Bernal Lecture

The Bernal Lecture[1] was an annual lecture on the social function of science organised by the Royal Society of London and endowed by Professor John Desmond Bernal. It was last delivered in 2004, after which it was merged with the Wilkins Lecture and Medawar Lecture to form the Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar Lecture.[2]

List of lecturers

Year Name Lecture Notes
1971Eric AshbyScience and Antiscience.
1974Conrad Hal WaddingtonThe new Atlantis revisited.
1977Piotr Leonidovich KapitzaScientific and social approaches for the solution of global problems.
1980John Maynard SmithScience, ideology and myth.
1983John ZimanThe collectivization of science.
1986Walter BodmerThe public understanding of science.
1989Walter PerryScience and education.
1992Alec JeffreysMolecular sleuthing: the story of DNA fingerprinting. (Sci. publ. Affairs Autumn 1993, 24.) (Delivered in 1993 in London and Keele.)
1995William StewartUK Science and Technology policy: a perspective from the past, a vision for the future. (Sci. publ. Affairs, Spring 1996.) (Delivered in London and Dundee.)
1998Tom BlundellThe networking of academic and industrial research: the UK phenomenon. (Delivered in London and York.)
2001Alan Lindsay MackayJD Bernal: his legacy to science and to society (Delivered in London.).
2004Michael Joseph CrumptonAre low-frequency environmental fields a health hazard?

References

  1. "The Bernal Lecture (1969)". Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  2. "The 2010 Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar Lecture". The Royal Society. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
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