Word: ryles
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Dave Jackson Trio--Ryle...
Dave Jackson Trio--Ryle's, Cambridge...
...accomplishment and for contributions to world peace. Writes Zuckerman: "The prizes cannot go, however great the importance of their contributions, to mathematicians, earth and marine scientists, astronomers, and many kinds of geologists and behavioral scientists." She notes that the rules have been bent a bit-for Radio Astronomers Martin Ryle and Anthony Hewish in 1974, and for Ethologists Konrad Lorenz, Nikolaas Tinbergen and Karl von Frisch in 1973. But still unlikely to be considered for the Nobel Prize are pioneers in exciting new fields like plate tectonics, a unified geological theory that explains continental drift, earthquakes, ocean trenches and mountain...
Died. Gilbert Ryle, 76, British philosopher and editor of the journal Mind (1948-71); after a stroke; in Whitby, England. Ryle, who taught at Oxford for 44 years, was a prolific writer with a fresh, piquant style. A linguistic analyst in the tradition of Wittgenstein and A. J. Ayer, he maintained that the true role of philosophy was to clarify, by closely examining the ways in which words were used. In his best-known work, The Concept of Mind (1949), Ryle held that the mind should not be viewed as operating separately from the body, like a "ghost...
...result of his efforts, astronomers can now clearly "see" in radio frequencies objects that are billions of light-years*- away, a feat that the Royal Academy equated to seeing a postage stamp on the moon with an optical telescope. Using Ryle's techniques, radio astronomers are extending their investigations to the very edge of the observable universe. Their findings are bringing man closer to an understanding of how the universe began and how it is evolving...