Carvalho, J. J. (2007) «
The Scientist as Statesman: Biologists and Third World Health.»
Not exact matches
For a few, participation in public life may be a full - time job
as «
scientist -
statesmen» (e.g., Conant, Bush, Killian).
REVIEW: Benjamin Franklin: In His Own Words uses the vast collections of the Library of Congress to highlight the Franklin's achievements
as a writer and printer, an inventor and
scientist and
as a politician and
statesman.
Double - page spreads offer equally captivating information on his life
as a
statesman, publisher, philosopher, and
scientist.
Focusing on Benjamin Franklin's role
as a
scientist rather than a Founding Father and
statesman, this Giants of Science biography, featuring Kulikov's hallmark exaggerated illustrations, explains the many ways that Franklin was the American manifestation of the European Enlightenment, putting his discoveries in clear historical context.
I see Hans Ulrich
as a modern - day incarnation of Musil's Diotima, who runs salons in The Man Without Qualities, connecting writers to economists and philosophers to artists,
statesmen, and
scientists, and everything in between.
Though the eddies were mentioned
as early
as 1793 by Jonathan Williams, a grandnephew of American
scientist and
statesman Benjamin Franklin, they were not systematically studied until the early 1930s by the oceanographer Phil E. Church.