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On the Scientific Spirit of the Japanese: Japanese scientists develop energy-saving semiconductor materials Nagoya University professor Amano Hiroshi uses his Nobel Prize-winning achievements - blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs

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Let's talk about the scientific spirit of the Japanese

Japanese scientists develop energy-saving semiconductor materials Professor Hiroshi Amano of Nagoya University has successfully developed semiconductor materials with outstanding energy-saving effects using his Nobel Prize-winning achievements - blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Gallium nitride replaces existing power semiconductors made of silicon and silicon carbide. Initiated by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, with Hiroshi Amano as the core, and 40 companies including Toyota Motor. (2018-5-19-7)

Thinking: I read more information and found a fact, that is, I often see Japanese scientific and technological innovation news in its scientific and technological frontier column from time to time. This should be the result of the Japanese people's outstanding spirit of scientific and truth-seeking. It reminds me of articles I liked to read about economics in the 1980s, and I was impressed by the two economists, Shimiya Kobayashi and Miyamoto: their words were simple, their analysis was pertinent, their illustrations were novel, and their examples were deductive. Later, I read some literary, philosophical, or philosophical Japanese accounts, especially about their personal investigation of Chinese (old) society and their feelings of folk customs, all of which were gentle and pearly or to the point. Thinking about the later wars of aggression, why were they able to go so smoothly all of a sudden? This is inseparable from its deep understanding of its opponents.

Speaking of Japan, the compatriots hate more the cruelty and cruelty it has inflicted on the Chinese in the war of aggression than the beasts. I understand this sentiment very well. Before I retired, my profession was to engage in local history, and I had personally heard people say about the cruelty of the Japanese, so emotionally I hated them very much. But to look at the world from a more rational perspective, we must understand the ins and outs of the problem. We must make ourselves really strong and not let others bully you. Therefore, we must acknowledge the existence of the superiority and inferiority of the other and its specific manifestations and their roots. For example, the spirit of scientific truth-seeking is the opposite of believing in ancient stories and not making opposition to personal fame and fortune as the ultimate and greatest goal of life. The difference in ideas and concepts and then the fallacy of thousands of miles must be clear.

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