d
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Nikolay Danilevsky
Philosopher, Academic Author, Journalist / 1822 - 1885
Russian historical philosopher and naturalist Nikolay Danilevsky wanted Russia to establish a cultural identity independent of the West.
See full bio
(1822-1885)
Philosopher, Academic Author, Journalist
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Dante
Philosopher, Scholar, Poet / 1265 - 1320
Poet, writer, political thinker. Dante was a Medieval Italian poet and philosopher whose poetic trilogy, The Divine Comedy, made an indelible impression on both literature and theology.
See full bio
(1265-1320)
Philosopher, Scholar, Poet
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Angela Davis
Scholar, Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Academic Author / 1944 -
Angela Davis is an activist, scholar and writer who advocates for the oppressed. She has authored several books, including Women, Culture & Politics.
See full bio
(1944-)
Scholar, Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Academic Author
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Simone de Beauvoir
Philosopher, Academic Author, Journalist / 1908 - 1986
French writer Simone de Beauvoir laid the foundation for the modern feminist movement. Also an existentialist philosopher, she had a romance with Sartre.
See full bio
(1908-1986)
Philosopher, Academic Author, Journalist
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Marquis de Condorcet
Mathematician, Writer / 1743 - 1794
Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas de Caritat is best known work in mathematics and support of the French Revolution.
See full bio
(1743-1794)
Mathematician, Writer
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Miguel de la Madrid
Educator, Economist, World Leader / 1934 - 2012
Miguel de la Madrid was president of Mexico from 1982 to 1988. He was a political conservative and his administration was characterized by an economic crisis.
See full bio
(1934-2012)
Educator, Economist, World Leader
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Bartolomé de Las Casas
Historian, Explorer, Political Leader, Missionary, Writer / 1474 - 1566
Originally a soldier, Bartolomé de Las Casas later worked against the oppression of indigenous races by Europeans.
See full bio
(1474-1566)
Historian, Explorer, Political Leader, Missionary, Writer
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Michel de Montaigne
Philosopher, Scholar, Journalist / 1533 - 1592
Michel de Montaigne was a 16th century French author best known for his series of philosophical essays, which were published in 1575.
See full bio
(1533-1592)
Philosopher, Scholar, Journalist
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Maximilien de Robespierre
Philosopher, Scholar, Activist, Lawyer, Judge, Journalist, Government Official / 1758 - 1794
Maximilien de Robespierre was an official during the French Revolution and one of the principal architects of the Reign of Terror.
See full bio
(1758-1794)
Philosopher, Scholar, Activist, Lawyer, Judge, Journalist, Government Official
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Marquis de Sade
Philosopher, Criminal, Author / 1740 - 1814
Marquis de Sade was a French aristocrat and philosopher who became notorious for acts of sexual cruelty in his writings as well as in his own life.
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| Watch video
(1740-1814)
Philosopher, Criminal, Author
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Benedict de Spinoza
Philosopher / 1632 - 1677
Dutch philosopher Benedict de Spinoza was expelled from his synagogue for his rationalist ideas about God, which he later published in his 1677 work, Ethics.
See full bio
(1632-1677)
Philosopher
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Alexis de Tocqueville
Historian, Academic Author, Journalist, Government Official / 1805 - 1859
Alexis de Tocqueville was a French historian and political scientist best known for his early work on the American political system Democracy in America.
See full bio
(1805-1859)
Historian, Academic Author, Journalist, Government Official
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Miguel de Unamuno
Educator, Philosopher, Scholar, Journalist, Author, Poet / 1864 - 1936
Miguel de Unamuno (y Jugo) was a Spanish philosopher and writer best known for his novel Abel Sánchez.
See full bio
(1864-1936)
Educator, Philosopher, Scholar, Journalist, Author, Poet
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Cosimo de' Medici
Historian, Art Collector, Business Leader, Political Leader, Royalty / 1389 - 1464
Cosimo de' Medici was the "Elder" and start of the Medici dynasty that ruled Florence (Italy) from the late Middle Ages through the Renaissance, and after.
See full bio
(1389-1464)
Historian, Art Collector, Business Leader, Political Leader, Royalty
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Michael DeBakey
Educator, Inventor, Doctor, Surgeon / 1908 - 2008
Michael DeBakey was an American cardiovascular surgeon and surgical pioneer.
See full bio
(1908-2008)
Educator, Inventor, Doctor, Surgeon
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W. Edwards Deming
Educator, Mathematician, Business Leader / 1900 - 1993
W. Edwards Deming was a statistician and business consultant whose methods help hasten Japan's recovery after WWII and beyond.
See full bio
(1900-1993)
Educator, Mathematician, Business Leader
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Jacques Derrida
Philosopher, Scholar, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Journalist / 1930 - 2004
Jacques Derrida was an influential postmodern French philosopher who developed the analytic method known as Deconstruction.
See full bio
(1930-2004)
Philosopher, Scholar, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Journalist
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René Descartes
Philosopher, Mathematician, Scientist, Academic Author / 1596 - 1650
Philosopher and mathematician René Descartes is regarded as the father of modern philosophy for defining a starting point for existence, “I think; therefore I am.”
See full bio
(1596-1650)
Philosopher, Mathematician, Scientist, Academic Author
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John Dewey
Educator, Philosopher, Academic Author / 1859 - 1952
Educator John Dewey originated the experimentalism philosophy. A proponent of social change and education reform, he founded The New School for Social Research.
See full bio
(1859-1952)
Educator, Philosopher, Academic Author
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Melvil Dewey
Educator, Scholar, Journalist / 1851 - 1931
Melvil Dewey was a librarian and scholar who developed the Dewey Decimal Classification system for cataloging books and other library materials.
See full bio
(1851-1931)
Educator, Scholar, Journalist
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Dorothea Dix
Educator, Activist / 1802 - 1887
Dorothea Dix was an educator and social reformer whose devotion to the welfare of the mentally ill led to widespread international reforms.
See full bio
(1802-1887)
Educator, Activist
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Theodosius Dobzhansky
Educator, Biologist, Geneticist / 1900 - 1975
Theodosius Dobzhansky was a 20th century scientist, professor and author who did pioneering work in genetics and evolution.
See full bio
(1900-1975)
Educator, Biologist, Geneticist
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William Dodd
Historian, Diplomat / 1869 - 1940
William Dodd was an American historian and diplomat who wrote about the antebellum South and the Civil War.
See full bio
(1869-1940)
Historian, Diplomat
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Christian Doppler
Educator, Mathematician, Physicist / 1803 - 1853
Austrian physicist Christian Doppler first described the Doppler effect, in reference to the observed frequency of light and sound waves, in the paper "Concerning the Coloured Light of Double Stars."
See full bio
(1803-1853)
Educator, Mathematician, Physicist
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William O. Douglas
Educator, Lawyer, Judge, Supreme Court Justice, Government Official / 1898 - 1980
William O. Douglas was a government official who in 1939 became the second youngest Supreme Court justice in U.S. history.
See full bio
(1898-1980)
Educator, Lawyer, Judge, Supreme Court Justice, Government Official
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W.E.B. Du Bois
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Journalist / 1868 - 1963
W.E.B. Du Bois was one of the most important African-American activists during the first half of the 20th century. He co-founded the NAACP and supported Pan-Africanism.
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| Watch video
(1868-1963)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Journalist
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René Dubos
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Environmental Activist, Biologist, Academic Author, Editor, Journalist / 1901 - 1982
René Dubos, credited for the maxim "Think globally, act locally." performed groundbreaking research which led to the discovery of major antibiotics.
See full bio
(1901-1982)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Environmental Activist, Biologist, Academic Author, Editor, Journalist
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Renato Dulbecco
Educator, Scientist / 1914 - 2012
Renato Dulbecco was an Italian virologist best known winning the Nobel Prize for pioneering the growing of viruses in culture in the 1950s.
See full bio
(1914-2012)
Educator, Scientist
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Ann Dunham
Anthropologist / 1942 - 1995
Ann Dunham was the mother of Barack Obama, who became the 44th president of the United States and the first African-American to hold this office.
See full bio
(1942-1995)
Anthropologist
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Katherine Dunham
Anthropologist, Activist, Choreographer, Journalist / 1909 - 2006
Katherine Dunham was an American dancer, choreographer and anthropologist noted for her innovative interpretations of ritualistic and ethnic dances.
See full bio
(1909-2006)
Anthropologist, Activist, Choreographer, Journalist
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Emile Durkheim
Sociologist / 1858 - 1917
Émile Durkheim was a pioneer of French sociology and the author of The Division of Labour in Society and Suicide.
See full bio
(1858-1917)
Sociologist
e
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J. Presper Eckert Jr.
Academic, Entrepreneur, Computer Programmer, Engineer / 1919 - 1995
J. Presper Eckert Jr. was the award-winning co-inventor of the first general purpose digital computer.
See full bio
(1919-1995)
Academic, Entrepreneur, Computer Programmer, Engineer
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Jonathan Edwards
Educator, Philosopher, Scholar, Theologian, Journalist / 1703 - 1758
The sermons and writings of Jonathan Edwards helped to shape the course of Protestant theology before, during, and after The Great Awakening of 1740-1742.
See full bio
(1703-1758)
Educator, Philosopher, Scholar, Theologian, Journalist
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Albert Ellis
Scholar, Psychologist, Journalist / 1913 - 2007
Psychologist Albert Ellis developed the psychotherapeutic approach known as rational emotive behavior therapy, which help patients overcome irrational beliefs.
See full bio
(1913-2007)
Scholar, Psychologist, Journalist
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Ralph Ellison
Educator, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Author / 1914 - 1994
Ralph Ellison was a 20th century African-American writer and scholar best known for his renowned, award-winning novel Invisible Man.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1914-1994)
Educator, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Author
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Daniel Ellsberg
Scholar, Anti-War Activist, Journalist, Government Official / 1931 -
Daniel Ellsberg strengthened public opposition to the Vietnam War in 1971 when he leaked the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times.
See full bio
(1931-)
Scholar, Anti-War Activist, Journalist, Government Official
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Ralph Waldo Emerson
Philosopher, Journalist, Poet / 1803 - 1882
Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American Transcendentalist poet, philosopher and essayist during the 19th century. One of his best-known essays is "Self-Reliance.”
See full bio
(1803-1882)
Philosopher, Journalist, Poet
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Robert F. Engle
Educator, Economist, Academic Author, Editor / 1942 -
Robert F. Engle is a co-recipient of the 2003 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, honored for developing methods to analyze unpredictable movements in the financial market.
See full bio
(1942-)
Educator, Economist, Academic Author, Editor
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Erik H. Erikson
Educator, Scholar, Psychologist, Journalist / 1902 - 1994
Personality development, in Erik H. Erikson's view, occurs through a series of identity crises that occur in stages that must be overcome and internalized.
See full bio
(1902-1994)
Educator, Scholar, Psychologist, Journalist
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Jaime Escalante
Educator / 1930 - 2010
Jaime Escalante became famous for his work with troubled, "unteachable" high school math students. His story was told in the 1988 film Stand and Deliver.
See full bio
(1930-2010)
Educator
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Laura Esquivel
Educator, Journalist, Author, Screenwriter / 1950 -
Laura Esquivel is the author of Like Water for Chocolate, an imaginative and compelling combination of novel and cookbook, as well as other books.
See full bio
(1950-)
Educator, Journalist, Author, Screenwriter
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Arthur Evans
Archaeologist / 1851 - 1941
Arthur Evans was a noted archaeologist and curator known for unearthing the remains of ancient Minoan civilization.
See full bio
(1851-1941)
Archaeologist
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Ernest Everett Just
Educator, Biologist / 1883 - 1941
African-American cell biologist Ernest Everett Just made pioneering contributions to the cytology and embryology of marine organisms.
See full bio
(1883-1941)
Educator, Biologist
f
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Domingo Faustino Sarmiento
Educator, Historian, Scholar, World Leader, Journalist, Sociologist / 1811 - 1888
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento was a writer and scholar who became president of Argentina in 1868.
See full bio
(1811-1888)
Educator, Historian, Scholar, World Leader, Journalist, Sociologist
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Gustav Fechner
Philosopher, Physicist / 1801 - 1887
German physicist Gustav Fechner utilized his science background to establish a new field called psychophysics, a science of psychology.
See full bio
(1801-1887)
Philosopher, Physicist
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Richard Feynman
Academic, Inventor, Physicist / 1918 - 1988
American physicist Richard Feynman is an American physicist best known for his work in quantum mechanics. He assisted in the development of the atomic bomb.
See full bio
(1918-1988)
Academic, Inventor, Physicist
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Abigail Fillmore
Educator, U.S. First Lady / 1798 - 1853
Abigail Fillmore was an American first lady from 1850 to 1853. She was the wife of Millard Fillmore, the 13th president of the United States.
See full bio
(1798-1853)
Educator, U.S. First Lady
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William Findley
Educator, U.S. Representative / 1741 - 1821
William Findley's long political career began after the Revolutionary War. He believed in limiting the power of government in order to protect people's rights.
See full bio
(1741-1821)
Educator, U.S. Representative
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John Ambrose Fleming
Educator, Engineer, Academic Author / 1849 - 1945
John Ambrose Fleming was an English scientist who made groundbreaking innovations in electrical engineering.
See full bio
(1849-1945)
Educator, Engineer, Academic Author
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Paul J. Flory
Educator, Activist, Chemist, Journalist / 1910 - 1985
American chemist Paul J. Flory won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1974 for his work with polymers, the building blocks of plastic and rubber.
See full bio
(1910-1985)
Educator, Activist, Chemist, Journalist
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Charlotte Forten
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Journalist / 1837 - 1914
Charlotte Forten was an African-American teacher and abolitionist who wrote extensive diaries covering the Civil War and the post-war years.
See full bio
(1837-1914)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Journalist
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Michel Foucault
Anthropologist, Educator, Historian, Philosopher, Scholar, Activist, Academic Author, Journalist / 1926 - 1984
Michel Foucault was a French philosopher and historian. His best known works are Discipline and Punish and The History of Sexuality.
See full bio
(1926-1984)
Anthropologist, Educator, Historian, Philosopher, Scholar, Activist, Academic Author, Journalist
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Anatole France
Philosopher, Literary Critic, Author / 1844 - 1924
Anatole France was a French writer of satire and fantasy. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1921.
See full bio
(1844-1924)
Philosopher, Literary Critic, Author
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César Franck
Educator, Songwriter / 1822 - 1890
Organist and composer César Franck taught at the Paris Conservatory. His peers did not initially respect his work, but students thrived in his classes.
See full bio
(1822-1890)
Educator, Songwriter
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Felix Frankfurter
Educator, Scholar, Supreme Court Justice / 1882 - 1965
Associate Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter was a noted law scholar, who was the high court's leading exponent of the doctrine of judicial self-restraint.
See full bio
(1882-1965)
Educator, Scholar, Supreme Court Justice
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John Hope Franklin
Educator, Historian, Journalist / 1915 - 2009
American historian and educator John Hope Franklin is noted for his reappraisal of the American Civil War era and the importance of the black American struggle.
See full bio
(1915-2009)
Educator, Historian, Journalist
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E. Franklin Frazier
Sociologist / 1894 - 1962
Sociologist E. Franklin Frazier blazed a trail in the 1940s and 50s for African American academics who studied black culture.
See full bio
(1894-1962)
Sociologist
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Christian Wolff
Philosopher, Scholar, Mathematician, Royalty, Botanist, Academic Author / 1679 - 1754
Christian Freiherr von Wolff was a German philosopher, mathematician, and scientist who is best known as a leading spokesman of German rationalism.
See full bio
(1679-1754)
Philosopher, Scholar, Mathematician, Royalty, Botanist, Academic Author
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Sigmund Freud
Scholar, Psychiatrist / 1856 - 1939
Sigmund Freud was an Austrian neurologist best known for developing the theories and techniques of psychoanalysis.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1856-1939)
Scholar, Psychiatrist
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Robert Frost
Educator, Poet / 1874 - 1963
A four-time Pulitzer Prize winner in poetry, American Robert Frost depicted realistic New England life through language and situations familiar to the common man.
See full bio
(1874-1963)
Educator, Poet
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Christopher Fry
Educator, Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet / 1907 - 2005
Playwright Christopher Fry wrote a series of major plays in free verse, with undertones of religion and mysticism, including A Phoenix Too Frequent (1946).
See full bio
(1907-2005)
Educator, Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet
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J.F.C. Fuller
Historian, Military Leader, Journalist / 1878 - 1966
J.F.C. Fuller was a 20th century British military officer, author, advocate of tank warfare and supporter of fascist movements.
See full bio
(1878-1966)
Historian, Military Leader, Journalist
g
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Ernest J. Gaines
Educator, Author / 1933 -
Novelist Ernest J. Gaines’s wrote The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, which reflects the African American experience and oral tradition of rural Louisiana.
See full bio
(1933-)
Educator, Author
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Thomas Gallaudet
Educator / 1787 - 1851
Thomas Gallaudet was an education pioneer and established the American School for the Deaf in 1817.
See full bio
(1787-1851)
Educator
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Francis Galton
Anthropologist, Explorer, Inventor, Scientist, Academic Author / 1822 - 1911
Francis Galton was an English explorer and anthropologist best known for his research in eugenics and human intelligence. He was the first to study the effects of human selective mating.
See full bio
(1822-1911)
Anthropologist, Explorer, Inventor, Scientist, Academic Author
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Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
Educator, Historian, Scholar, Literary Critic, Filmmaker, Academic Author, Editor / 1950 -
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is an African-American educator and scholar, and the director of the W. E. B. DuBois Institute for African and African-American Research.
See full bio
(1950-)
Educator, Historian, Scholar, Literary Critic, Filmmaker, Academic Author, Editor
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Carl Friedrich Gauss
Mathematician, Astronomer / 1777 - 1855
Carl Friedrich Gauss was a German mathematician, astronomer, and physicist who published over 150 works and contributed the fundamental theorem of algebra.
See full bio
(1777-1855)
Mathematician, Astronomer
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Clifford Geertz
Anthropologist, Educator, Journalist / 1926 - 2006
Clifford Geertz was a leading proponent of a form of anthropology that stresses the importance of symbols and interpretation in human social life.
See full bio
(1926-2006)
Anthropologist, Educator, Journalist
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Gerard Debreu
Educator, Economist / 1921 - 2004
Gérard Debreu was a Nobel-prize winning economist
who researched the equilibrium between prices, production and demand in
free-market economies.
See full bio
(1921-2004)
Educator, Economist
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Jean-Léon Gérôme
Academic, Painter, Sculptor / 1824 - 1904
Jean-Leon Gerome was a French painter, sculptor, and teacher. His best-known works are scenes inspired by his travels in Egypt.
See full bio
(1824-1904)
Academic, Painter, Sculptor
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Robert Goddard
Educator, Engineer, Inventor, Physicist / 1882 - 1945
American physicist Robert H. Goddard built the world's first liquid-fueld rocket in 1926 and is best known as the founding father of modern rocketry.
See full bio
(1882-1945)
Educator, Engineer, Inventor, Physicist
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Doris Kearns Goodwin
Educator, Journalist / 1943 -
Doris Kearns Goodwin is best known for authoring biographies of American presidents, including Lyndon B. Johnson, John F. Kennedy, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln.
See full bio
(1943-)
Educator, Journalist
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Stephen Jay Gould
Educator, Biologist, Journalist, Author / 1941 - 2002
Stephen Jay Gould was an American paleontologist and evolutionary biologist, and the best-selling writer of popular science books.
See full bio
(1941-2002)
Educator, Biologist, Journalist, Author
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Antonio Gramsci
Linguist, Philosopher, Political Leader, Journalist / 1891 - 1937
Antonio Gramsci was an Italian Communist Party leader. He was arrested for speaking out against fascism and wrote his Prison Notebooks before dying in jail.
See full bio
(1891-1937)
Linguist, Philosopher, Political Leader, Journalist
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Temple Grandin
Educator, Biologist, Writer / 1947 -
Temple Grandin is a noted animal expert and advocate for autistic populations who has penned the books Animals in Translation and Animals Make Us Human.
See full bio
(1947-)
Educator, Biologist, Writer
h
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G. Stanley Hall
Educator, Psychologist / 1844 - 1924
American psychologist G. Stanley Hall was a trailblazer in his field. He established the concept of child psychology and founded Clark University.
See full bio
(1844-1924)
Educator, Psychologist
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Alice Hamilton
Educator, Activist, Doctor, Chemist / 1869 - 1970
Alice Hamilton was a physician and authority on lead poisoning and industrial disease. The NIOSH present an award in her name.
See full bio
(1869-1970)
Educator, Activist, Doctor, Chemist
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Andrew Hamilton
Educator, Lawyer, Judge, Government Official / 1676 - 1741
Andrew Hamilton was a lawyer who defended John Peter Zenger in a case that marked the first victory for freedom of the press in the American colonies.
See full bio
(1676-1741)
Educator, Lawyer, Judge, Government Official
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George Heard Hamilton
Historian / 1910 - 2004
Art historian George Heard Hamilton was a 19th and 20th century art expert. He directed the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute.
See full bio
(1910-2004)
Historian
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Jean Harris
Educator, Murderer / 1923 - 2012
In 1982, Jean Harris shot and killed author and cardiologist Herman Tarnower, who wrote the international best-seller The Complete Scarsdale Medical Diet.
See full bio
(1923-2012)
Educator, Murderer
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F.A. Hayek
Educator, Scholar, Economist, Journalist / 1899 - 1992
Economist F.A. Hayek was noted for his criticisms of the Keynesian welfare state and of totalitarian socialism. In 1974 he shared the Nobel Prize for Economics.
See full bio
(1899-1992)
Educator, Scholar, Economist, Journalist
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Seamus Heaney
Educator, Academic Author, Playwright, Poet / 1939 -
Seamus Henry is a renowned Irish poet and professor who won the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.
See full bio
(1939-)
Educator, Academic Author, Playwright, Poet
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Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Philosopher / 1770 - 1831
German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was one of the creators of German Idealism. He explored how contradictions ultimately integrated.
See full bio
(1770-1831)
Philosopher
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Martin Heidegger
Philosopher / 1889 - 1976
Though his reputation was scarred by his affiliation with the Nazi party, Martin Heidegger is one of the most influential philosophers of the 20th century.
See full bio
(1889-1976)
Philosopher
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Al Held
Educator, Painter / 1928 - 2005
Painter, Al Held was know for his painting complex cube-like structures in the 1960s, and his precise and brightly colored geometric forms in the 1980s.
See full bio
(1928-2005)
Educator, Painter
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Thor Heyerdahl
Archaeologist, Explorer, Writer / 1914 - 2002
Norwegian adventurer Thor Heyerdahl made a celebrated journey aboard a raft called Kon-Tiki in 1947, and later wrote an international best-seller about his amazing expedition.
See full bio
(1914-2002)
Archaeologist, Explorer, Writer
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Thomas Hobbes
Historian, Philosopher, Political Scientist, Scientist, Academic Author, Journalist / 1588 - 1679
Thomas Hobbes, an English philosopher in the 17th century, was best known for his book Leviathan (1651) and his political views on society.
See full bio
(1588-1679)
Historian, Philosopher, Political Scientist, Scientist, Academic Author, Journalist
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Hans Hofmann
Educator, Painter / 1880 - 1966
German painter Hans Hofmann was an influential 20th century art teacher whose work paved the way for Abstract Expressionism.
See full bio
(1880-1966)
Educator, Painter
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Oliver Wendell Holmes
Educator, Doctor, Physiologist, Author, Poet / 1809 - 1894
Physician Oliver Wendell Holmes served as dean of Harvard Medical School, but was best known for his poetry and "Breakfast-Table" essays.
See full bio
(1809-1894)
Educator, Doctor, Physiologist, Author, Poet
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Maxine Hong Kingston
Educator, Anti-War Activist, Journalist, Author / 1940 -
Maxine Hong Kingston is a Chinese American author of memoirs and fiction. Her best known work is The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood among the Ghosts.
See full bio
(1940-)
Educator, Anti-War Activist, Journalist, Author
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Robert Hooke
Philosopher, Scholar, Mathematician, Architect, Illustrator, Astronomer, Physicist, Academic Author / 1635 - 1703
Robert Hooke was an English philosopher, mathematician and architect who discovered the law of elasticity, now known as Hooke's law.
See full bio
(1635-1703)
Philosopher, Scholar, Mathematician, Architect, Illustrator, Astronomer, Physicist, Academic Author
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bell hooks
Scholar, Academic Author, Journalist / 1952 -
Bell hooks is an American scholar whose best known work focuses on perceptions of black women in the United States.
See full bio
(1952-)
Scholar, Academic Author, Journalist
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John Hope
Educator, Civil Rights Activist / 1868 - 1936
John Hope was an educator and advocate of advanced liberal-arts instruction for blacks and was one of the founders of the Niagara Movement.
See full bio
(1868-1936)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist
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Mark Hopkins
Educator, Theologian / 1802 - 1887
An influential teacher in the 19th century, theologian Mark Hopkins stressed moral values over intellectual achievement and self-education over dogmatic education.
See full bio
(1802-1887)
Educator, Theologian
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Karen Horney
Academic, Psychologist, Journalist / 1885 - 1952
German-born American psychoanalyst Karen Horney, departing from some of Freud’s principles, suggested an environmental and social basis for the personality.
See full bio
(1885-1952)
Academic, Psychologist, Journalist
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A.E. Housman
Scholar, Poet / 1859 - 1936
A.E. Housman was an English scholar and poet whose poems were based on classical models and expressed a Romantic pessimism in a spare, simple style. He published two volumes of poetry: A Shropshire Lad and Last Poems.
See full bio
(1859-1936)
Scholar, Poet
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Charles H. Houston
Academic, Civil Rights Activist, Lawyer / 1895 - 1950
Charles H. Houston was an attorney and vice-dean who worked in important civil rights cases, ultimately helping to end Jim Crow laws.
See full bio
(1895-1950)
Academic, Civil Rights Activist, Lawyer
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Oliver Otis Howard
Academic, General / 1830 - 1909
After the Civil War, Union general Oliver Otis Howard was appointed commissioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau to help former slaves find work, education and medical aid.
See full bio
(1830-1909)
Academic, General
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Clark L. Hull
Educator, Scholar, Psychologist / 1884 - 1952
Psychologist Clark L. Hull performed a study and produced the dominant learning theory of the 1940s and 1950s, that learning was based on “habit strength."
See full bio
(1884-1952)
Educator, Scholar, Psychologist
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Hubert H. Humphrey
Academic, Mayor, U.S. Vice President, U.S. Representative / 1911 - 1978
Hubert H. Humphrey was an assistant majority leader of the Senate who became the 38th U.S. vice president under Lyndon B. Johnson.
See full bio
(1911-1978)
Academic, Mayor, U.S. Vice President, U.S. Representative