Welcome to the Web site for Science, Society, and the Arts, a research conference at Washington and Lee University. The next conference will take place Thursday March 7 and Friday March 8, 2013 on the Washington and Lee campus.
Science, Society, and the Arts is a multi-disciplinary conference involving Washington and Lee undergraduates and law students in the presentation of their academic achievements before an audience of their peers and the faculty. Conference participants share their work via oral presentations, traditional academic-conference-style panels, poster sessions, artistic shows, or creative performances. Students, faculty, and staff may also choose to participate in colloquia organized around common readings proposed by interested Washington and Lee community members.
SSA Keynote Speaker
SSA 5, 2013
Dr. Richard Alley is the Evan Pugh Professor of Geosciences and an Associate of the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute at The Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Alley studies the world’s great ice sheets and glaciers in Greenland, Antarctica, and Alaska to learn the history of Earth’s climate and aid in prediction of future changes in climate and sea level.
Dr. Alley has been honored many times for research, teaching, and service, including election to the US National Academy of Sciences, the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement, the American Geological Institute Award for Outstanding Contribution to Public Understanding of the Geosciences, and the Schneider Award for Science Communication.
Dr. Alley participated in the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which was co-recipient of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. Dr. Alley is the host of the PBS miniseries Earth: The Operators’ Manual, which presents an assessment of the Earth’s problems and possible solutions, while leaving viewers ‘informed, energized and optimistic.’
The title of Dr. Alley's talk is "The Surprisingly Optimistic Future of Energy and the Environment."
Photo Credit: Geoff Haines-Stiles
Past Keynote Speakers
SSA 4, 2011 - Ann V. Klotz, cum laude graduate of Yale, obtained her Master of Arts degree from New York University, where she majored in Individual Study of Drama. Klotz spent 20 years as an educator and administrator at The Chapin School in New York City, where she served as head of the Drama Department, coordinator of the Fine Arts Department and teacher of Upper School English. Klotz heads the Laurel School, a school that fosters confidence, creativity, critical thinking and compassion in its students. In 1984, Klotz established the Ensemble Theatre Community (ETC) School, a summer program for high schools students, that uses theater methods to teach students about life and living in the world as a fully engaged, concerned citizen.
SSA 3, 2009 - Dr. Brian Nosek, Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Virginia, is Principal Investigator on an R-01 grant from National Institutes of Health for “A Virtual Laboratory in the Social and Behavioral Sciences” that serves as the primary funding for the academic research of Project Implicit (http://projectimplicit.net/), a collaborative partnership with Anthony Greenwald and Mahzarin Banaji. Nosek received his B.S. in Psychology with minors in Computer Science and Women’s Studies from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, and his Ph.D. in Psychology from Yale University in 2002. His research suggests that people are more biased that they think because biases can exist outside of conscious awareness or conscious control.
SSA 2, 2007 - Dr Mario Livio is a Senior Astrophysicist at the Hubble Space Telescope Science Institute, and the previous head of the Institute’s Science Division. He joined the Institute in 1991 as head of the Archive Branch. Prior to coming to the Institute, he completed his undergraduate studies (majoring in both physics and mathematics) at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, his M.Sc. degree (in theoretical particle physics) at the Weizmann Institute, an his Ph.D. (in theoretical astrophysics) at Tel-Aviv University. He was a professor of physics in the physics department of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology from 1981 until 1991.
SSA 1, 2004 - Alan Lightman is at once one of the most renowned theoretical physicists of our time, the publisher of numerous scientific books and essays, and author of several novels, the most famous of which is Einstein’s Dreams – an international bestseller, translated into thirty languages, and runner up for the highly prestigious 1994 PEN New England/Boston Globe Winship Award. Lightman earned his undergraduate degree from Princeton, a Ph.D. in theoretical physics from California Institute of Technology, served as post-doctoral fellow in astrophysics at Cornell University, former Professor of Astronomy at Harvard, and research scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.