Hawking in the history of science is a miracle, although suffering from a strange disease, but he is still through his own way to chase science, and published a number of popular science books.
However, as we all know, Hawking suffered from severe amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which left his entire body immobile and dependent on a wheelchair. As his condition worsened, Hawking ended up with only a few mobile fingers in his body, and he could only communicate with the outside world by virtue of his specially designed wheelchair.
So the question is, how did Hawking's children come to be?
Hawking's children
Mentioning Hawking's children, we have to talk a little more about Hawking's acromegaly. Although Hawking suffers from acromegaly, acromegaly doesn't make Hawking dependent on a wheelchair from the start, but gradually makes him lose control of his body and end up with a wheelchair as his companion.
Hawking met his future wife, Wilder, when he was a college student, when he was just 21 years old, yet in the second half of the year he was diagnosed by doctors with motor neuron disease, also known as acromegaly. At the time, doctors judged that he had only two years to live, but two years on, he's still alive and, unlike what doctors expected, his tachyphylaxis has been slow to set in, so that in his late 20s he's still able to move around without the aid of a wheelchair.
When Hawking was 22, he became engaged to his wife, Wilder, whom he married when he was 23. Although Hawking was suffering from acromegaly by this time, he could still walk on his own, just needing to rest every little way, and he later bought a three-wheeled motorized vehicle to help him get to his office further away.
Hawking was 25 when his eldest son, Robert, was born, his daughter Lucy was born when he was 28, and his youngest son, Timothy, was born when he was 37.
In fact, shortly after the birth of his first son, Hawking's health deteriorated, and he would trip and fall for no apparent reason, once slipping down a flight of stairs and even knocking his head, causing short-term memory loss.
Later, Hawking had to rely on crutches to get around and could no longer give lectures, due to the fact that he could no longer write words.
It was only in 1969, the year before his youngest daughter was born, that he had to take advice and start using a wheelchair. But he still didn't see himself as disabled at heart, and always dashed through the streets with impunity.
By the time his youngest son was born, Hawking's speech had deteriorated so much that much of the time he could only babble and pronounce words that only his closest family and friends could understand.
While Hawking's whole body function had deteriorated a lot at this time, his reproductive function was not affected, and Hawking himself once described that: my disease only affects the random muscle, and the involuntary muscle is still very normal.
It was because of this that his youngest son was able to be born with most of his bodily functions out of his control.
However, Hawking later divorced his original wife, supposedly because Hawking fell in love with the caregiver who took care of him, but that's another issue.
Hawking and tachyzoites
It has been said that Hawking became a tachyzoite, and lost to tachyzoites. This is because Hawking himself was a child prodigy, already showing great talent at a young age. While attending Newton University, he found the university's homework ridiculously easy, and his physics tutor praised him as a very bright and intelligent one. He was even dubbed "Einstein" while in school.
But in fact Hawking's talents were so wide-ranging that, before he suffered from Alzheimer's disease, he loved music, science fiction and rowing, and was a coxswain in the Oxford College Rowing Club, among other things.
But after suffering from acromegaly, rowing could no longer be accomplished, nor could he perform other tasks that required physical coordination to accomplish, and science became his only outlet.
This is because Hawking is so smart that he can calculate many formulas in his own brain without having to use a computer or other means to do so. That said, if it weren't for acromegaly, perhaps Hawking would have chosen a completely different route than he does today.
But it was also because of the acromegaly that made him not very accomplished in the field of science. We often think of Hawking as being more accomplished in the field of science than Yang Zhenning, but in reality, Hawking can only be called a science writer when it comes to Yang Zhenning.
This is mainly because, although Hawking is very smart, his acromegaly makes the need for important projects unavailable. Furthermore, Hawking is so famous because Hawking needs money more than the average scientist, so he needs the fame to be well rewarded.
This is because Hawking needs enough money to keep up with the high medical expenses, on the other hand Hawking needs to pay for child support. In this case, Hawking has acted in many movies, TV shows, and played himself, and even participated in many speeches, often predicting future events on TV shows, essentially to maintain his popularity, enabling him to have better medical equipment to sustain his life.
It could be argued that without acromegaly, Hawking could have had an infinite number of possibilities, but because of acromegaly, it has left him with only a limited number of areas to choose from in his life.