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         Gell-mann Murray:     more books (56)
  1. Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in Twentieth-Century Physics.(Review)(Brief Article): An article from: The Antioch Review by Albert B. Stewart, 2000-03-22
  2. Albert Einstein Medal Recipients: Roger Penrose, Edward Witten, Murray Gell-Mann, John Archibald Wheeler, Stephen Hawking, Chen Ning Yang
  3. Strange Beauty Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in Twentieth-Century Physics - 1999 publication. by Gorg Johnson, 1999
  4. Sloan Research Fellowships: John Forbes Nash, Jr., Richard Feynman, Roald Hoffmann, Murray Gell-Mann, John Milnor, William Thurston
  5. A place removed from 'the pressure of received ideas'.(COMMENT: Murray Gell-Mann)(Santa Fe Institute): An article from: Science News by Tom Siegfried, 2009-09-12
  6. Save Murray Gell-Mann a spot in physics hall of fame.(FROM THE EDITOR): An article from: Science News by Tom Siegfried, 2009-09-12
  7. Murray Gell-Mann: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Donald R. Franceschetti, 2001
  8. Complex Systems Scientists: Stephen Wolfram, Murray Gell-Mann, Francisco Varela, Stuart Kauffman, Heinz Von Foerster, Ralph Abraham
  9. Strange Beauty. Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in Twentieth-Century Physics
  10. UNDERSTANDING COMPLEXITY IN THE PREHISTORIC SOUTHWEST. by George J., & Murray Gell-Mann (editors.). Gumerman, 1994
  11. Last of the Curlews by Fred Bodsworth, 1995-09
  12. Particle Physics by Murray Gell-Mann, 2005-12-30
  13. Topics in theoretical physics;: Lecture notes from Ph. 234 by Murray Gell-Mann, 1959
  14. Hyperons and heavy mesons: Systematics and decay by Murray Gell-Mann, 1957

41. USC Events Calendar - Physicist Murray Gell-Mann
murray gellmann is Professor and Co-Chairman of the Science Board Simple and theComplex. In 1969, Professor gell-mann received the nobel Prize in
http://www.usc.edu/calendar/events/17211.html
Today's Events This Week's Events March 2003 S M T W T F S Search to Submit Submit a New Event Event Categories Arts and Lectures
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Physicist Murray Gell-Mann
Art as Social Commentary
Tue, March 25, 2003 from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm Admission: General Public, $15; USC Faculty/Staff and Seniors,$13; USC Students with valid ID, $10 Bovard Auditorium (ADM) University Park Campus Buy Ticket Online 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. His "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." Although a theoretical physicist, Gell-Mann's interests extend to many other subjects including natural history, historical linguistics and archeology.

42. Murray Gell Mann
Translate this page gell-mann, murray (New York 1929), fisico statunitense, celebre per i suoi studisulle particelle Nel 1969 gell-mann fu insignito del premio nobel per la
http://space.tin.it/scienza/llpassal/gellmann.html
La Fisica delle particelle elementari MURRAY GELL-MANN Gell-Mann, Murray a cura di Pio Passalacqua Enrico Fermi Richard Feynman Murray Gell-Mann Sheldon Lee Glashow ... George Zweig

43. Biographies - Murray Gell-Mann
for nuclear particles and their interactions which got him the nobel prize in MurrayGellMann still lives today and works as a professor at the Science Board
http://grotto.virtualave.net/bios/gellmann.html
Murray Gell-Mann
Biography
Murray Gell-Mann, son of an austrian immigrant was born on September 15, 1929 in New York. Gell-mann worked for a short time at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, New Jersey before joining the faculty at the University of Chicago. He then later went on to become a professor at the California Institute of Technology. Gell-mann is perhaps best known of his discovery of classification scheme for nuclear particles and their interactions which got him the nobel prize in 1969. This led to his "8-fold way" theory which brought order to the discovery of 100 nuclear particles (particles found in the atom's nucleus). He would also later find out that all these particles, including the proton and neutron, were made of even smaller particles which he introduced as quarks. Murray Gell-Mann still lives today and works as a professor at the Science Board of the Sante Fe Institute. Did you know? that there's an informative science program on CBC Radio (88.5 FM) that is half-named after Gell-Mann's discovery of the quark, called Want more information on Murray Gell-Mann? Go visit the

44. Embedded.com - We Can't Predict The Behavior Of The Universe, Gell-Mann Says
nobel prizewinning physicist murray gell-mann used his tie to explain effectivecomplexity during his keynote address at the Embedded Systems Conference in
http://www.embedded.com/story/OEG20020314S0043

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We can't predict the behavior of the universe, Gell-Mann says
By Susan Rambo Embedded.com (03/14/02, 02:05:29 PM EDT) Nobel prize-winning physicist Murray Gell-Mann used his tie to explain effective complexity during his keynote address at the Embedded Systems Conference in San Francisco this week. Using the patterns on his own tie and others he brought (one notably a brand favored by Monica Lewinsky), Gell-Mann, the man who first identified and named the elementary particle known as the quark, demonstrated the difference between simplicity and complexity, defining complexity, known as "effective complexity" in scientific discourse, as the length of a compressed description of a subject's regularities as opposed to its random or incidental features. The regularities on complex-patterned ties take longer to describe than those on simple striped ties. Randomness versus regularity, however, is subjective, depending on who is judging and in what context. For instance, he does not look at the coffee stains on his tie when he's describing its regularities, whereas to his drycleaner the stains are the only regularities.

45. Gihon Foundation
murray gellmann, Ph.D. Recipient of the 1969 nobel Prize in physics for his workon the theory of elementary particles, he is currently Distinguished Fellow
http://www.gihon.com/pages/council/2000/gell-mann_01.html

Council on Ideas
Members:
M. Cherif Bassiouni
Murray Gell-Mann

Nikki Giovanni

Stanley Karnow
...
Anna C. Roosevelt
Murray Gell-Mann, Ph.D.
Print friendly version
info@gihon.com

46. Strange Beauty -- Murray Gell-Mann And The Revolution In Twentieth-Century Physi
No contemporary scientist has done more to shape our understanding of the universethan murray gellmann, the nobel Prize-winner many consider the most
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47. Strange Beauty -- Murray Gell-Mann And The Revolution In Twentieth-Century Physi
Acclaimed science writer George Johnson brings his formidable reporting skillsto the first biography of nobel Prizewinner murray gell-mann, the brilliant
http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0679437649
Search for Author/Title Keyword Title Author Publisher ISBN Featured Books in All Scholarly Subjects African American Studies African Studies American Studies Anthologies Anthropology Architecture Asian Studies Books on Books Chicago Cinema studies Media Studies Classical studies Critical Theory/Marxism Cultural Studies Geography Performance Studies Science studies Drama Economics Education Environmental studies Feminist theory/Women's study Fiction Folktales French Stuff General Interest Highlights History African African American American East Asia Eastern European European Latin American Medieval Middle East Russian South asian Southeast Asian Historiography Misc. History Humor International relations Journals Just for Fun Latin American/Caribbean St. Law Linguistics Literary Studies Literary Criticism Referenc Literary MOSTLY Theory Literary NOT Theory Mathematics Medicine/Health/AIDS Native American Studies Philosophy Photography Poetry Political Science/Sociology (Post)colonial studies Psychology Reference Foreign language reference General Reference Religious studies Black Theology Buddhist studies Islamic studies Biblical studies - New Test Biblical studies Old Test.

48. Bran Ferren / Fernando Flores / Murray Gell-Mann
1969 nobel Prize award in physics for his work on the theory of elementary GellMannwill speak from his vantage point at the convergence of physics, biology
http://www.acm.org/acm97/conference/ferren_flores_mann.html
1983 Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Technical Achievement Award for his Computer-Controlled Lightning Effects System (for such films as Places in the Heart and Deathtrap ); 1987 Scientific and Engineering Award for the Advanced Concept Optical Printer and the Laser Synchro-Cue System, for motion picture special effects and precise camera positioning.
Speaking on: How information technologies will transform the experience of telling, and listening to, stories : bringing back the lost art of interactive story telling, Ferren suggests, can rescue our declining state of education.
Founder, Chairman, and CEO of Business Design Associates, Inc.
Former Economics and Finance Minister of Chile, philosopher, author, and software entrepreneur. A major figure in computer software and management science, Flores' most recent collaboration, with Hubert Dreyfus and Charles Spinoza, is Disclosing New Worlds: Entrepreneurship, Democratic Action, and the Cultivation of Solidarity.
Speaking on: The impacts of information technology on business communications.

49. 21Oct96
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WILLIAM PERRY AND nobel LAUREATE murray gellmann WEIGH IN ONTHE IMPACT OF COMPUTING IN THE 21st CENTURY Diverse Group of Experts Convene
http://www.acm.org/acm97/press/21Oct96.html
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Chris Morgan
ACM Director of Public Relations
morgan@acm.org
Patricia Mozzillo
Technology Solutions
pmozzillo@tsipr.com

SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WILLIAM PERRY AND NOBEL LAUREATE MURRAY GELL-MANN WEIGH IN ON THE IMPACT OF COMPUTING IN THE 21st CENTURY
Diverse Group of Experts Convene For Global Discussion On The Next 50 Years of Computing
NEW YORK, NY, October 22, 1996

William Perry, U.S. Secretary of Defense and Nobel Prize-winning physicist, Murray Gell-Mann are the latest additions to the impressive roster of technology visionaries who will be exploring computers in the next millennium at ACM97 - the first major interactive event and technology expo to focus on the long term future of computing.
Next March, Perry and Gell-Mann will join with other leaders and thinkers from science, industry and academia to take a critical look at the impact of new technologies in our lives and to begin a global dialogue on navigating a common course for the future. The conference will take place as part of ACM97 - the Next 50 Years of Computing, being held at the San Jose Convention Center, March 1 - 5, 1997. ACM97 calls upon leaders from diverse disciplines, such as Perry and Gell-Mann, who are esteemed professionals in the fields of information intelligence and physics, respectively, to explore the possible implications of technological development on society, economy, environment, education, science and culture. As featured speakers, they will deliver their presentations in two of the 17 plenary sessions to take place at a three-day conference series planned for ACM97. The event is being organized by the Association for Computing (ACM) who selected Perry and Gell-Mann to present specific forward-looking topics.

50. AnyBook4Less.com - ISBN: 0679756884 - Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann And The R
and Frailties of a nobelPrize Physicist Comment George Johnson beautifully describesthe life and work of the nobel-Prize physicist murray gell-mann and the
http://www.anybook4less.com/detail/0679756884.html
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Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in 20Th-Century Physics
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Rating: Summary: Success and Frailties of a Nobel-Prize Physicist Comment: George Johnson beautifully describes the life and work of the Nobel-Prize physicist Murray Gell-Mann and the revolutionary history of elementary particle physics. In addition to how the important discoveries of the Eightfold Way and quarks were made, we learn Gell-Mann's diverse interests in linguistics, ornithology, archaeology, environmental problems and complex phenomena. The author writes not only about the physicist's brilliance and success but also his human frailties such as his experiences of writer's block and procrastination and his brooding temper, thus making the biography complete as viewed from every side. This is a good book for laypersons as well as for physicists.

51. Gell-Mann
gellmann, murray (szül. USA), amerikai fizikus; a szubatomi részecskék és kölcsönhatásaikosztályozásáért nyerte el 1969-ben a fizikai nobel-díjat
http://www.kfki.hu/~cheminfo/hun/olvaso/bh/bh6/gell.html

52. Gell_Mann.html
Today, murray gellmann is Professor and Co-Chairman of the Science Board of theSanta Fe Institute (SFI In 1969, gell-mann received the nobel Prize in
http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/Bahri/Gell_Mann.html
Murray Gell-Mann Biography B orn on September 15, 1929, in New York, New York, Murray Gell-Mann had a passion for learning that was seemingly inborn and insatiable. Son of Austrian-Hungarian immigrants, Murray and his brother, Ben, frequently visited museums and zoos, and explored their urban environment in an endless quest for knowledge. The passion for education was a family tradition, as Murray's father, Arthur Gell-Mann, established the Arthur Gell-Mann School of Languages, where he taught other immigrants to speak impeccable English. Arthur urged Murray to study all subjects, especially physical science and mathematicstwo subjects that Murray would later revolutionize with his brilliant ideas. Today, Murray Gell-Mann is Professor and Co-Chairman of the Science Board of the Santa Fe Institute (SFI). His book, The Quark and the Jaguar: Adventures in the Simple and the Complex , deals with Complex Adaptive Systems (see below), which are the focus of study at SFI. Gell-Mann's esteemed position at SFI is the result of his expertise in physics as well as cultural and linguistic studies. In 1969, Gell-Mann received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his research on elementary particles. He invented the "Eightfold Way" theory that attempted to harmonize over 100 chaotic subatomic particles within the nucleus of an atom. He discovered the most elementary particle known to science and named it the "quark". Using his data about quarks, Gell-Mann formed theories about the properties within an atom that keep the nucleus bound together.

53. Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann And The Revolution In 20th Century By George Jo
Strangely, murray gellmann, unlike Stephen Dawkins and Dick Feynman, is not wellknown outside scientific circles gell-mann was awarded the nobel Prize for
http://www.eclectica.org/v4n2/skea_johnson.html
Apr/May 2000 Book Reviews
Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in 20th Century
George Johnson
Jonathan Cape, Random House (February 2000) 435 pages
ISBN: 224 04427 3
reviewed by Ann Skea
"There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion". Francis Bacon. (Quoted by Murray Gell-Mann in an article explaining his theory of cosmic-ray particles whose behaviour seemed to defy the laws of physics.) George Johnson's choice of this poetic quotation to preface his biography of Murray Gell-Mann, is as good an example of his own apprehension of the poetic beauty of sub-atomic physics as it is of the breadth of Gell-Mann's learning and interests. Johnson, who is a science editor for the New York Times, writes fluent prose which is a pleasure to read. It captures the strange beauty of the sub-atomic world and the fascination of it: "It is sometimes said," he writes, "that the cathedrals of the late twentieth century are the giant particle accelerators, monuments to the belieffar from obvious on its facethat buried beneath the rough surface of the world we inhabit is a crystalline order so beautiful and subtle that the mind can barely grasp it." Johnson's own mind, like those of the physicists he writes about, grasps most of the theory describing this order, and he is superbly able to describe this abstract and abstruse theory in every-day, easily understandable terms. Writing of quantum wave theory, for example, he makes the different kinds of waves (scalar, vector, axial vector, pseudoscalar, tensor) like fingers on a hand held up to a mirror: "move your hand into the mirror and your double will seem to be pushing its hand outward; the vector is reversed. A axial vector is an arrow....it is not reversed in a mirror..."; and group theory mathematics is depicted by rotating a book or flipping it end-over-endoperations which physicists describe in complicated formulae but which Johnson makes sound simple.

54. Center For Business Innovation
. murray gellmann was awarded the nobel Prize in Physics in 1969, and is bestknown for his theory predicting the existence of quarks a discovery which
http://www.cbi.cgey.com/journal/issue1/features/ashare/author.html
Current Issue All Issues Coming Soon Credits and Contact ... Subscribe Home Journal Issue 1
The Big Idea

Innovation In Action

A Blueprint For Change

On The Horizon

Shared Conversation
John Kao on Corporate Creativity

Murray Gell-Mann on the Complex Adaptive Business

Bob Galvin on Learning At Motorola

Technology Watch
...
Inconclusion
SHARED CONVERSATION
John Kao Murray Gell-Mann Robert W. Galvin John Kao draws on an appropriately eclectic background in his study of corporate creativity. He is a Harvard-trained psychiatrist, a successful high-tech entrepreneur, and a film producer (of the award-winning "Sex, Lies, and Videotape"). But it's his avocation as a jazz pianist that has given him the best metaphors to describe how some companies manage creativity better than others. He teaches a course on the subject at Harvard Business School, and shared some highlights with us . . . Murray Gell-Mann was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1969, and is best known for his theory predicting the existence of "quarks"a discovery which sparked the development of a new branch of physics known as quantum chromodynamics. His interests extend to many other subjects, including archaeology, history, evolutionary biology, linguistics, learning, and creative thinking. He was able to bring all these subjects together as a founding member of the Santa Fe Institute, where he is involved in the study of complex adaptive systems.

55. Murray Gell-Mann
murray gellmann. murray gell-mann is an American physician. He made a quarkmodel of hadrons (with G. Zweig). He received a nobel Prize in 1969.
http://prioris.mini.pw.edu.pl/~wawrzek/tq98/gellmann.htm
Murray Gell-Mann Murray Gell-Mann is an American physician. Since 1955 he has worked in California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Member of National Science Academy in Washington. He is author of a lot of works about elementary particles. He discovered a quantum number - strangeness and, in 1961 particle Omega . He made a quark model of hadrons (with G. Zweig). He received a Nobel Prize in 1969.

56. Fitch - Autobiography
(In corso di traduzione in italiano). The nobel Prize in Physics. murray GellMannwas born on 15th September 1929, in New York City. He obtained his B.Sc.
http://scienzapertutti.lnf.infn.it/Gell-Mann-bio.html

Murray Gell-Mann
From Nobel Lectures , Physics 1980. (In corso di traduzione in italiano)
The Nobel Prize in Physics
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.

57. Murray Gell-Mann
murray gellmann. (1929 - ). murray gell-mann was born in 1929 in New YorkCity. The achievement earned him the nobel Prize for Physics in 1969.
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/biography/GellMann.html
Murray Gell-Mann
Source: Dor LeDor

58. Www.virginia.edu/topnews/textonlyarchive/October_1994/gellman.txt
nobel LAUREATE murray gellmann TO SPEAK AT U.VA. OCT. 26 CHARLOTTESVILLE,Va., Oct. 20 murray gell-mann, professor emeritus
http://www.virginia.edu/topnews/textonlyarchive/October_1994/gellman.txt

59. Università Degli Studi Di Modena E Reggio Emilia - Facoltà Di Ingegneria - FAC
nobel murray gell-mannINCONTRO CON IL PREMIO nobel murray gell-mann,
http://www.ingre.unimo.it/database/unire/ingegneria2.nsf/pagine/F96BA3147AF65965

60. The Scientist - North American Scientists Sweep This Year's Nobel Prizes
Three scientists shared the 1990 nobel Prize in physics Americans Jerome I Theirexperiments set out to prove the quark model that murray gellmann and George
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1990/nov/martello_p8_901112.html
The Scientist 4[22]:8, Nov. 12, 1990
News
North American Scientists Sweep This Year's Nobel Prizes
By Angela Martello Date: November 12, 1990 Advances in transplant science, synthetic organic chemistry, and the study of quarks have allowed six North American scientists to sweep this year's three Nobel science prizes. E. Donnall Thomas, 70, and Joseph E. Murray, 71, shared the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology for their work in transplant medicine. Thomas, director emeritus of the Seattle-based Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center's Division of Clinical Research, was cited for his pivotal work on bone marrow transplantationa treatment often offered as a last hope for patients afflicted with various types of leukemia and other blood-related and genetic disorders. In 1956, Thomas successfully transplanted donor marrow into a human patient. Thomas's Nobel Prize came swiftly on the heels of another highly regarded award: He and six other researchers recently received the 1990 Gairdner Foundation International Awards in recognition of their contributions to medical science (see People, page 25 of this issue). Murray, professor of surgery, emeritus, at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, was recognized by the Nobel committee for his pioneering work in transplant medicine. In 1954, Murray performed the first successful kidney transplant between identical twins. He later championed the use of organs from deceased donors and demonstrated that the application of whole body irradiation could induce immunosuppression, thus reducing the risk that the recipient would reject the donated organ.

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