John D. Barrow

John D. Barrow was born in London in 1952 and attended Ealing Grammar School. He graduated in Mathematics from Durham University in 1974, received his doctorate in Astrophysics from Oxford University in 1977 (supervised by Dennis Sciama), and held positions at the Universities of Oxford and California at Berkeley before taking up a position at the Astronomy Centre, University of Sussex in 1981. He was professor of astronomy and Director of the Astronomy Centre at the University of Sussex until 1999. He is the author of 370 scientific articles in cosmology and astrophysics, and is a recipient of the Locker Prize for Astronomy and the 1999 Kelvin Medal of the Royal Glasgow Philosophical Society. He was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science degree by the University of Hertfordshire in 1999. He held a Senior 5-year Research Fellowship from the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council of the UK in 1994-9. He holds the Gresham Professorship of Astronomy for the period 2003-6. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2003.
In July 1999 he took up a new appointment as Professor of Mathematical Sciences at Cambridge University and Director of the Millennium Mathematics Project, a new initiative to improve the understanding and appreciation of mathematics and its applications amongst young people and the general public. He is also Fellow and Vice-President of Clare Hall College, Cambridge.
He is the author of more than 370 scientific articles and 16 books, translated into 28 languages, which explore many of the wider historical, philosophical and cultural ramifications of developments in astronomy, physics and mathematics: these include, The Left Hand of Creation (with Joseph Silk), The Anthropic Cosmological Principle (with Frank Tipler), L'Homme et le Cosmos (with Frank Tipler), The World Within the World, Theories of Everything, Pi in the Sky: counting, thinking and being, Pérche il mondo è matematico?, The Origin of the Universe, The Artful Universe, Impossibility: the limits of science and the science of limits, Between Inner Space and Outer Space, The Book of Nothing and The Constants of Nature: from alpha to omega, and most recently, The Infinite Book: a short guide to the boundless, timeless and endless. He has written a play, Infinities, which was performed (in Italian) at the Teatro la Scala, Milan, in the Spring of 2002 and again in 2003 under the direction of Luca Ronconi and in Spanish at the Valencia Festival. It was the winner of the Italian Premi Ubu award for best play in the Italian theatre in 2002 and the 2003 Italgas Prize for the promotion of science.
He is a frequent lecturer to audiences of all sorts in many countries. He has given many notable public lectures in many countries, including the 1989 Gifford Lectures at Glasgow University, the George Darwin and Whitrow Lectures of the Royal Astronomical Society, the Amnesty International Lecture on Science in Oxford, The Flamsteed Lecture, The Tyndall Lecture, The Brasher Lecture, The RSA Christmas Lecture for Children, and the Spinoza Lecture at the University of Amsterdam.
John Barrow also has the curious distinction of having delivered lectures on cosmology at the Venice Film Festival, 10 Downing Street, Windsor Castle and the Vatican Palace.


  CHAIRMEN
     
Ernesto Carafoli (Università degli Studi, Padua)
Orio Ciferri (Università di Pavia)
Gian Antonio Danieli (Università degli Studi, Padua)
Bernardino Fantini (University of Geneva)
Giovanni Giacometti (Università degli Studi, Padua)
Takashi Gojobori (National Institute of Genetics, Mishima)
Ladislav Kovac (Comenius University, Bratislava)
Pierre Lasserre (University of Paris VI)
Lucio Luzzatto (Istituto Nazionale per la Ricerca sul Cancro, Genoa)
Howard Moore (UNESCO-ROSTE)
  Giorgio Morpurgo (Università degli Studi di Perugia)
Piergiorgio Odifreddi (Università degli Studi di Torino)
Vittorio Sgaramella (Parco Tecnologico Padano - CERSA, Lodi)
Talal Younès (IUBS, Paris)
     

 

INVITED SPEAKERS
     
Werner Arber (University of Basel)
John Barrow (Cambridge University)
Giorgio Bernardi (Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Napoli)
Alec Boksenberg (Cambridge University)
Rita Colwell (University of Maryland, College Park)
Antoine Danchin (Institut Pasteur, Paris)
Christian de Duve (Christian de Duve Institute of Cellular Pathology, Bruxelles)
Graziano Fiorito (Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Napoli)
Richard Ernst (ETH, Zürich)
Giovanni Giacometti (Università di Padova)
Pierre Gilles de Gennes (Institut Curie, Paris)
Elkhonon Goldberg (New York Univeristy)
Takashi Gojobori (National Institute of Genetics, Mishima)
Susan Greenfield (Oxford University)
Daniel Hartl (Harvard University, Cambridge)
Motonori Hoshi (Keio University, Yokohama)
Hideaki Koizumi (Advanced Research Laboratory, Saitama)
Pier Luigi Luisi (Università degli Studi di Roma Tre)
Lucio Luzzatto (Istituto Nazionale per la Ricerca sul Cancro, Genova)
Gabriel Macaya (University of Costa Rica, San José)
Benno Müller-Hill (University of Cologne)
Arthur I. Miller (University College London)
Piergiorgio Odifreddi (Università degli Studi di Torino)
Pierre Papon (Ecole Supérieure de Physique et Chimie Industrielles de Paris)
Alain Prochiantz (CNRS - Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris)
Jörg Rasche (German Association for Analytical Psychology, Berlin)
Vittorio Sgaramella (Parco Tecnologico Padano - CERSA, Lodi)
Elliott Sober (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
Alessandro Schiesaro (King's College London)
Marvalee Wake (University of California, Berkeley)
Douglas Wallace (University of California, Irvine)
Emile Zuckerkandl (Institute of Molecular Medical Sciences, Palo Alto)

© Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti