BIOGRAPHY (detailed)
condensed version

Born:
Crowthorne, Berkshire, England, December l5, 1923.

Education:
Winchester College (England) 1936--1941.
University of Cambridge, 1941--43.

Served as civilian doing Operations Research at Headquarters, R.A.F. Bomber Command, 1943--1945.

B.A. in Mathematics, University of Cambridge, 1945.

Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, 1946--47.

Went to Cornell University in 1947 with a Commonwealth Fellowship.

Research Fellow, University of Birmingham, 1949--51

Became professor of physics at Cornell University in 1951.

Elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1952.

Professor of physics at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton,1953--1994. Professor Emeritus, 1994 to present.

Became an American Citizen in 1957.

Helped to design TRIGA reactor and ORION space-ship at General Atomic in San Diego, 1956--59.

Intermittently consulting in various parts of the government, in particular, the weapons laboratories, the Space Agency, the Disarmament Agency, and the Defense Department.

Served as Chairman of the Federation of American Scientists for 1962--63.

Elected member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences in 1964.

Visiting Professor at Yeshiva University, 1967--68.

Visiting Professor at the Max-Planck-Institute for Physics and Astrophysics in Munich, Germany, 1974--75.

Elected Corresponding Member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, 1975.

Has written popular scientific articles for magazines, in particular Scientific American and the New Yorker.

Awarded the Danny Heineman Prize by the American Institute of Physics in 1965.

Awarded the Lorentz Medal of the Royal Netherlands Academy in 1966.

Awarded the Hughes Medal of the Royal Society, London, November 1968.

Awarded the Max Planck Medal of the German Physical Society, September 1969.

Awarded the J. Robert Oppenheimer Memorial Prize, Center for Theoretical Studies, Miami, March 1970.

Awarded the Harvey Prize by the Technion, Haifa, Israel, March 1977.

"Disturbing the Universe," book commissioned by the Science Book Program of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and published by Harper and Row, New York and London, 1979. Translated into French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese and Chinese.

Awarded the Wolf Prize in physics by the Wolf Foundation of Herzlia, Israel, 1981.

Appeared in PBS television program "The Day After Trinity", April 29, 1981

"Weapons and Hope," book published by Harper and Row, New York, London, 1984.

Honorary Degrees:
Yeshiva University, 1966
University of Glasgow, 1974
Princeton University, 1974
University of York, 1980
City University of London, 1981
New School of Social Research, 1982
Rensselaer Polytechnic, 1983
Susquehanna University, 1984
Depauw University, 1987
Rider College, 1989
Bates College, 1991
Haverford College, 1991
Dartmouth College, 1995
Federal Inst. of Tech. (ETH), Switzerland, 1995
Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy, 1996
University of Puget Sound, 1997
Oxford University, 1997
Clarkson University, 1998
Rockefeller University, 2001
St. Peter's College, 2004
Georgetown University, 2005

National Books Critics Circle Award for Non-Fiction 1984.

"Origins of Life," book published by Cambridge University Press, Spring 1986.

"Infinite in All Directions," book published by Harper and Row, (Cornelia & Michael Bessie Books), Spring 1988.

Gemant Award, given by the American Institute of Physics for "creative work in the arts and humanities that derived from a deep knowledge of and love for physics," June 1988.

Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science for "Infinite in All Directions," November 1988.

Member of National Research Council Commission on Life Sciences, 1989--1991.

Elected Honorary Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, England, March 1989.

Elected Associé Etranger de l'Académie des Sciences, Paris, France, June 1989.

Britannica Award for dissemination of knowledge, January 1990.

Awarded the Matteucci Medal by the Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze dei Quaranta, Rome, Italy, March 1990.

Awarded the Oersted Medal by the American Association of Physics Teachers in San Antonio, Texas, January 22, 1991.

"From Eros to Gaia," an anthology of lectures and magazine articles written for the general public, published by Pantheon Books, June 1992.

Awarded the Wright Prize by Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, California, February 1994.

Montgomery Fellow at Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, September-December 1994.

Enrico Fermi Award given by U.S. Department of Energy, January 1995.

Lewis Thomas Prize, honoring the Scientist as Poet, by Rockefeller University awarded in May 1996.

Awarded the Antonio Feltrinelli International Prize by the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei in Rome, November 1996.

"Selected Papers of Freeman Dyson with Commentary" published by American Mathematical Society, 1996.

"Imagined Worlds," an expanded version of the 1995 Harvard-Jerusalem lectures, published by Harvard University Press, April 1997.

"The Sun, the Genome and the Internet," published by Oxford University Press, April 1999.

New revised edition of "Origins of Life" published by Cambridge University Press, 1999.

Rydell Professor at Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Minnesota, 1999.

Awarded the Joseph P. Burton award by the American Physical Society forum on Physics and Society, 1999.

Awarded the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion, 2000.

Elected an Honorary Member of the London Mathematical Society, 2000.

Served as member of NASA Advisory Council, 2001--2003.

Delivered Page-Barbour lectures at the University of Virginia, 2004.

Served as member of National Academy of Sciences committee on Next Generation Biowarfare Threats, 2004--2005.


home