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Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2013

The Modern Concept of Substance

Frank Wilczek discussed the modern concept of substance and the nature of the Higgs particle following an introduction given by Jerome Friedman.
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

From the Archives

The Academy’s Special Collections include materials related to the family life of Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford, an American-born thermodynamic physicist, military officer, and inventor. Elected a Foreign Honorary Member in 1789, Rumford donated $5,000 in stock to the Academy, which later formed the basis of the prize that bears his name.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2001

Gordon Conway (Class V)

In the News
|
Oct 1, 2020

America’s Plastic Hour Is Upon Us

George Packer, in The Atlantic, considers whether America might now repair our broken democracy by entering an era of major reform - including the Academy's recommendations in Our Common Purpose.
Source
The Atlantic
Bulletin
|
Aug 15, 2013

The Benefit of Public Investment in Higher Education: California and Beyond

On January 28, 2013, the Academy honored Robert J. Birgeneau, Chancellor Emeritus of the University of California, Berkeley, at a special symposium on the benefit of public investment in higher education. Chancellor Birgeneau, Mary Sue Coleman, and Henry E. Brady participated in a conversation on the future of America’s system of public higher education, focusing on the California model and beyond.
Bulletin
|
Dec 5, 2022

American Institutions, Society & the Public Good

American Institutions, Society & the Public Good
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

From the Archives

April showers may bring May flowers, but May flowers among archival materials can bring a host of problems.
Bulletin
|
Dec 6, 2021

Board of Directors Statement on Climate Change

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences was founded in 1780, during the American Revolution, to provide guidance to a young nation. Throughout its 241-year history, the Academy’s leadership has seldom issued organizational statements, preferring to have its projects, studies, publications, and convenings present the best available thinking about the topics in question. However, when a situation arises – like climate change – that profoundly threatens the world, a call to action from the Academy’s Board of Directors is appropriate.
In the News
|
Dec 12, 2019

The Process Due: A Multidisciplinary Examination of the Devastating and Persistent Crisis in Legal Services

"Access to Justice," the Fall 2019 issue of Daedalus, is only the first of several efforts sponsored by the Academy to gather information about the national need for improved legal access, study innovations piloted around the country to fill this need, and advance a set of clear, national recommendations for closing the justice gap.
Source
Judicature
Press Release
|
Oct 8, 2005

American Academy Inducts 225th Class of Scholars, Scientists, Artists, Civic, Corporate and Philanthropic Leaders

Data Forum
|
Aug 18, 2014

Enclosed in a College Major? Variations in Course-taking among the Fields

One of the recurring questions the Humanities Indicators receives concerns the extent to which students are engaging with the humanities as undergraduates—a subject for which there is precious little data. The best available information comes from an occasional survey of college graduates, which includes a painstaking review of the college transcripts of a nationally representative sample of college graduates.
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

Forty Years of Evolution in the Galápagos Finches

Peter Grant and B. Rosemary Grant present their research studying evolutionary processes in the Galápagos finches, followed by a conversation with Zackory Burns (Hellman Fellow in Science and Technology Policy).
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2023

Noteworthy

SELECT PRIZES AND AWARDS TO MEMBERS
In the News
|
Jul 16, 2017

Reverse the decline in language education

While the world’s economy is increasingly global, fewer American students are studying how to speak a language other than English. That’s a backward slide that hurts the nation’s ability to compete economically and diminishes the overall quality of a typical American education. Citing Academy report on "America's Languages," the editorial board of the News & Observer makes the case for improving foreign language instruction.
Source
The News & Observer
Environmental Image Bisected by Fire Line
Academy Article
|
Aug 31, 2021

On Climate Change - A Statement from the Board of the Academy

The American Academy’s Board of Directors issued a statement about climate change to stand explicitly with the scientific community and others to recognize the urgent need for a long-term commitment by every segment of our society to address this global issue.
Press Release
|
Apr 10, 2003

American Academy President Patricia Meyer Spacks Addresses Joint Meeting of the Academy and the Boston Athenaeum

Bulletin
|
Jul 26, 2021

Empathy and Our Future

While many discussions in America are now focused on accountability versus unity, a concept that belongs in conversations about how America can recover from a divisive election, devastating pandemic, and long history of racial injustice is empathy. At a virtual Stated Meeting, Sherry Turkle (MIT) and Eric Liu (Citizen University) joined Academy President David Oxtoby in a conversation about what empathy looks like in an increasingly digital world, the search for authentic connections at a time of isolation and disunion, and the role authentic connection can play in repairing our civic culture.
Bulletin
|
Dec 5, 2022

Report of the Chair of the Board of Directors

This was a year of reemergence and celebration for the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Our building reopened for staff and events. We held a joyous Induction Weekend in September, making up for two years of cancellations due to the pandemic. And we finished a very successful capital campaign through the hard work of President David Oxtoby, campaign cochairs Louise Bryson and David Rubenstein, and Chief Advancement Officer Ginger Saariaho, exceeding our $100 million target. We are deeply grateful to them and to the members and friends who gave generously to support our work.
Bulletin
|
Mar 13, 2015

Dædalus Asks, “What is the Brain Good For?”

What is consciousness? How do we store memories, process thoughts, and command our bodies? Why do we require sleep to live? And can we trust our perception of the world around us? The Winter 2015 issue of Dædalus responds to these fundamental questions of human experience, exploring “What is the Brain Good For?” through recent developments and new theories in the field of neuroscience.
In the News
|
Feb 27, 2018

Universities Are Vital for Bridging the Science Gap

The best way we can transcend ideology is to teach our students, regardless of their majors, to think like scientists.
Source
Scientific American

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