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         Gell-mann Murray:     more books (56)
  1. The Quark and the Jaguar: Adventures in the Simple and the Complex by Murray Gell-Mann, 1995-09-15
  2. Murray Gell-mann: Selected Papers (World Scientific Series in 20th Century Physics) by Harald Fritzsch, 2010-02-08
  3. Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in Twentieth-Century Physics by George Johnson, 2000-10-17
  4. The Evolution Of Human Languages (Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity Proceedings) by John A. Hawkins, Murray Gell-mann, 1992-10-20
  5. The Eightfold Way by Murray Gell-mann, Yuval Ne'eman, 2000-09-05
  6. Nonextensive Entropy: Interdisciplinary Applications (Santa Fe Institute Studies on the Sciences of Complexity)
  7. Understanding Complexity In The Prehistoric Southwest (Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity Proceedings, Vol 16) by George J. Gumerman, Murray Gell-mann, 1994-07-20
  8. Elementary Particles and the Universe: Essays in Honor of Murray Gell-Mann
  9. Le Quark et le Jaguar : Voyage au coeur du simple et du complexe by Murray Gell-Mann, 2000-01-01
  10. El Quark Y El Jaguar (Spanish Edition) by Murray Gell-Mann, 2002-01
  11. Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution of 20th-Century Physics by George Johnson, 1996
  12. GELL-MANN, MURRAY (1929- ): An entry from Gale's <i>World of Earth Science</i>
  13. Biography - Gell-Mann, Murray (1929-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  14. Murray Gell-Mann

1. Murray Gell-Mann - Biography
A short biography from the nobel prize museumCategory Science Physics Quantum Mechanics People...... murray gellmann was in 1955 married to J. Margaret Dow; they have a daughter,Elizabeth, and a son, Nicholas. From nobel Lectures, Physics 1963-1970.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1969/gell-mann-bio.html
Murray Gell-Mann was born on 15th September 1929, in New York City. He obtained his B.Sc. at Yale University in 1948, and his Ph.D. in 1951 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology . In 1952 he became a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, during 1952-1953 he was instructor at the University of Chicago , from 1953 to 1954 he was Assistant Professor, in 1954 he was appointed Associate Professor for research on dispersion relations. In this period he developed the strangeness theory and the eightfold way theory. In 1956 he was appointed Professor, his research then turned more to the theory of weak interactions.
In 1959 Professor Gell-Mann was awarded the Dannie Heineman Prize of the American Physical Society. He is a Fellow of this society and a member of the National Academy of Sciences
Murray Gell-Mann was in 1955 married to J. Margaret Dow; they have a daughter, Elizabeth, and a son, Nicholas. From Nobel Lectures , Physics 1963-1970.

2. Murray Gell-Mann Winner Of The 1969 Nobel Prize In Physics
Beauty murray gellmann and the Revolution in 20th-Century Physics by George Johnson,2000. Featured Internet Links Google, Search WWW Search The nobel Prize
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1969a.html
M URRAY G ELL -M ANN
1969 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for his contributions and discoveries concerning the classification of elementary particles and their interactions.
Background
    Born: 1929
    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
Book Store Featured Internet Links

    Search WWW Search The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Nobel News Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

3. Ten Nobels For The Future
1979 Wiesel, Elie Peace, 1986 Zewail, Ahmed H. Chemistry, 1999 Zinkernagel, RolfM. Medicine, 1996, nobel Laureate in Physics, 1969 murray gellmann was born in
http://www.hypothesis.it/nobel/eng/bio/gellmann.htm

Allais, Maurice
Economics, 1988
Altman, Sidney
Chemistry, 1989
Arber, Werner
Medicine, 1978
Arrow, Kenneth J.
Economics, 1972
Baltimore, David
Medicine, 1975
Becker, Gary S.
Economics, 1992
Black, James W.
Medicine, 1988
Brown, Lester R.

Buchanan, James M.
Economics, 1986
Charpak, Georges
Physics, 1992 Dahrendorf, Ralf Dausset, Jean Medicine, 1980 Economics, 1983 de Duve, Christian Medicine, 1974 Dulbecco, Renato Medicine, 1975 Ernst, Richard R. Chemistry, 1991 Esaki, Leo Physics, 1973 Fo, Dario Literature, 1997 Gell-Mann, Murray Physics, 1969 Glashow, Sheldon Lee Physics, 1979 Guillemin, Roger C.L. Medicine, 1977 Hoffmann, Roald Chemistry, 1981 Jacob, François Medicine, 1965 Kindermans, Jean-Marie Peace 1999 Klein, Lawrence R. Economics, 1980 Kroto, Harold W. Chemistry, 1996 Lederman, Leon M.

4. Dieci Nobel Per Il Futuro
Translate this page Fisica, 1979 Wiesel, Elie Pace, 1986 Zewail, Ahmed H. Chimica, 1999 Zinkernagel,Rolf M. Medicina, 1996, nobel per la Fisica 1969 murray gell-mann, nato a New
http://www.hypothesis.it/nobel/ita/bio/gellmann.htm

Allais, Maurice
Economia, 1988
Altman, Sidney
Chimica, 1989
Arber, Werner
Medicina, 1978
Arrow, Kenneth J.
Economia, 1972
Baltimore, David
Medicina, 1975
Becker, Gary S.
Economia, 1992
Black, James W.
Medicina, 1988
Brown, Lester R.

Buchanan, James M.
Economia, 1986
Charpak, Georges
Fisica, 1992 Dahrendorf, Ralf Dausset, Jean Medicina, 1980 Debreu, Gérard Economia, 1983 de Duve, Christian Medicina, 1974 Dulbecco, Renato Medicina, 1975 Ernst, Richard R. Chimica, 1991 Esaki, Leo Fisica, 1973 Fo, Dario Letteratura, 1997 Gell-Mann, Murray Fisica, 1969 Glashow, Sheldon Lee Fisica, 1979 Guillemin, Roger C.L. Medicina, 1977 Hoffmann, Roald Chimica, 1981 Jacob, François Medicina, 1965 Kindermans, Jean-Marie Pace, 1999 " Klein, Lawrence R. Economia, 1980 Kroto, Harold W. Chimica, 1996 Lederman, Leon M. Fisica, 1988 Lehn, Jean-Marie Chimica, 1987 Leontief, Wassily

5. HotAIR - Nobel Thoughts: Murray Gell-Mann
HOME AIRCHIVES PAPERAIR VOLUME 6ISSUE 3 nobel Thoughts murray gell-mann.nobel Thoughts murray gell-mann. Profound insights of the laureates.
http://www.improb.com/airchives/paperair/volume6/v6i3/gell-mann-2000-06.html
HOME AIRCHIVES PAPERAIR VOLUME 6-ISSUE 3 > Nobel Thoughts: Murray Gell-Mann
Nobel Thoughts: Murray Gell-Mann
Profound insights of the laureates by Marc Abrahams
Murray Gell-Mann is a Distinguished Fellow and Co-Chairman of the Science Board of the Santa Fe Institute. He is also the Robert Andrews Millikan Professor of Theoretical Physics Emeritus at the California Institute of Technology. In 1969 Gell-Mann was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics "for his contributions and discoveries concerning the classification of elementary particles and their interactions." Do you often give nicknames to people or things?
Not especially. Sometimes using the etymology of the names, but otherwise not. Are there any nicknames you are known by?
Not that I know of. Never, throughout your life?
Not really. No. Sometimes people abbreviate my first name to "Murr," but it's pretty unusual. See, it already has the "ee" sound on the end, which is a typical diminutive: Charlie, Bobby, Harry... I s that typical of people with "ee" sounds at the end of their names, not to have nicknames?

6. HotAIR - Nobel Thoughts: Murray Gell-Mann
HOME AIRCHIVES PAPERAIR VOLUME 6ISSUE 3 nobel Thoughts murray gell-mann.Boys Will Be Boys. Research by and for adolescent males of all ages and sexes.
http://www.improb.com/airchives/paperair/volume6/v6i3/boys-be-boys-6-3.html
HOME AIRCHIVES PAPERAIR VOLUME 6-ISSUE 3 > Nobel Thoughts: Murray Gell-Mann
Boys Will Be Boys
Research by and for adolescent males of all ages and sexes compiled by Katherine Lee
Whence the Ill Wind Blows
"Differentiation of Mouth Versus Gut as Site of Origin of Odoriferous Breath Gases After Garlic Ingestion," F. Suarez, et al., American Journal of Physiology, vol 76, no. 2, pt. 1, February 1999, pp. G426-30. (Thanks to Ewald Schnug for bringing this to our attention.)
Ecological Nether Niche
"The Biology and Adaptations of the Hippopotamus Leech Placobdelloides jaegerskioldi (Glossiphoniidae) to Its Host," J.H. Oosthuizen and Ronald W. Davies, Canadian Journal of Zoology, vol.72, no. 3, March 1994, pp.418-22. (Thanks to Steve Mirsky and N.B.Olsen for bringing this to our attention.) Having investigated more than 2000 leeches in rectums from 40 (dead) rhinos, the authors conclude that
"Evidence suggests that mating in P. jaegerskioeldi is restricted to the rectum of the hippopotamus".
A Kink in the Works
"Penile injuries from vacuum cleaners," N.D. Citron, and F. J. Wade

7. Murray Gell-Mann Brief Biography
murray gellmann is Professor and Co-Chairman of the Science Board of the SantaFe Institute In 1969, Professor gell-mann received the nobel Prize in
http://www.santafe.edu/sfi/People/mgm/mgmbio.html
home page vita publications
Murray Gell-Mann
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY
Murray Gell-Mann is Professor and Co-Chairman of the Science Board of the Santa Fe Institute, and author of the popular science book, The Quark and the Jaguar, Adventures in the Simple and the Complex In 1969, Professor Gell-Mann received the Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles. Professor Gell-Mann's "eightfold way" theory brought order to the chaos created by the discovery of some 100 particles in the atom's nucleus. Then he found that all of those particles, including the neutron and proton, are composed of fundamental building blocks that he named "quarks." The quarks are permanently confined by forces coming from the exchange of "gluons." He and others later constructed the quantum field theory of quarks and gluons, called "quantum chromodynamics," which seems to account for all the nuclear paticles and their strong interactions. Besides being a Nobel laureate, Professor Gell-Mann has received the Ernest O. Lawrence Memorial Award of the Atomic Energy Commission, the Franklin Medal of the Franklin Institute, the Research Corporation Award, and the John J. Carty medal of the National Academy of Sciences. He has been awarded honorary doctoral degrees from many institutions, including Yale University, the University of Chicago, the University of Turin, Italy, and Cambridge and Oxford Universities, England. In 1988 he was listed on the United Nations Environmental Program Roll of Honor for Environmental Achievement (the Global 500). In 1994 he shared the 1989 Erice "Science For Peace" Prize.

8. Murray Gell-Mann Publications
murray gellmann. and Complex Adaptive Systems, in JA Hawkins and M. gell-mann (eds.),The 93, Superstring Theory, Closing Talk at the 67th nobel Symposium in
http://www.santafe.edu/sfi/People/mgm/mgmpubs.html
home page brief biography vita
Murray Gell-Mann
Publications
Regularities and randomness: Evolving schemata in science and the arts, in Art and Complexity, J. Casti and A. Karlqvist, Eds., Elsevier Science, pp. 47 - 58, (2003) Plectics: The study of simplicity and complexity, europhysics news, Vol. 33 no. 1, pp. 17 - 20 (2002) "What is Complexity?," in Alberto Quadrio Curzio and Marco Fortis (eds.), Complexity and Industrial Clusters: Dynamics and Models in Theory and Practice. (Heidelberg, Germany: Physica-Verlag, 2002). pp. 13 - 24. (New York, NY: The New York Academy of Sciences, 2001). pp. 41-49. "Simplicity and Complexity," In S.M. Fitzpatrick and J.T. Bruer, (Eds.), Carving Our Destiny: Scientific Research Faces a New Millennium , (Joseph Henry Press, Washington, D.C., 2001) pp. 305-311. Contribution to "Science, Technology and the Natural Environment." In The Great Conversation , (The Aspen Institute, 2000) pp. 76-77. "Pulling Diamonds from the Clay," in Peter J. Denning (ed.), Talking Back to the Machine: Computers and Human Aspiration. (New York, NY: Copernicus, 1999). pp. 155-168. The Garden of Live Flowers in V. Stefan (ed.), Physics and Society: Essays in Honor of Victor Frederick Weisskopf by the International Community of Physicists. (Springer-Verlag 1998). pp. 109-121.

9. Gell-Mann, Murray
murray gellmann, 1983. Kevin Fleming/Corbis. (b. Sept. 15, 1929, New York, NY,US), American physicist, winner of the nobel Prize for Physics for 1969 for his
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/229_62.html

10. Nobel Prize Winners G-I
of nerve fibres, gellmann, murray, 1969, physics, US, classificationof elementary particles and their interactions, Gennes, Pierre-Gilles
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_g-i.html
Article Year Category Country* Achievement Literary Area Gabor, Dennis physics U.K. invention of holography Gajdusek, D. Carleton physiology/medicine U.S. studies of origin and spread of infectious diseases Galsworthy, John literature U.K. novelist literature Colombia novelist, journalist, social critic peace Mexico Gasser, Herbert Spencer physiology/medicine U.S. researches on differentiated functions of nerve fibres Gell-Mann, Murray physics U.S. classification of elementary particles and their interactions Gennes, Pierre-Gilles de physics France discovery of general rules for behaviour of molecules Giaever, Ivar physics U.S. tunneling in semiconductors and superconductors Giauque, William Francis chemistry U.S. behaviour of substances at extremely low temperatures literature France novelist, essayist Gilbert, Walter chemistry U.S. development of chemical and biological analyses of DNA structure Gilman, Alfred G. physiology/medicine U.S. discovery of cell signalers called G-proteins Gjellerup, Karl Adolph literature Denmark novelist Glaser, Donald A.

11. Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel Laureate And Creative Physicist
murray gellmann, nobel Laureate. I met murray gell-mann when he visited ImperialCollege around 1958 when I was a student, and again at Trieste, 1964.
http://www.mth.kcl.ac.uk/~streater/gellmann.html
Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel Laureate
I met Murray Gell-Mann when he visited Imperial College around 1958 when I was a student, and again at Trieste, 1964. I also saw him at Goteborg, 1968, on the occasion of the Nobel Symposium. He won the prize a year later; it was said that more than half the Nobel advisors had suggested him in 1969, a figure which, if true, has never been remotely matched before or since. His prediction of the existence and properties of the Omega-minus was probably what convinced many physicists that Gell-Mann should be nominated. Go to my HOME PAGE for more links.

12. Edge: MURRAY GELL-MANN
murray gellmann is a theoretical physicist; Robert Andrews Millikan Professor Emeritusof Institute of Technology; winner of the 1969 nobel Prize in physics
http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bios/gell-mann.html
The
Third
Culture Home About Edge Features Edge Editions ... Edge Search "The first thing that makes me respect Murray is that unlike all his contemporaries, including Feynman, Weinberg, Hawking, and all the other particle physicists, he saw that complexity is the next big problem. The kind of breakthroughs he made in the early 1960's in terms of impact on the world are not going to get made in that domain, they are going to get made in this domain. Murray recognized that, and has become more than just conversant with what's going on and with what the problems are." -J. Doyne Farmer "There's nothing like having a Nobel laureate around to liven up discussions on almost any topic." -Christopher G. Langton "Murray is the greatest living American theoretical physicist." -Lee Smolin Murray Gell-Mann
"The Sante Fe Institute, which I helped to found in 1984, gathers together mathematicians, computer scientists, physicists, chemists, neurobiologists, immunologists, evolutionary biologists, ecologists, archaeologists, linguists, economists, political scientists, and historians, among others. The emphasis is on interactive people. Many distinguished scientists and scholars yearn to stray outside their own fields but can't do so easily at their own institutions. We didn't want to locate our institute near Harvard or Stanford, where there's enormous pressure of received ideas - ideas accepted by a whole community and therefore difficult to challenge. In Sante Fe, we can think and talk freely, constrained only by the need to agree with reality."

13. PBS - The Nobel: Visions Of Our Century
In addition to his affinity for science, gellmann's interests include His diversestrengths led a colleague to say, murray has no Biography - nobel e-Museum.
http://www.pbs.org/kqed/nobel/laureates/gellmann.html
Gell-Mann's "eightfold way" theory brought order to the chaos created by the discovery of some 100 particles in the atom's nucleus. He showed that all of these, as well as the neutron and proton, are composed of fundamental particles, including the ones he named "quarks." Gell-Mann is currently distinguished fellow of the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico, which he co-founded in 1984. His work since then has focused on simplicity and complexity in nature, as described in his popular book, The Quark and the Jaguar. In addition to his affinity for science, Gell-Mann's interests include natural history, archaeology, historical linguistics, psychology and history. His diverse strengths led a colleague to say, "Murray has no particular talent for physics, but he's so smart he's a great physicist anyway." Additional Links Biography - Nobel e-Museum Biography - PBS Discussion of Gell-Mann's Work - Emory University Gell-Mann's Home Page at the Santa Fe Institute (Includes Some of his Writings) Johnson, George.

14. A Science Odyssey: People And Discoveries: Murray Gell-Mann
The names alone that gellmann applies to his new theories A colleague once said, murray has no particular talent for the same year he won the nobel Prize in
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/bpgell.html
Murray Gell-Mann
Photo courtesy of AIP Emilio Segre Visual Archives Murray Gell-Mann started early. He entered Yale University at age 15. After receiving his B.S. there, he worked with Enrico Fermi at the University of Chicago. He obtained his PhD from MIT and in 1955 married archaeologist J. Margaret Dow. He has been a professor of physics and theoretical physics at California Institute of Technology for much of his career. During the 1950s, discoveries of new subatomic particles were proliferating so quickly such that scientists spoke of a "particle zoo." Gell-Mann turned his attention to some particles that behaved particularly strangely. He proposed a new quantum property of particles he called the "strangeness number." While studying particles, he found even more general characteristics that allowed him to sort them into eight "families." He called this grouping the eightfold way, referring to Buddhist philosophy's eight attributes of right living. Then he found that the eightfold way could really best be explained by a particle, undiscovered as yet, that had three parts (hadrons), each holding a fraction of a charge. He called them "quarks" with a nod to James Joyce, whose novel Finnegan's Wake contains the passage: "Three quarks for Muster Mark!" Fractional charge seemed an outrageous suggestion at first, but proof came for his theoretical quarks in 1974.

15. Challenge Cast
murray gellmann received the nobel Prize in 1969, after inventingthe theory of quarks as fundamental building blocks of matter.
http://www.hyper-mind.com/hypermind/universe/cast.htm
Giants of Knowledge
Steven Weinberg , University of Texas at Austin Steven Weinberg is a giant of theoretical physics. He received the Nobel Prize in 1979 for inventing a theory that unifies two of the four fundamental forces of nature. A talented author, he wrote the international popular science best seller "The First Three Minutes". He is professor at the University of Texas at Austin. "I think that one of the things that I love so much about physics is the dialogue with nature... and this dialogue is not one in which nature always agrees with the physicists!"
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Carlo Rubbia , C.E.R.N. Carlo Rubbia is a former director of CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics, and a fearless experimental physicist. He shared the Nobel Prize in 1984 with Simon van der Meer for the discovery of particles that proved Steven Weinberg's theory on the unification of forces. "One should not forget that our scientific domain is called nature philosophy. Therefore it is a domain where experiment, measure and scientific observation have the last word."
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16. Murray Gell-Mann
murray gellmann has been described as The Man With Five Brains and it's not hardto arms control and foreign relations oh yes, and he has a nobel prize for
http://www.geocities.com/omegaman_uk/gellmann.html
Science
Is this the cleverest man in the world?
He won a Nobel prize, but since then his interests have widened. Now he's on a quest for a real Theory of Everything
Murray Gell-Mann has been described as The Man With Five Brains and it's not hard to understand why. He is an emeritus professor of physics, an international advisor on the environment, an authority on the origin of languages, arms control and foreign relations oh yes, and he has a Nobel prize for solving a key mystery of the universe.
Despite his sprite-like appearance, he also has a reputation for dealing with fools the way a killer whale deals with penguins. But then, it cannot be easy being The Man With Five Brains in a world with more than its fair share of Men With Half A Brain.
Pausing in London to talk to Focus about his new book on the science of (almost) everything, he pulls out a slip of paper he has been given in a major London bookstore. It shows that his book The Quark and the Jaguar has been classified under "Fiction - General", and the author as "Mann, M. Gell" .A review in the Sunday Times spells his name Gell-Man."
For someone who spends his time thinking about subjects most people cannot even spell, it must all be a bit wearing. But he has had time to get used to it: the fact is Gell-Mann has been a prodigy almost all his 65 years.

17. TechTV | On 'The Screen Savers': Amiga, Physicist Murray Gell-Mann, And More
On tonight's show nobel laureate and physicist murray gellmann talksabout physics. Bill McEwen, CEO of Amiga, talks about developments
http://www.techtv.com/screensavers/shownotes/story/0,24330,2189418,00.html
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Email this story On tonight's show Nobel laureate and physicist Murray Gell-Mann talks about physics. Bill McEwen, CEO of Amiga , talks about developments in the Amiga computing platform. AMD's new Athlon processor: How fast is it ? It's all on tonight's episode of "The Screen Savers." For all the links to tonight's show, read the list below. Today's headlines Question of the day Have stealthy scammers scared you away from online auctions?

18. TechTV | On 'The Screen Savers': Amiga, Physicist Murray Gell-Mann, And More
murray gellmann nobel laureate and physicist murray gell-mann talks about physics.Learn more about quarks. gell-mann's book can be purchased from Amazon.
http://www.techtv.com/screensavers/print/0,23102,2189418,00.html
On 'The Screen Savers': Amiga, Physicist Murray Gell-Mann, and More
Catch everything Wednesday 3/13 at 7 p.m. Eastern on 'The Screen Savers.'
Also airs 3/13 at 10 p.m., 3/14 at 1 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Eastern.

On tonight's show
Nobel laureate
and physicist Murray Gell-Mann talks about physics. Bill McEwen, CEO of Amiga , talks about developments in the Amiga computing platform. AMD's new Athlon processor: How fast is it ? It's all on tonight's episode of "The Screen Savers." For all the links to tonight's show, read the list below. Today's headlines
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19. Murray Gell-Mann
NOVEMBER 12, 1999Murray gellmann, winner of the 1969 nobel Prize in physics forhis work on the theory of elementary particles, will deliver a free public
http://www.oberlin.edu/news-info/99nov/gell-mann.html
Nobel Prize-winning Physicist to Lecture on the Simple and the Complex By Marci Janas
Murray Gell-Mann N OVEMBER Murray Gell-Mann , winner of the 1969 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles, will deliver a free public lecture at 4:30 P.M. Monday, November 15, in King 306. The title of his talk is "Plectics: The Study of Simplicity and Complexity." Gell-Mann, who introduced the word quark into the lexicon, is the author of the popular science book The Quark and the Jaguar: Adventures in the Simple and the Complex. Gell-Mann's eightfold-way theory brought order to the chaos created by the discovery of some 100 particles in the atom's nucleus. Later Gell-Mann found that all the particles, including the neutron and proton, are composed of fundamental building blocks that he named quarks. He and others have constructed the quantum field theory of quarks and gluons, called quantum chromodynamics, which seems to account for all the nuclear particles and their strong interactions. The winner of many other awards and honors, Gell-Mann is professor and cochair of the Santa Fe Institute Science Board and the Robert Andrews Millikan Professor of Theoretical Physics Emeritus at the California Institute of Technology. (Millikan, also a Nobel Prize-winner, graduated from Oberlin College in 1891.) Gell-Mann taught at Cal Tech from 1955 until 1993.

20. Complexity Conference To Feature Nobel Laureate Gell-Mann
Speakers include nobel laureate murray Gell Mann and Alex d'Arbeloff(SB 1949), Chairman of Teradyne and of the MIT Corporation.
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/tt/1999/nov10/complexity.html
Published by the MIT News Office at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
November 10
Tech Talk Search MIT News ... MIT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1999
Complexity conference to feature Nobel laureate Gell-Mann
Engineering is in the midst of an explosion of complexity. New semiconductor chips contain a billion subcircuits. A new car contains 20 microprocessors. Home health care systems are being designed that monitor the heartbeat and temperature of a home's occupants. A conference November 19-20 at the University Hotel in Cambridge, sponsored by MIT and the Santa Fe Institute, will address this trend by bringing together a variety of people from academia and industry who are working on complex systems. Speakers include Nobel laureate Murray Gell Mann and Alex d'Arbeloff (SB 1949), Chairman of Teradyne and of the MIT Corporation. "Cars, computers, and even toasters are more complex than they were 10 years ago. But greater complexity brings both new benefits and new problems. For example, the new computerized cars can be more flexible and reliable than the old `dumb' ones, but when they break down, they do so in weird new ways. The purpose of the conference is to determine the implications this `complexification' has for society, and to develop techniques and strategies for engineering complex but reliable systems," said Seth Lloyd, organizer of the Complexity in Engineering Conference and the Finmeccanica Career Development Associate Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering.

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