Murray Gell-Mann
Life Trustee, Science Board
Distinguished Fellow, Santa Fe Institute
Bio
Murray Gell-Mann is one of today’s most prominent scientists. He is
currently Distinguished Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. He is also
Robert Andrews Millikan professor emeritus at the California Institute
of Technology, where he joined the faculty in 1955. In 1969, he
received the Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of
elementary particles. He is the author of The Quark and the Jaguar,
published in 1994, in which his ideas on simplicity and complexity are
presented to a general readership.
Among his contributions to physics was the "eightfold way"
scheme that brought order out of the chaos created by the discovery of
some 100 kinds of particles in collisions involving atomic
nuclei. Professor Gell-Mann subsequently found that all of those
particles, including the neutron and proton, are composed of
fundamental building blocks with very unusual properties that he named
“quarks.” That idea has since been fully confirmed by experiment. The
quarks are permanently confined by forces coming from the exchange of
“gluons.” He and others later constructed the quantum field theory of
quarks and gluons, called “quantum chromodynamics,” which seems to
account for all the nuclear particles and their strong interactions.
Professor Gell-Mann was a director of the J.D. and C.T. MacArthur
Foundation from 1979-2002 and is a board member of the Wildlife
Conservation Society. From 1974 to 1988, he was a citizen regent of
the Smithsonian Institution. He belongs to the National Academy of
Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American
Philosophical Society, and the Council on Foreign Relations; he is
also a foreign member of the Royal Society of London. He was on the
President’s Science Advisory Committee from 1969 to 1972 and the
President’s Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology from 1994
to 2001.
In 1988, Professor Gell-Mann was listed on the United Nations
environmental program’s Roll of Honor for Environmental Achievement
(The Global 500). He also shared the 1989 Ettore Majorana “Science for
Peace” prize. Earlier, he was given the Ernest O. Lawrence Memorial
Award of the Atomic Energy Commission, the Franklin Medal of the
Franklin Institute, the Research Corporation Award, and the John
J. Carty Medal of the National Academy of Sciences. He has received
honorary degrees from many universities, including Yale, Columbia, the
University of Chicago, Cambridge, and Oxford. In 1994, the University
of Florida awarded him an honorary degree in environmental studies, and in 2005 Professor Gell-Mann was awarded the Albert Einstein Medal by the Albert Einstein Society.
Gell-Mann’s interests extend to historical linguistics, archaeology,
natural history, the psychology of creative thinking, and other
subjects connected with biological and cultural evolution and with
learning. Much of his recent research at the Santa Fe Institute has
focused on the theory of complex adaptive systems, which brings many
of those topics together. Professor Gell-Mann is spearheading the
Evolution of Human Languages program at the Santa Fe
Institute. Another focus of his work relates to simplicity,
complexity, regularity, and randomness. He is also concerned with how
knowledge and understanding are to be extracted from the welter of
“information” that can now be transmitted and stored as a result of
the digital revolution. Professor Gell-Mann lives in Santa Fe, New
Mexico. He teaches from time to time at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.