Biography:James Trefil
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James S. Trefil (born September 10, 1938) is an United States physicist (Ph.D. in Physics at Stanford University in 1966) and author of nearly fifty books. Much of his published work focuses on science for the general audience. Dr. Trefil has previously served as Professor of Physics at the University of Virginia and he now teaches as Robinson Professor of Physics at George Mason University. Among Trefil's books is Are We Unique?, an argument for human uniqueness in which he questions the comparisons between human intelligence and artificial intelligence. Trefil also regularly gives presentations to judges and public officials about the intersections between science and the law.
Books
- Introduction to the Physics of Fluids and Solids (1975)
- From Atoms to Quarks (1980)
- The Unexpected Vista: A Physicist's View of Nature (1983)
- The Moment of Creation (1983)
- A Scientist at the Seashore (1984)
- Meditations at 10,000 Feet (1986)
- The Dark Side of the Universe (1989)
- Reading the Mind of God: In Search of the Principle of Universality (1989)
- 1,001 Things Everyone Should Know About Science (1992)
- A Scientist in the City (1994)
- The Edge of the Unknown: 101 Things You Don't Know about Science and No One Else Does Either (1996) ISBN:0-395-72862-2
- Are We Unique: A Scientist Explores the Complexity of the Human Brain (1997) ISBN:0-471-24946-7
- Other Worlds: The Solar System and Beyond? (1999)
- The Laws of Nature (2002)
- The Nature of Science: An A-Z Guide to the Laws and Principles Governing Our Universe (2003) ISBN:0-618-31938-7
- Human Nature: A Blueprint for Managing the Earth – By People, for People (2004) ISBN:0-8050-7248-9
- Why Science? (2007)
- Space Atlas: Mapping the Universe and Beyond (2012)
Co-authored
- (with Harold Morowitz, co-author) The Facts of Life? (1992)
- (with Robert Hazen, co-author) Science Matters: Achieving Scientific Literacy. (1991);
- (with Robert Hazen, co-author) The Sciences: An Integrated Approach. (1995)
- (with Margaret Hindle Hazen, co-author) Good Seeing: A Century of Science at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1902-2002
- (with Michael Summers, co-author) EXOPLANETS: Diamond Worlds, Super Earths, Pulsar Planets, and the Search for Life Beyond Our Solar System (2017)[1]
Edited
- The Encyclopedia of Science and Technology (2002)
Awards
- 2000 Andrew Gemant Award[2]
- 2007 Science Writing Award (American Institute of Physics) for his article Where is the universe heading? in Astronomy Magazine.[3]
References
- ↑ "New and Notable". Skeptical Inquirer (Center for Inquiry) 41 (4): 60. 2017.
- ↑ "Gemant Award Bestowed on Trefil". Physics Today 54 (3): 91–91. March 2001. doi:10.1063/1.1366074. Bibcode: 2001PhT....54R..91..
- ↑ "American Institute of Physics announces awards for best science writing". phys.org. 13 February 2018. https://phys.org/news/2008-02-american-physics-awards-science.html. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
Further reading
- Culotta, Elizabeth (15 March 1991). "Science's 20 Greatest Hits Take Their Lumps". Science 251 (4999): 1308–1309. doi:10.1126/science.251.4999.1308. Bibcode: 1991Sci...251.1308C.
- Kauffman, George B. (August 1991). "Science matters: Achieving scientific literacy (Hazen, Robert M.; Trefil, James)". Journal of Chemical Education 68 (8): A213. doi:10.1021/ed068pA213. Bibcode: 1991JChEd..68..213K. http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ed068pA213.
- Pool, R. (18 January 1991). "Science Literacy: The Enemy Is Us". Science 251 (4991): 266–267. doi:10.1126/science.251.4991.266. Bibcode: 1991Sci...251..266P.
- Pool, R. (13 April 1990). "Freshman Chemistry Was Never Like This: To battle science illiteracy among college students, the New Liberal Arts program tries a fresh approach to teaching science". Science 248 (4952): 157–158. doi:10.1126/science.248.4952.157. Bibcode: 1990Sci...248..157P.
- "James Trefil". George Mason University. 11 October 2010. https://robinsonprofessors.gmu.edu/about/james-trefil/. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
External links