When Murray Gell-Mann was starting out in physics, one of the big mysteries in the field was to understand the strong interactions, and especially the hadron resonances that proliferated in the 1950's. The existence of these resonances showed clearly that something very new was happening in physics at an energy scale of order one GeV. Another important mystery was to find the correct description of the weak interactions, and among other things to overcome the problems associated with the unrenormalizability of the simple though relatively successful Fermi theory. This problem pointed to a new development at a significantly higher energy scale.
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