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Authors
Anderson,
P.W. (1923 ) a member of the technical
staff of the Bell Telephone Laboratories and visiting
professor of theoretical physics at Cavendish Laboratory,
Cambridge, England. He shared the 1977 Nobel Prize with
van Vleck and Neville Mott for their fundamental theoretical
investigation of the electronic structure of magnetic
and disordered systems, work related to the properties
of semiconductors.
Bronowski,
Jacob
Campbell,
Joseph
(1904-1987) mythologist and educator, professor
of literature at Sarah Lawrence College (1934-72). Famous
for his analysis of comparative mythology in The
Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949) and the four-volume
Masks of God (1959--68).
Dante
Alighieri
(1265-1321) medieval poet, author of The Divine
Comedy
Darwin,
Charles (1809-1882) English naturalist who
was the grandson of Erasmus Darwin and father of physicist
George Darwin. He was ship's naturalist aboard the H. M.S. Beagle.
The Beagle undertook a five year cruise around the world,
beginning December 27, 1831 and ending October 2, 1836.
During the course of the voyage, Darwin noticed how
species changed along the coast of South America, and
especially on the Galápagos Islands. Reflecting
on these observations he developed the theory of evolution
that bears his name.
Davies,
Paul professor of theoretical physics,
University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England. Prolific
popularizer of science.
Dewey,
John (1859-1952) professor of philosophy
at Columbia University, Americas most influential
philosophic force. His ideas about education revolutionized
the educational system of the US. Darwin's theory of
natural selection had a life-long impact upon Dewey's
thought, suggesting the importance of focusing on the
interaction between the human organism and its environment
when considering questions of psychology and the theory
of knowledge.
Among his influential books are Reconstruction in
Philosophy (1920), Human Nature and Conduct
(1922), Experience and Nature (1925), and The
Quest for Certainty (1929).
Dobzhansky,
Theodosius (1900-1975) famous Russian-American
geneticist who discovered the fruit fly's third chromosome
and made a cytological map of it.
Durant,
Will (1885-1981) historian and teacher, his
lectures on philosophy were published as The Story
of Philosophy (1926). It was a blend of biographical,
historical and philosophical material and became an
international bestseller. With his wife, Ariel, he wrote
over a period of 40 years the famous multivolume Story
of Civilization. The 10th volume received the Pulitzer
Prize in 1968 and the Durants received the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 1977.
Edman,
Irwin (1896-1954) professor of philosophy
at Columbia University from 1920 to 1954 . Renown as
an influencial teacher, essayist and poet. He wrote
several books, including Four Ways to Philosophy
(1937) and Philosopher's Holiday (1938), a collection
of informal reminiscences.
Einstein,
Albert (1879-1955) winner of the Nobel Prize
and author of the Theory of Relativity, is generally
regarded as one of the worlds most distinguished
scientists.
Eudoxus
(c. 400 B.C.) one of the greatest of the ancient
mathematicians, surpassed only by Archimedes. He was
born in Cnidos, on the Black Sea and studied mathematics
and medicine. At the age of 23 he went to Plato's academy
in Athens to study philosophy. Some time later he went
to Egypt to learn astronomy at Helopolis.In 365 B. C.
he returned to Athens and became a colleague of Plato.
He died in Cnidos at the age of 53 and was considered
the leading mathematician and astronomer of his day.
Books V, VI, and XII.Euclid's work on mathematics is
thought to be based on Eudoxus' work.
Faust,
Clarence H. (1901-1975) President of the
Ford Foundation's Fund for the Advancement of Education
and Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Sciences at
Stanford University also an ordained Evangelical minister
Frankfort,
H. and H.A.
France,
Anatole
Freud,
Sigmund
Golden,
Richard (1925- ) the editor of these pages.
High school teacher of the course Science and Philosophy
on which this website is based.
Gould,
Stephen Jay (1941- 2002) One of the most
influential evolutionary biologists of the 20th century.
Professor of paleontology at Harvard University. Well
known beyond his scientific discipline for his many
popular and graceful essays in Natural History Magazine
which were collected in many best selling books.
Hardin,
Garrett (1915- ) ecologist, educator from
the University of California: Santa Barbara. In such
books as Nature and Man's Fate (1959) and Exploring
New Ethics for Survival (1977) he argued that disease,
starvation, and social disorder will result unless human
population growth is curbed.
Heilbroner,
Robert L.
Hofstadter,
Richard (1916-1970)
American historian, major seminal influence in
intellectual and political history, taught at Columbia
from 1946 until his early death. His doctoral thesis,
Social Darwinism in American Thought (1944), won
the Beveridge Award from the American Historical Society.
Both his books The Age of Reform (1955) and Anti-Intellectualism
in American Life (1963) won Pulitzer Prizes. He
wrote a total of 13 books.
Huxley,
Julian
(1887-1975) English biologist, the grandson of
T H Huxley, professor of zoology and secretary to the
Zoological Society of London. He was the first director-general
of UNESCO (1946-8), and was knighted in 1958.
Huxley,
T. H. (1827-1895) English biologist who traveled
as a ship's surgeon on a voyage to Australia between
1846 and 1850. After reading Origin of Species,
he became Darwin's most devoted advocate and popularizer.
Jeans,
Sir James (1877-1946) English mathematician
and Astronomer Royal. Author of many widely known books
including The Universe Around Us, Astronomy and Cosmology,
The Mysterious Universe.
Kuhn,
Thomas S. (1922-1996) philosopher, historian
of science, originally trained as a physicist, he became
interested in the historical development of science
and in 1962 published The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions, a study of how scientific theories
are formed, judged, and supplanted. It has had wide
currency in many areas of contemporary thought. He taught
at Harvard, the University of California: Berkeley,
Princeton, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
LaPlace,
Pierre (1749-1827) French physicist
and mathematician famous for his advancement of the
calculus and his five volume Mécanique Céleste
(Celestial Mechanics) (1799-1825) summarizing and
extending the work of his predecessors.
Laszlo,
Ervin
Lindberg,
David C.
Lippmann,
Walter (1889-1974)
writer, editor, the most influential political
commentator of his time, sought after by world leaders
and followed by millions of loyal readers. His first
book, A Preface to Politics (1913), led to his
position as an editor for the influential New Republic.
In his book, A Preface to Morals (1929) he stressed
the importance disgrace of public "disinterestedness."
He won two Pulitzer Prizes.
Mayr,
Ernst (1904- ) one of the most distinguished
scholars in evolutionary biology, Agassiz Professor
of Zoology, Emeritus at Harvard University. His research
on avian evolution resulted in his seminal redefining
of the term "species" to describe an interbreeding
natural population reproductively isolated from other
such groups (1940). His philosophical writings emphasized
his belief that the future of human evolution depends
on education.
Matson,
Floyd W.
Mithen,
Steven
Pascal,
Blaise (1623-1662 ) published advanced work
in mathematics at 16. In 1645 he invented the first
mechanical calculator to help his father with his work
collecting taxes. It resembled a mechanical calculator
of the 1940's. He performed a series of experiments
on atmospheric pressure and discovered that air pressure
decreased with altitude. He concluded that there was
a vacuum above the Earths atmosphere and argued
with other scientists who did not believe a vacuum could
exist, including the famous Rene Descartes. In correspondence
with Fermat he laid the foundation for the theory of
probability. He died at the age of 39.
Malinowski,
Bronislaw (1884-1942) anthropologist, originally
from Poland. He went to London in 1910 and became professor
at the London School of Economics. In 1938 he went to
the USA, where he accepted a post at Yale. He was the
pioneer in fieldwork in anthropology.
Murray,
Gilbert (18661957) famous classical
scholar, professor of Greek at Oxford, translator of
Greek drama. Murray was active in the cause of world
peace. He was chairman (192338) of the League
of Nations Union and first president of the general
council of the United Nations Association. He also wrote
several books about international politics
LEWIS MUMFORD, one of the keenest of the younger American
critics, is equally well-known as essayist, social his-torian
and architectural authority. Among his books are Sticks.
and Stones, The Golden Day and Herman Melville.
JOSEPH
WOOD KRUTCH is the dramatic editor of the New York Nation.
Among his books are Edgar Allan
Poe: A Psychological Study, The Modern Temper and Five
Masters.
Randall,Jr.,
John Herman (1899-1980) professor of philosophy
at Columbia University for almost 50 years. His book
The Making of the Modern Mind, first appeared
in 1926 and, with revisions, is still in print. It is
a vital source of information on the influence of science
on culture.
Rogers,
Eric M.
Russell,
Bertrand (1872-1970) British philosopher
and mathematician. He wrote Principles of Mathematics
(1903), and collaborated with A N Whitehead in Principia
mathematica (1910--13). In 1916 his pacifism lost
him his fellowship at Trinity College (restored in 1944),
and in 1918 he served six months in prison. From the
1920s he lived by lecturing and journalism, and became
increasingly controversial. He visited the Soviet Union,
was professor at Peking (1920-1). The evils of Fascism
led him to renounce pacifism in 1939. Later works included
An Enquiry into Meaning and Truth (1940) and
Human Knowledge (1948). After 1949 he became
a champion of nuclear disarmament, and engaged in unprecedented
correspondence with several world leaders. He was awarded
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950.
Sagan,
Carl (1934-1996) American astronomer,
author, and popularizer of science and astronomy. He
received his Ph.D. in astrophysics at the University
of Chicago in 1960. Director of the Laboratory for Planetary
Studies at Cornell University. He is perhaps best known
for his creation of the popular public television series
Cosmos (1980).
Schrodinger,
Erwin (1887-1961) Austrian physicist who
invented wave mechanics in 1926. Wave mechanics was
an independent formulation of quantum mechanics to Heisenberg's
matrix mechanics. Like matrix mechanics, wave mechanics
mathematically described the behavior of electrons and
atoms. The central equation of wave mechanics, now known
as the Schrödinger equation, turned out to be much
simpler for physicists to solve in most cases.
Shapley,
Harlow (1885-1972) American astronomer who,
in 1918, discovered the galactic distance scale using
RR Lyrae and Cepheid variables.
Simpson,
George Gaylord
Sperry,
Roger
Spinoza,
Benedict De
(1632--1677)
a.k.a. Baruch Spinoza A philosopher of Jewish
ancestry and up-bringing, who was born and lived all
his life in Holland, and wrote in Scholastic Latin.
He was expelled from the synagogue with all the curses
available, universally detested for his supposed atheism
and blasphemy, and lived quietly, publishingly little,
and that reluctantly, as a lens-crafter; by all accounts
a perfect saint. He was competent as a natural scientist,
distinguished in politics and theology (well, not in
his own day...), and one of the greatest philosophers
ever. He died, much too soon, of lung-disease.
Tattersall,
Ian
Woodbridge,
Frederick J. E.
Wordsworth
, William (1770-1850)
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