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CONTACT: Frank Stephenson
(850) 644-8634
fstephenson@fsu.edu
January 2009WORLD-RENOWNED SCIENTISTS TO
CELEBRATE
DARWIN’S LIFE, LEGACY AT THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- This year marks the 200th birthday of
pioneering naturalist Charles Darwin and the 150th anniversary of
the publication of his book “The Origin of Species,” truly a
landmark work that changed the world. Celebrations and tributes,
both large and small, are scheduled around the globe this year, and
many are already under way.
At The Florida State University, two-time Pulitzer-Prize winning
author and world-renowned biologist E.O. Wilson will be among the
headliners of a two-week-long celebration of what discoveries in
science and the humanities have meant to modern civilization.
Wilson will join acclaimed Harvard cosmologist Lisa Randall; famed
anthropologist Don Johanson (co-discoverer of “Lucy,” the world’s
most famous fossil); Sean B. Carroll, noted biologist and author;
and Ira Flatow of National Public Radio’s “Science Friday,” among
many others, for the program, which begins March 16 and runs through
March 28.
Unlike many tributes scheduled around the nation and the world,
Florida State’s program, named “Origins ’09,” is designed to go
beyond Darwin’s legacy and show how the evolution of ideas in fields
ranging from physics to art have shaped what humans know not only
about life and nature but what that knowledge poses for the future.
The program will culminate in a special tribute to the origins of
jazz by a collaboration of musicians and performers from Florida
State’s College of Music and from Florida A&M University.
“Origins ‘09” is being sponsored by Florida State’s Office of
Research and is co-sponsored by Florida State’s College of Medicine
and the Tallahassee Scientific Society. It’s all part of a tribute
to 2009 as the Year of Science, a national designation inspired by
the 200th birthday of Darwin (Feb. 12).
Major funding for this event is being provided by the Florida
Humanities Council. All events are free and open to the public. For
the full schedule of events, as well as more information, visit
http://www.origins.fsu.edu.
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