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(Redirected from Paul A Samuelson) American economist (1915–2009)

Paul Samuelson
Samuelson between 1970 and 1975
BornPaul Anthony Samuelson
(1915-05-15)May 15, 1915
Gary, Indiana, U.S.
DiedDecember 13, 2009(2009-12-13) (aged 94)
Belmont, Massachusetts, U.S.
EducationUniversity of Chicago (BA)
Harvard University (MA, PhD)
Spouses
Marion Crawford ​ ​(m. 1938; died 1978)
Risha Clay ​(m. 1981)
Academic career
FieldMacroeconomics
InstitutionMassachusetts Institute of Technology
School or
tradition
Neo-Keynesian economics
Doctoral
advisor
Joseph Schumpeter
Wassily Leontief
Doctoral
students
Lawrence Klein
Robert C. Merton
InfluencesKeynes • Schumpeter • Leontief • Haberler • Hansen • Wilson • Wicksell • Lindahl
ContributionsNeoclassical synthesis
Mathematical economics
Economic methodology
Revealed preference
International trade
Economic growth
Public goods
AwardsJohn Bates Clark Medal (1947)
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (1970)
National Medal of Science (1996)
Information at IDEAS / RePEc
Signature
Part of a series on
Macroeconomics
Federal Reserve
Basic concepts
Policies
Models
Related fields
SchoolsMainstream

Heterodox

People
See also

Paul Anthony Samuelson (May 15, 1915 – December 13, 2009) was an American economist who was the first American to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. When awarding the prize in 1970, the Swedish Royal Academies stated that he "has done more than any other contemporary economist to raise the level of scientific analysis in economic theory".

Samuelson was one of the most influential economists of the latter half of the 20th century. In 1996, when he was awarded the National Medal of Science. Samuelson considered mathematics to be the "natural language" for economists and contributed significantly to the mathematical foundations of economics with his book Foundations of Economic Analysis. He was author of the best-selling economics textbook of all time: Economics: An Introductory Analysis, first published in 1948. It was the second American textbook that attempted to explain the principles of Keynesian economics.

Samuelson served as an advisor to President John F. Kennedy and President Lyndon B. Johnson, and was a consultant to the United States Treasury, the Bureau of the Budget and the President's Council of Economic Advisers. Samuelson wrote a weekly column for Newsweek magazine along with Chicago School economist Milton Friedman, where they represented opposing sides: Samuelson, as a self described "Cafeteria Keynesian", claimed taking the Keynesian perspective but only accepting what he felt was good in it. By contrast, Friedman represented the monetarist perspective. Together with Henry Wallich, their 1967 columns earned the magazine a Gerald Loeb Special Award in 1968.

Biography

Samuelson in 1997

Samuelson was born in Gary, Indiana, on May 15, 1915, to Frank Samuelson, a pharmacist, and Ella née Lipton. His family, he later said, was "made up of upwardly mobile Jewish immigrants from Poland who had prospered considerably in World War I, because Gary was a brand new steel-town when my family went there". In 1923, Samuelson moved to Chicago where he graduated from Hyde Park High School (now Hyde Park Career Academy).

Samuelson attended the University of Chicago as an undergraduate, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1935. He said he was born as an economist at 8:00 am on January 2, 1932, in the University of Chicago classroom. The lecture mentioned as the cause was on the British economist Thomas Malthus, who most famously studied population growth and its effects. Samuelson felt there was a dissonance between neoclassical economics and the way the system seemed to behave; he said Henry Simons and Frank Knight were a big influence on him. He next completed his Master of Arts degree in 1936, and his Doctor of Philosophy in 1941 at Harvard University. He won the David A. Wells prize in 1941 for writing the best doctoral dissertation at Harvard University in economics, for a thesis titled "Foundations of Analytical Economics", which later turned into Foundations of Economic Analysis. As a graduate student at Harvard, Samuelson studied economics under Joseph Schumpeter, Wassily Leontief, Gottfried Haberler, and the "American Keynes" Alvin Hansen.

Samuelson moved to MIT as an assistant professor in 1940 and remained there until his death. Samuelson's biographer argues that a central reason for Samuelson's move from Harvard to MIT was the anti-Semitism that was famously widespread at Harvard at the time. In a 1989 letter to his friend Henry Rosovsky, Samuelson blamed anti-Semitism in Harvard economics above all on chair Harold Burbank, as well as on Edward Chamberlin, John H. Williams, John D. Black, and Leonard Crum.

Samuelson's family included many well-known economists, including brother Robert Summers, sister-in-law Anita Summers, brother-in-law Kenneth Arrow and nephew Larry Summers.

During his seven decades as an economist, Samuelson's professional positions included:

  • Assistant professor of economics at MIT, 1940; associate professor, 1944.
  • Member of the Radiation Laboratory 1944–45.
  • Professor of international economic relations (part-time) at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in 1945.
  • Guggenheim Fellowship from 1948 to 1949
  • Professor of economics at MIT beginning in 1947 and Institute Professor beginning in 1962.
  • Vernon F. Taylor Visiting Distinguished Professor at Trinity University (Texas) in spring 1989.

Death

Samuelson died after a brief illness on December 13, 2009, at the age of 94. His death was announced by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. James M. Poterba, an economics professor at MIT and the president of the National Bureau of Economic Research, commented that Samuelson "leaves an immense legacy, as a researcher and a teacher, as one of the giants on whose shoulders every contemporary economist stands". Susan Hockfield, the president of MIT, said that Samuelson "transformed everything he touched: the theoretical foundations of his field, the way economics was taught around the world, the ethos and stature of his department, the investment practices of MIT, and the lives of his colleagues and students". His second wife died in 2019.

Fields of interest

As professor of economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Samuelson worked in many fields, including:

Impact

Samuelson is considered one of the founders of neo-Keynesian economics and a seminal figure in the development of neoclassical economics. In awarding him the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, the committee stated:

More than any other contemporary economist, Samuelson has helped to raise the general analytical and methodological level in economic science. He has simply rewritten considerable parts of economic theory. He has also shown the fundamental unity of both the problems and analytical techniques in economics, partly by a systematic application of the methodology of maximization for a broad set of problems. This means that Samuelson's contributions range over a large number of different fields.

He was also essential in creating the neoclassical synthesis, which ostensibly incorporated Keynesian and neoclassical principles and still dominates current mainstream economics. In 2003, Samuelson was one of the ten Nobel Prize–winning economists signing the Economists' statement opposing the Bush tax cuts.

Samuelson believed unregulated markets have drawbacks, he stated, "free markets do not stabilise themselves. Zero regulating is vastly suboptimal to rational regulating. Libertarianism is its own worst enemy!" Samuelson strongly criticised Friedman and Friedrich Hayek, arguing their opposition to state intervention "tells us something about them rather than something about Genghis Khan or Franklin Roosevelt. It is paranoid to warn against inevitable slippery slopes ... once individual commercial freedoms are in any way infringed upon."

Aphorisms and quotations

Stanislaw Ulam once challenged Samuelson to name one theory in all of the social sciences that is both true and nontrivial. Several years later, Samuelson responded with David Ricardo's theory of comparative advantage: "That it is logically true need not be argued before a mathematician; that is not trivial is attested by the thousands of important and intelligent men who have never been able to grasp the doctrine for themselves or to believe it after it was explained to them."

For many years, Samuelson wrote a column for Newsweek. One article included Samuelson's most quoted remark and a favorite economics joke:

To prove that Wall Street is an early omen of movements still to come in GNP, commentators quote economic studies alleging that market downturns predicted four out of the last five recessions. That is an understatement. Wall Street indexes predicted nine out of the last five recessions! And its mistakes were beauties.

In the early editions of his famous, bestselling economics textbook Paul Samuelson joked that GDP falls when a man "marries his maid".

Publications

The competitive price system adapted from Samuelson, 1961

Foundations of Economic Analysis

Main article: Foundations of Economic Analysis

Paul Samuelson's book Foundations of Economic Analysis (1946) is considered his magnum opus. It is derived from his doctoral dissertation, and was inspired by the classical thermodynamic methods. The book proposes to:

  • Examine underlying analogies between central features in theoretical and applied economics and
  • Study how operationally meaningful theorems can be derived with a small number of analogous methods (p. 3),

in order to derive "a general theory of economic theories" (Samuelson, 1983, p. xxvi). The book showed how these goals could be parsimoniously and fruitfully achieved, using the language of the mathematics applied to diverse subfields of economics. The book proposes two general hypotheses as sufficient for its purposes:

  • Maximizing behavior of agents (including consumers as to utility and business firms as to profit) and
  • Economic systems (including a market and an economy) in stable equilibrium.

The first tenet suggests that all actors, whether firms or consumers, are striving to maximize something. They could be attempting to maximize profits, utility, or wealth, but it did not matter because their efforts to improve their well-being would provide a basic model for all actors in an economic system. His second tenet focuses on providing insight on the workings of equilibrium in an economy. Generally in a market, supply would equal demand. However, he noted that this isn't always the case and that the important thing to look at was a system's natural resting point. Foundations presents the question of how an equilibrium would react when it is moved from its optimal point. Samuelson was also influential in providing explanations on how the changes in certain factors can affect an economic system. For example, he could explain the economic effect of changes in taxes or new technologies.

In the course of analysis, comparative statics, (the analysis of changes in equilibrium of the system that result from a parameter change of the system) is formalized and clearly stated.

The chapter on welfare economics "attempt(s) to give a brief but fairly complete survey of the whole field of welfare economics" (Samuelson, 1947, p. 252). It also exposits on and develops what became commonly called the Bergson–Samuelson social welfare function. It shows how to represent (in the maximization calculus) all real-valued economic measures of any belief system that is required to rank consistently different feasible social configurations in an ethical sense as "better than", "worse than", or "indifferent to" each other (p. 221).

Economics

Main article: Economics: An Introductory Analysis

Samuelson is also author (and from 1985 co-author) of an influential principles textbook, Economics, first published in 1948 (19th ed. as of 2010; multiple reprints). The book sold more than 300,000 copies of each edition from 1961 through 1976 and was translated into forty-one languages. As of 2018, it had sold over four million copies. William Nordhaus joined as co-author on the 12th edition (1985). Sometime before 1988, it had become the best-selling economics textbook of all time.

Samuelson was once quoted as saying, "Let those who will write the nation's laws if I can write its textbooks." Written in the shadow of the Great Depression and the Second World War, it helped to popularize the insights of John Maynard Keynes. A main focus was how to avoid, or at least mitigate, the recurring slumps in economic activity.

Samuelson wrote: "It is not too much to say that the widespread creation of dictatorships and the resulting World War II stemmed in no small measure from the world's failure to meet this basic economic problem adequately." This reflected the concern of Keynes himself with the economic causes of war and the importance of economic policy in promoting peace.

Samuelson's book was the second to introduce Keynesian economics to a wide audience, and was by far the most successful. Canadian economist Lorie Tarshis, who had been a student attending Keynes's lectures at Harvard in the 1930s, published in 1947 an introductory textbook that incorporated his lecture notes, titled Elements of Economics.

Samuelson's textbook was a watershed in introducing the serious study of business cycles to the economics curriculum. It was particularly timely because it followed the Great Depression. The study of business cycles along with the introduction of the Keynesian approach of aggregate demand set the stage for the macroeconomic revolution in America, which then diffused throughout the world through translations into every major language. Generations of students, who then became teachers, learned their first and most influential lessons from Samuelson's Economics. It attracted many imitators, who became successful in different niches of the college market.

The text was not without criticism. While it praised the "mixed economy" of market and government, some found that too radical and attacked it as socialist. As a precursor to criticisms of Samuelson's Economics textbook, Lorie Tarshis's textbook was attacked by trustees of, and donors to, American colleges and universities as preaching a "socialist heresy". Piling on, William F. Buckley, Jr., in his 1951 book, God and Man at Yale, devoted an entire chapter, attacking both Samuelson's and Tarshis' textbooks. For Samuelson's book, Buckley drew from the Educational Examiner and credited it as an "excellent review of Samuelson's text." ("Note to Chapter Two." p. 234) For Tarshis' book, Buckley drew from Merwin K. Hart's organization to wit: "I am also grateful to the National Economic Council for its telling analysis of the Tarshis." ("Note to Chapter Two." p. 234) Buckley essentially characterized both as – in the words of Paul Davidson – "communist inspired". Buckley, for the rest of his life, defended the criticisms set forth in his book.

Other publications

There are 388 papers in Samuelson's Collected Scientific Papers. Stanley Fischer (1987, p. 234) writes that taken together they are "unique in their verve, breadth of economic and general knowledge, mastery of setting, and generosity of allusions to predecessors".

Samuelson was co-editor, along with William A. Barnett, of Inside the Economist's Mind: Conversations with Eminent Economists (Blackwell Publishing, 2007), a collection of interviews with notable economists of the 20th century.

Memberships

List of publications

Samuelson, Paul A. (1966), Vol. 1 → via Google Books, 1937–mid-1964.
Samuelson, Paul A. (1966), Vol. 2 → via Google Books, 1937–mid-1964.
Samuelson, Paul A. (1972), Vol. 3 → via Google Books, mid-1964–1970.
Samuelson, Paul A. (1977), Vol. 4 → via Internet Archive (registration required), 1971–76.
Samuelson, Paul A. (1986), Vol. 5 → via Google Books, 1977–1985 Description → via
Samuelson, Paul A. (2011), Vol. 6, 1986–2009. Description → via Wayback Machine
Samuelson, Paul A. (2011), Vol. 7, 1986–2009.

See also

Notes

Explanatory annotations

  1. The Educational Reviewer was founded in 1949 by Lucille Cardin Crain (née Marie Lucille Gabrielle Cardin; 1901–1983), a conservative activist whose primary interest was in – as she stated in 1951 – "rooting out radical influences in American education." In each issue, arch-conservative academicians and writers offered their views of high school and college textbooks as evidence of collectivist content and the like. The publication, for the first three years, was chiefly financed by William F. Buckley, Jr. Crain's husband, Kenneth Cardwell Crain (1883–1969), was a brother of Gustavus Demetrious Crain, Jr. (1885–1973), founder of Crain Communications.

References

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  26. Samuelson, P. A. (October 1, 1970). "The Fundamental Approximation Theorem of Portfolio Analysis in terms of Means, Variances and Higher Moments". The Review of Economic Studies. 37 (4): 537–542. doi:10.2307/2296483. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2296483.
  27. Samuelson, Paul A. (October 31, 1974). "Challenge to Judgment". The Journal of Portfolio Management. 1 (1): 17–19. doi:10.3905/jpm.1974.408496.
  28. Stolper, W. F.; Samuelson, P. A. (November 1, 1941). "Protection and Real Wages". The Review of Economic Studies. 9 (1): 58–73. doi:10.2307/2967638. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2967638.
  29. Samuelson, P. A. (1964). "Theoretical Notes on Trade Problems". Review of Economics and Statistics. 46 (2): 145–154. doi:10.2307/1928178. JSTOR 1928178.
  30. Samuelson, Paul A. (December 1958). "An Exact Consumption-Loan Model of Interest with or without the Social Contrivance of Money". Journal of Political Economy. 66 (6): 467–482. doi:10.1086/258100. ISSN 0022-3808.
  31. Samuelson, Paul A. (May 1939). "Interactions between the Multiplier Analysis and the Principle of Acceleration". The Review of Economics and Statistics. 21 (2): 75–78. doi:10.2307/1927758. JSTOR 1927758.
  32. Samuelson, Paul A.; Solow, Robert M. (1960). "Analytical Aspects of Anti-Inflation Policy". The American Economic Review. 50 (2): 177–194. ISSN 0002-8282. JSTOR 1815021.
  33. Tobin, James. "Macroeconomics and fiscal policy". Paul Samuelson and Modern Economic Theory. Eds. E. Cary Brown and Robert M. Solow. McGraw-Hill, 1983.
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  49. ^ Davidson, Paul (Autumn 2005). "Galbraith and the Post Keynesians". Journal of Post Keynesian Economics. 28 (1). Taylor & Francis, Ltd.: 103–113. JSTOR 4538962. Retrieved April 22, 2021 ("William F. Buckley attacked Tarshis's book as being communist inspired." p. 107){{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (linkISSN 0160-3477 (print publication); ISSN 1557-7821 (online publication); OCLC 5550151503, 192224991 (article).
  50. Davidson, Paul (Spring 2015). "What Was the Primary Factor Encouraging Mainstream Economists to Marginalize Post Keynesian Theory?". Journal of Post Keynesian Economics. 37 (3). Taylor & Francis, Ltd.: 369–383. doi:10.1080/01603477.2015.1000093. S2CID 154780517. ISSN 0160-3477 (print publication); ISSN 1557-7821 (online publication); ProQuest 1673822215 (abstract; database → ABI/INFORM Collection); OCLC 8504916331 (article).
  51. ^ Buckley, William F. Jr. (December 1951) . "Chapter 2: Individualism at Yale". God and Man at Yale: The Superstitions of "Academic Freedom (4th printing). Chicago: Henry Regnery Company. pp. 45–113. ISBN 9780895266927. Retrieved April 22, 2021 – via Internet Archive (Buckley's criticism of Tarshis's textbook, The Elements of Economics, begins at p. 49 and is expanded in Appendix VII → pp. 227, 230–231) {{cite book}}: External link in |postscript= (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link). OCLC 189667 (all editions).
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Jan Tinbergen
Laureate of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics
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    Stanley Cohen
    Donald A. Henderson
    Vernon B. Mountcastle
    George Emil Palade
    Joan A. Steitz
    1987
    Michael E. DeBakey
    Theodor O. Diener
    Harry Eagle
    Har Gobind Khorana
    Rita Levi-Montalcini
    1988
    Michael S. Brown
    Stanley Norman Cohen
    Joseph L. Goldstein
    Maurice R. Hilleman
    Eric R. Kandel
    Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
    1989
    Katherine Esau
    Viktor Hamburger
    Philip Leder
    Joshua Lederberg
    Roger W. Sperry
    Harland G. Wood
    1990s
    1990
    Baruj Benacerraf
    Herbert W. Boyer
    Daniel E. Koshland Jr.
    Edward B. Lewis
    David G. Nathan
    E. Donnall Thomas
    1991
    Mary Ellen Avery
    G. Evelyn Hutchinson
    Elvin A. Kabat
    Robert W. Kates
    Salvador Luria
    Paul A. Marks
    Folke K. Skoog
    Paul C. Zamecnik
    1992
    Maxine Singer
    Howard Martin Temin
    1993
    Daniel Nathans
    Salome G. Waelsch
    1994
    Thomas Eisner
    Elizabeth F. Neufeld
    1995
    Alexander Rich
    1996
    Ruth Patrick
    1997
    James Watson
    Robert A. Weinberg
    1998
    Bruce Ames
    Janet Rowley
    1999
    David Baltimore
    Jared Diamond
    Lynn Margulis
    2000s
    2000
    Nancy C. Andreasen
    Peter H. Raven
    Carl Woese
    2001
    Francisco J. Ayala
    George F. Bass
    Mario R. Capecchi
    Ann Graybiel
    Gene E. Likens
    Victor A. McKusick
    Harold Varmus
    2002
    James E. Darnell
    Evelyn M. Witkin
    2003
    J. Michael Bishop
    Solomon H. Snyder
    Charles Yanofsky
    2004
    Norman E. Borlaug
    Phillip A. Sharp
    Thomas E. Starzl
    2005
    Anthony Fauci
    Torsten N. Wiesel
    2006
    Rita R. Colwell
    Nina Fedoroff
    Lubert Stryer
    2007
    Robert J. Lefkowitz
    Bert W. O'Malley
    2008
    Francis S. Collins
    Elaine Fuchs
    J. Craig Venter
    2009
    Susan L. Lindquist
    Stanley B. Prusiner
    2010s
    2010
    Ralph L. Brinster
    Rudolf Jaenisch
    2011
    Lucy Shapiro
    Leroy Hood
    Sallie Chisholm
    2012
    May Berenbaum
    Bruce Alberts
    2013
    Rakesh K. Jain
    2014
    Stanley Falkow
    Mary-Claire King
    Simon Levin
    Chemistry
    1960s
    1964
    Roger Adams
    1980s
    1982
    F. Albert Cotton
    Gilbert Stork
    1983
    Roald Hoffmann
    George C. Pimentel
    Richard N. Zare
    1986
    Harry B. Gray
    Yuan Tseh Lee
    Carl S. Marvel
    Frank H. Westheimer
    1987
    William S. Johnson
    Walter H. Stockmayer
    Max Tishler
    1988
    William O. Baker
    Konrad E. Bloch
    Elias J. Corey
    1989
    Richard B. Bernstein
    Melvin Calvin
    Rudolph A. Marcus
    Harden M. McConnell
    1990s
    1990
    Elkan Blout
    Karl Folkers
    John D. Roberts
    1991
    Ronald Breslow
    Gertrude B. Elion
    Dudley R. Herschbach
    Glenn T. Seaborg
    1992
    Howard E. Simmons Jr.
    1993
    Donald J. Cram
    Norman Hackerman
    1994
    George S. Hammond
    1995
    Thomas Cech
    Isabella L. Karle
    1996
    Norman Davidson
    1997
    Darleane C. Hoffman
    Harold S. Johnston
    1998
    John W. Cahn
    George M. Whitesides
    1999
    Stuart A. Rice
    John Ross
    Susan Solomon
    2000s
    2000
    John D. Baldeschwieler
    Ralph F. Hirschmann
    2001
    Ernest R. Davidson
    Gábor A. Somorjai
    2002
    John I. Brauman
    2004
    Stephen J. Lippard
    2005
    Tobin J. Marks
    2006
    Marvin H. Caruthers
    Peter B. Dervan
    2007
    Mostafa A. El-Sayed
    2008
    Joanna Fowler
    JoAnne Stubbe
    2009
    Stephen J. Benkovic
    Marye Anne Fox
    2010s
    2010
    Jacqueline K. Barton
    Peter J. Stang
    2011
    Allen J. Bard
    M. Frederick Hawthorne
    2012
    Judith P. Klinman
    Jerrold Meinwald
    2013
    Geraldine L. Richmond
    2014
    A. Paul Alivisatos
    Engineering sciences
    1960s
    1962
    Theodore von Kármán
    1963
    Vannevar Bush
    John Robinson Pierce
    1964
    Charles S. Draper
    Othmar H. Ammann
    1965
    Hugh L. Dryden
    Clarence L. Johnson
    Warren K. Lewis
    1966
    Claude E. Shannon
    1967
    Edwin H. Land
    Igor I. Sikorsky
    1968
    J. Presper Eckert
    Nathan M. Newmark
    1969
    Jack St. Clair Kilby
    1970s
    1970
    George E. Mueller
    1973
    Harold E. Edgerton
    Richard T. Whitcomb
    1974
    Rudolf Kompfner
    Ralph Brazelton Peck
    Abel Wolman
    1975
    Manson Benedict
    William Hayward Pickering
    Frederick E. Terman
    Wernher von Braun
    1976
    Morris Cohen
    Peter C. Goldmark
    Erwin Wilhelm Müller
    1979
    Emmett N. Leith
    Raymond D. Mindlin
    Robert N. Noyce
    Earl R. Parker
    Simon Ramo
    1980s
    1982
    Edward H. Heinemann
    Donald L. Katz
    1983
    Bill Hewlett
    George Low
    John G. Trump
    1986
    Hans Wolfgang Liepmann
    Tung-Yen Lin
    Bernard M. Oliver
    1987
    Robert Byron Bird
    H. Bolton Seed
    Ernst Weber
    1988
    Daniel C. Drucker
    Willis M. Hawkins
    George W. Housner
    1989
    Harry George Drickamer
    Herbert E. Grier
    1990s
    1990
    Mildred Dresselhaus
    Nick Holonyak Jr.
    1991
    George H. Heilmeier
    Luna B. Leopold
    H. Guyford Stever
    1992
    Calvin F. Quate
    John Roy Whinnery
    1993
    Alfred Y. Cho
    1994
    Ray W. Clough
    1995
    Hermann A. Haus
    1996
    James L. Flanagan
    C. Kumar N. Patel
    1998
    Eli Ruckenstein
    1999
    Kenneth N. Stevens
    2000s
    2000
    Yuan-Cheng B. Fung
    2001
    Andreas Acrivos
    2002
    Leo Beranek
    2003
    John M. Prausnitz
    2004
    Edwin N. Lightfoot
    2005
    Jan D. Achenbach
    2006
    Robert S. Langer
    2007
    David J. Wineland
    2008
    Rudolf E. Kálmán
    2009
    Amnon Yariv
    2010s
    2010
    Shu Chien
    2011
    John B. Goodenough
    2012
    Thomas Kailath
    Mathematical, statistical, and computer sciences
    1960s
    1963
    Norbert Wiener
    1964
    Solomon Lefschetz
    H. Marston Morse
    1965
    Oscar Zariski
    1966
    John Milnor
    1967
    Paul Cohen
    1968
    Jerzy Neyman
    1969
    William Feller
    1970s
    1970
    Richard Brauer
    1973
    John Tukey
    1974
    Kurt Gödel
    1975
    John W. Backus
    Shiing-Shen Chern
    George Dantzig
    1976
    Kurt Otto Friedrichs
    Hassler Whitney
    1979
    Joseph L. Doob
    Donald E. Knuth
    1980s
    1982
    Marshall H. Stone
    1983
    Herman Goldstine
    Isadore Singer
    1986
    Peter Lax
    Antoni Zygmund
    1987
    Raoul Bott
    Michael Freedman
    1988
    Ralph E. Gomory
    Joseph B. Keller
    1989
    Samuel Karlin
    Saunders Mac Lane
    Donald C. Spencer
    1990s
    1990
    George F. Carrier
    Stephen Cole Kleene
    John McCarthy
    1991
    Alberto Calderón
    1992
    Allen Newell
    1993
    Martin David Kruskal
    1994
    John Cocke
    1995
    Louis Nirenberg
    1996
    Richard Karp
    Stephen Smale
    1997
    Shing-Tung Yau
    1998
    Cathleen Synge Morawetz
    1999
    Felix Browder
    Ronald R. Coifman
    2000s
    2000
    John Griggs Thompson
    Karen Uhlenbeck
    2001
    Calyampudi R. Rao
    Elias M. Stein
    2002
    James G. Glimm
    2003
    Carl R. de Boor
    2004
    Dennis P. Sullivan
    2005
    Bradley Efron
    2006
    Hyman Bass
    2007
    Leonard Kleinrock
    Andrew J. Viterbi
    2009
    David B. Mumford
    2010s
    2010
    Richard A. Tapia
    S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan
    2011
    Solomon W. Golomb
    Barry Mazur
    2012
    Alexandre Chorin
    David Blackwell
    2013
    Michael Artin
    Physical sciences
    1960s
    1963
    Luis W. Alvarez
    1964
    Julian Schwinger
    Harold Urey
    Robert Burns Woodward
    1965
    John Bardeen
    Peter Debye
    Leon M. Lederman
    William Rubey
    1966
    Jacob Bjerknes
    Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
    Henry Eyring
    John H. Van Vleck
    Vladimir K. Zworykin
    1967
    Jesse Beams
    Francis Birch
    Gregory Breit
    Louis Hammett
    George Kistiakowsky
    1968
    Paul Bartlett
    Herbert Friedman
    Lars Onsager
    Eugene Wigner
    1969
    Herbert C. Brown
    Wolfgang Panofsky
    1970s
    1970
    Robert H. Dicke
    Allan R. Sandage
    John C. Slater
    John A. Wheeler
    Saul Winstein
    1973
    Carl Djerassi
    Maurice Ewing
    Arie Jan Haagen-Smit
    Vladimir Haensel
    Frederick Seitz
    Robert Rathbun Wilson
    1974
    Nicolaas Bloembergen
    Paul Flory
    William Alfred Fowler
    Linus Carl Pauling
    Kenneth Sanborn Pitzer
    1975
    Hans A. Bethe
    Joseph O. Hirschfelder
    Lewis Sarett
    Edgar Bright Wilson
    Chien-Shiung Wu
    1976
    Samuel Goudsmit
    Herbert S. Gutowsky
    Frederick Rossini
    Verner Suomi
    Henry Taube
    George Uhlenbeck
    1979
    Richard P. Feynman
    Herman Mark
    Edward M. Purcell
    John Sinfelt
    Lyman Spitzer
    Victor F. Weisskopf
    1980s
    1982
    Philip W. Anderson
    Yoichiro Nambu
    Edward Teller
    Charles H. Townes
    1983
    E. Margaret Burbidge
    Maurice Goldhaber
    Helmut Landsberg
    Walter Munk
    Frederick Reines
    Bruno B. Rossi
    J. Robert Schrieffer
    1986
    Solomon J. Buchsbaum
    H. Richard Crane
    Herman Feshbach
    Robert Hofstadter
    Chen-Ning Yang
    1987
    Philip Abelson
    Walter Elsasser
    Paul C. Lauterbur
    George Pake
    James A. Van Allen
    1988
    D. Allan Bromley
    Paul Ching-Wu Chu
    Walter Kohn
    Norman Foster Ramsey Jr.
    Jack Steinberger
    1989
    Arnold O. Beckman
    Eugene Parker
    Robert Sharp
    Henry Stommel
    1990s
    1990
    Allan M. Cormack
    Edwin M. McMillan
    Robert Pound
    Roger Revelle
    1991
    Arthur L. Schawlow
    Ed Stone
    Steven Weinberg
    1992
    Eugene M. Shoemaker
    1993
    Val Fitch
    Vera Rubin
    1994
    Albert Overhauser
    Frank Press
    1995
    Hans Dehmelt
    Peter Goldreich
    1996
    Wallace S. Broecker
    1997
    Marshall Rosenbluth
    Martin Schwarzschild
    George Wetherill
    1998
    Don L. Anderson
    John N. Bahcall
    1999
    James Cronin
    Leo Kadanoff
    2000s
    2000
    Willis E. Lamb
    Jeremiah P. Ostriker
    Gilbert F. White
    2001
    Marvin L. Cohen
    Raymond Davis Jr.
    Charles Keeling
    2002
    Richard Garwin
    W. Jason Morgan
    Edward Witten
    2003
    G. Brent Dalrymple
    Riccardo Giacconi
    2004
    Robert N. Clayton
    2005
    Ralph A. Alpher
    Lonnie Thompson
    2006
    Daniel Kleppner
    2007
    Fay Ajzenberg-Selove
    Charles P. Slichter
    2008
    Berni Alder
    James E. Gunn
    2009
    Yakir Aharonov
    Esther M. Conwell
    Warren M. Washington
    2010s
    2011
    Sidney Drell
    Sandra Faber
    Sylvester James Gates
    2012
    Burton Richter
    Sean C. Solomon
    2014
    Shirley Ann Jackson
    John von Neumann Lecturers
    Presidents of the Econometric Society
    1931–1950
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    Presidents of the American Economic Association
    1886–1900
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