SORU: aşağıdaki parçaya göre cevaplayınız
As we understand from the passage, Bardeen ----.
In a biography of Bardeen, recently published, he
does not fit the popular stereotype of scientific
genius, for he is surprisingly sane and ordinary. As
far as character goes, he had several assets. To
start with he was a notable team builder. Tenacious
when it came to attacking problems, he had the gift of
breaking a large problem down into smaller, more
soluble parts and then reassembling the whole. As a
teacher, his habit of stopping to think allowed his
students to do so too. Government and industry
valued his advice - according to one commentator,
he helped Xerox to build one of the finest industrial
laboratories in the world in the fields of organic and
disordered solids during the late 1970s. But,
perhaps, the most telling aspect of Bardeen's
character was his willingness to share the credit with
others. For example, he deliberately stayed away
from the meeting of the American Physical Society
in March 1957, at which his theory of
superconductivity was first presented, so that the
contribution of his young co-researchers would be
recognised.