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Syamal Gupta - An Eulogy

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  I will remember Syamal Gupta, or Syamalda to me and many of his friends and colleagues, as a man 1.       of complete integrity 2.       of impeccable character 3.       of inconspicuous charisma 4.       of innate empathy 5.       of intuitive networking skill 6.       of self-effacing leadership, and 7.       of unbounded curiosity. He had neither greed nor jealousy, and above all, he believed in plain living and high thinking. In short, he was more like the person described in Bhagavad Gita: Chapter 2, Verse 71. विहाय कामान्य: सर्वान्पुमांश्चरति नि:स्पृह: | निर्ममो निरहङ्कार: स शान्तिमधिगच्छति || vihāya kāmān ya ḥ sarv ā n pum ā n ś h charati ni ḥ sp ṛ iha ḥ nirmamo nirahank ā ra ḥ sa ś h ā ntim adhigachchhati That person, who gives up all material desires and lives free from a sense of greed, proprietorship, and egoism, attains perfect peace. On 20 April 2022, the family of Syamalda—his wife Chandra Gupta, and his three daughters, Debjani Sen, Damayanti

Talent is not innate. It is developed.

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  INTRODUCTION There is an age-old belief that Talent is inborn, i.e., it is genetically inherited, or God gifted. However, since the mid-1800s, this belief has been questioned, sporadically, in various academic conversations. Such conversations intensified over the past couple of decades, peaking during the four years between 2006 and 2009. During those four years, distinguished scientists and best-selling authors published valuable contributions on this subject.   As it happens, all of them take the same view, which is a contrarian view. They debunk the age-old popular notion that 'Talent is innate'. Instead, based on their case studies, they argue in favor of the contrarian hypothesis that 'Talent is not innate. It is developed'. They contend that it is developed through hard work providing certain constituents are present. In what follows, in the first part of the article, I cite two representative case studies out of the many case studies done by those scient

Sibdas Chakrabarti OBE – an engineer, husband, father, and friend

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  Figure 1 Sibdas Chakrabarti making a presentation at Bengal  Engineering and Science University - 10 Nov 2009 I met Sibdas Chakrabarti OBE, for the first time, on 10 November 2009. That evening he made a presentation at the civil engineering department of Bengal Engineering and Science University (BESU), which is located at Shibpur, Howrah, West Bengal Figure 1 . An alumnus of BESU, Sibdas had moved permanently to England in the 1960s. In November 2009, he was visiting his family in Kolkata and taking advantage of that visit he had prescheduled the presentation at his alma matter that evening.   As it happened that same evening, another person, also visiting from England, was invited to make a presentation at the same civil engineering department. This person was Dr Graham Owens, President of the Institution of Structural Engineers. The two events clashed. I was then a council member and the country representative of the Institution. At Graham’s request, I tried to and did resolve th