Richard Wilson,
born in London, England in 1926, has been at Harvard University since 1955
where he is now Mallinckrodt Research Professor of Physics.
Richard Wilson has been an affiliate of the Center for Middle
Eastern Studies and of the Belfer Center for Science
and International Affairs at the Kennedy School of
Government. His CV shows that
he is the author or coauthor of 904
published articles and papers. See also charts of Richard
Wilson's
ancestors
and descendants
and Andree Wilson's ancestors.
Richard and Andree Desiree Wilson live in Newton
Centre where
Andree tends her
fine garden. In particular look at the web site of
Elaine Wilson, a fine landscape painter.
Richard Wilson is a common nme. There 8,679
Richard Wilsons
living in the USA alone. It is also a famous name and a selection
of "Richard Wilson's" activities shows that he was, and is,
an
extraordinarily busy man. Last year Richard
Wilson, the sculptor, was elected to the Royal Academy in UK.
Other distinctions are listed in Wilkipedia.
Richard Wilson, the physicist, may be found most days in Jefferson
Laboratory of Physics room 257A at Harvard University. A page of
Photographs of Richard Wilson over the years can be found here.
A recent interview
by NY
Times
columnist Andrew Revkin may be found here,
The most recent
study is of
cancer at
old age he is also studying the problem of chronic
arsenic
exposure and how to help the millions who are overexposed.
When opportunity arises, which it does all too often, he engages in
various
Human Rights
activities; he is still involved in
experiments on parity
violation in electron
proton scattering at CEBAF and on an asymmetry in neutron decay.
He also has a major interest in
analyzing and trying to understand, risks; how to reduce them, how
important individual risks may be. Ten times as many people were killed
on the roads last year as were killed on September 11th 2001.
The
international drug trade may be far more destructive society than Al
Qaeda.
Keeping perspective was a major theme of the book "Risk Benefit
Analysis" by Richard Wilson and Edmund
A. Crouch, available from Harvard
University Press. As a frequent visitor to Arab
countries he was
fortunate to make many friends, including the Iraqi statesman Muhummed
Fadhel Jamali who signed the UN charter in 1945. On a
visit to Harvard Fadhel left a copy of his memoirs - so far
unpublished. The pages are posted on this site in html.
We expect to make a pdf version
in due course.
He was a
trustee of the Global Foundation till its demise on
the death of its President (Professor Behram Kursunuglu) in 2003.
He is now President of the ARSENIC FOUNDATION which is
dedicated to helping to avoid the arsenic poisoning from drinking
contaminated water supplies
in SE Asia.