The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsOh no. They're writing about Epstein in Scientific Journals!
(Trust me, I can argue this post is appropriate for the Lounge.)
I came across this paper this morning:
From Paradox to Practice: A Review on Production Strategies, Stability Mechanisms, and Theoretical Insights of Bulk Nanobubbles Ananda J. Jadhav and Aniruddha Bhalchandra Pandit Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research 2026 65 (13), 6725-6763
From the text:
Let me tell you from experience, it sucks when you have a very common last name. It's why we chose to give my sons my wife's beautiful rare last name of Italian origin, even if everyone pronounces it wrong and even if they're easy, unlike me, to find them (or stalk them) on the internet where happily, they have positive profiles.
With a common name, the same jokes, year after year, decade after decade, you're expected to laugh, even if you've heard it a zillion times. I try to be gracious about it, sometimes it's difficult.
The Epstein-Plesset model was first published in 1950, by "P.S. Epstein" at the California Institute of Technology.
J. Chem. Phys. 18, 15051509 (1950)
I don't know anything about P.S. Epstein, but he or she wrote a long time ago, 76 years ago, and presumably he or she didn't live long enough to hear even worse jokes than the ones I hear because the name "Epstein," unlike my name, has become a pejorative. The famous people associated with my name - there are many - were all admired in general social culture, albeit in a sometimes goofy way.
LearnedHand
(5,563 posts)Im listening to the audiobooks, so I flinch a little every time the drives are mentioned. Its almost as bad as the flinch I get when I read or hear the word trump as a verb, like in card games or strategic moves.
NNadir
(38,475 posts)In the past, I've used it a lot at DU in the common phrase "Experiment (insert pluralized orange pedophile's name) theory.
It really has to suck for good people born with the name Epstein, of whom I'm sure there are many.
LearnedHand
(5,563 posts)The flinches at names or common language are a good indicator of how deep the trauma is.
NNadir
(38,475 posts)3catwoman3
(29,726 posts)I can no longer use either the OK or thumbs up gestures.
NNadir
(38,475 posts)Midnight Writer
(25,687 posts)NNadir
(38,475 posts)...with a criminal having the same name and denigrated my work.
Often people have no idea how problematic a common name can be, people sitting in your plane seat, driving off in your reserved car, sitting in your hotel room...etc...etc...
The tiresome jokes at which you're expected to laugh is a minor issue.
The only advantage I can see is with difficulty people would have stalking you on the internet.