fundamental challenges posed in analog
computing, and working in his chosen field of engineering and computer
science, took early retirement from the University of Connecticut at the
age of 57 to remake himself as a licensed Jungian analyst and scholar.
It was a second career he pursued for another 28 years, and it led to his writing a second book. Pauli and Jung: A Meeting of Two Great Minds (Quest Books, 2004). This
volume, which is based on two decades of letters of correspondence
between Jung and a famous patient of his, the enigmatic and brilliant
theoretical physicist Wolfgang Pauli, explores the issues of genius,
creativity, and these two men’s discourses and debates over such
concepts of quantum theory, synchronicity and the controversial notion
of mind over matter.
Lindorff’s
leap from engineering to a study of the psyche came in 1979. He said he
was in the UConn faculty club dining hall having a weekly lunch with an
informal group of professors who liked to practice their German, when
the topic turned to a court decision, just in the news, in which several
male state employees had won a lawsuit claiming discrimination because
at the time, female state workers could retire at 60, while men had to
wait until they were 65. Lindorff said, “With my three years’ military
credit, I could retire now!” A colleague advised him, “If you’re going
to do that, you better do it right away, because this decision is going
to be so expensive it’s bound to be overturned on appeal.” Lindorff
left his lunch, pushed back his chair, got up, and walked across the
campus to the personnel office and filed for retirement. “I didn’t even
call my wife to discuss it!” he said. Shortly after this impulsive act,
the court ruling was overturned as predicted, but Lindorff and a few
others who had already filed their papers were allowed to remain
retired...
For
the rest of this article by DAVE LINDORFF in ThisCantBeHappening!, the
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