|
Born
in 1928 at Jamshedpur, Prof. K.A.V. Pandalai obtained his
Masters in Aeronautical Engineering (1950) and Doctors in Aero
Engineering (1955) from Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, New
York, USA.
During his tenure at Indian
Institute of Technology (IIT), Madras, Prof. Pandalai held
many positions, including that of Director of the Institute.
He has over 44 years of research and teaching experience in
aircraft structure mechanics, composites, classical
aerodynamics and so on. He has taught at many educational
institutions in India and abroad which include Polytechnic
Institute of Brooklyn, Stanford University, California and
George Washington University at Washington, USA. He has guided
many MTech/MS and PhD students and has about 100 research
papers to his credit.
Prof. Pandalai was awarded the
CSIR Silver Jubilee Award (1971) of Rs. 6.25 lakh for use as
seed money to set up FRP Research Centre at IIT, Madras, of
which he functioned as first Director. He is also the
recipient of Senior Grade Foreign Fellowship of the National
Science Foundation of the USA and NRDC of India awards. He is
a Fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences and the
Aeronautical Society of India. He was a Fellow of the Royal
Aeronautical Society and the Acoustical Society of America.
Even after his retirement in 1988,
Prof. Pandalai is actively involved in the field of
aeronautics and composites and on various issues of science
and technology and their impact on society. |
|
This
monograph discusses some of the major achievements in science
and technology of this century and also the scientists like
Albert Einstein who contributed to these achievements. The
dark facet of science and technology is examined in the
backdrop of the unprecedented holocaust and destruction caused
by the World War II. The arrival of the computer and
artificial intelligence, the search for extra-terrestrial
intelligence, the space age, all of which belong to the
post-World War II era are then described. A brief discussion
of the major developments in biological sciences is followed
by the discussion on increasing decay and degeneration of
man's ethical and moral values. Finally, the monograph ends on
a positive note by presenting the picture of a ray of hope
that seems visible with man trying to come out of the tunnel
of darkness and self-inflicted misery. |