John 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
325 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.
In July 1999 he took up a new appointment as Research
Professor of Mathematical Sciences at Cambridge 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 the author of 15 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 and The Book of Nothing. His most recent book, The Constants
of Nature: from alpha to omega has just been published by Random House. He
has written a play, Infinities, which was performed (in Italian) at the
Teatro la Scala, Milan, in the Spring of 2002 under the direction of Luca
Ronconi and in Spanish at the Valencia Festival.
He was awarded the 2006 Templeton Prize for "Progress
Toward Research or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities" for his
"writings about the relationship between life and the universe, and the
nature of human understanding [which] have created new perspectives on
questions of ultimate concern to science and religion". He is a member of
a United Reformed Church, which he describes as teaching "a traditional
theistic picture of the universe"
He was awarded the Dirac Prize and Gold Medal of the Institute
of Physics in 2015 and the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 2016
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