Guy de La Brosse


(c. 1586-1641)

*** Not in Gale

French botanist, physician, pharmacologist.

Galileo Project entry

His major book, De la nature, vertu et utilité des plantes (Paris, 1628), was a theoretical book about plants in general. In it he raised questions about the generation, growth, and nutrition of plants. He also published a monograph on the causes of the plague, Traicté de la peste (Paris, 1623), and several other works on medicine, on plants, and on the collection of plants in the Jardin du Roi.

His titles make it clear that he regarded the Jardin du Roi as a collection of medicinally useful plants. The edict establishing it referred to it as a "Jardin des Plantes Medicinales" for the instruction of students of medicine.

From the beginning, La Brosse's idea of the Jardin included instruction in chemistry as a handmaiden to medicine, and he devoted part of his works to chemistry--Paracelsian chemistry.

The Botanical Philosophy of Guy de la Brosse: A Study in Seventeenth-Century Thought


Jean Charles de La Faille, S.J.


(1597-1652)

*** Not in Gale

Belgian mathematician. Military engineer. Catholic, who entered the Jesuit order in 1613.

Galileo Project entry

La Faille owed his fame as a scholar to his tract, Theoremata de centro gravitatis partium circuli et ellipsis, published at Antwerp in 1632. In it the center of gravity of a sector of a circle was determined for the first time.

Also wrote Theses mechanicae, 1625.

Philip IV consulted La Faille on questions of defense and of military engineering and later charged him with teaching military arts and engineering to pages in the court. He served as technical adviser to the Duke of Alba along the Portuguese frontier in 1641-4. He also accompanied Don Juan on military expeditions.

He corresponded with Michel van Langren.

MacTutor entry


Philippe de La Hire [Philippe I]


(1640-1718)

*** Not in Gale

French astronomer, mathematician, mechanic, zoologist, physiologist, meteorologist, cartographer, instrument-maker, hydraulics and navigation specialist, architect, naturalist, painter. Catholic. Eldest son of Laurent de La Hire, peintre ordinaire du roi, and founder and professor at the Académie Royale de Peinture and Sculpture. La Hire's father was also one of the first disciples of Desargues. Philippe's younger brother is Gabriel-Philippe de La Hire.

Galileo Project entry

After his father's death La Hire spent four years in Venice where he developed his artistic talent and studied classical geometry. Upon his return to France he was active primarily as an artist. He formed a friendship with Abraham Bosse, Desargues's last disciple, who asked La Hire to solve a problem in stonecutting. In 1673 La Hire published Nouvelle methode en géometrie pour les sections des superficies coniques et cylindriques from his research in constructing conic sections. Twelve years later he published a much more extensive work, Sectiones conicae, through which Desargues' projective geometry became known.

La Hire published three works in one volume which, though not original, provided an exposition of the properties of conic sections and the progress of analytic geometry during the half century.

After his nomination to the Académie La Hire became active as an astronomer. He produced tables of the movements of the sun, moon, and the planets. He studied the instrumental techniques and particular problems of observation. From 1679-1682 he made several observations and measurements (occasionally with Picard) of different points along the French coastline. He continued his involvment in the mapping project of France (1683) by extending the meridian of Paris to the north. In 1683 he participated in the experiment of falling bodies with Mariotte. The following two years he directed the surveying operations to provide water to Versailles. He devoted several works to the methods and instruments of surveying, land measuring, and gnomics.

La Hire's work also extended to descriptive zoology, the study of respiration, and physiological optics.

During his many travels he made observations in natural science, meteorology, and physics. At the Paris observatory he conducted experiments in terrestrial magnetism, pluviometry, thermometry, and barometry.

In 1695 he published Traité de mécanique, an important work in the development of modern manuals of manuals.

He developed a leveling instrument for use in surveying. He suggested the epicycloidal profile for gear teeth.

Memberships: Académie Royal des Sciences, 1678-1718. He was nominated astronome pensionnaire in 1678. He participated in several projects of the Académie. He even edited various writings of his colleagues, Picard, Mariotte, Roberval, and Frenicle.

MacTutor entry

Catholic Encyclopedia entry

French entry


Gabriel-Philippe de La Hire [Philippe II]


(1677-1719)

*** Not in Gale

French astronomer, engineer, physician, anatomist, meteorologist, architect, cartographer, instrument maker, specialist in mechanical devices. Catholic. His father, Laurent de La Hire, (1606-1656), was a distinguished artist. Younger brother of Philippe de La Hire.

Galileo Project entry

La Hire assisted his father Laurent de la Hire in his regular observations at the Paris Observatory. His first solo work was the establishment of the Ephemerides for 1701, 1702, and 1703. This work involved de La Hire in a painful dispute with Jean Le Fevre, 'astronome pensionnaire' and editor of Connaissance des temps. Le Fevre accused both father and son of plagiarism and incompetence. The result of the controversy left Le Fevre with the loss of his editorship, severely censured, and expelled from the Académie.

In 1702 La Hire published a new edition of Mathurin Jousse's Le theatre de l'art de charpentrie. The following year he presented several short memoires to the Académie on subjects ranging from observational and physical astronomy to applied science and medicine.

After his nomination to the second class of architects of the Académie of Architecture (1706), de La Hire began to consider several technical and architectural problems. In 1707 he wrote a memoire on the organ of sight in which he established that the aqueous humor filled the same function as the vitreous humor.

In 1718 he participated in the geodesic operations carried out under the direction of Jacques Cassini to extend the meridian of Paris from Amiens to Dunkerque.

He invented a device to detach a carriage from the horses when they got out of hand.

Member: Académie Royal des Sciences, 1694-1719.

The Index biographique de l'académie lists the steps of his membership:

1694, appointed élève astronome.

1699, appointed associé

1706, appointed to second class in the Royal Academy of Architects.

1718, succeeded his father as pensionnaire in the Académie des sciences.

1718, succeeded his father as professor of architecture (Académie of Architecture).

French entry

Online Books page


Estienne de La Roche / Villefranche


(c. 1480-c. 1520)

*** Not in Gale

French mathematician.

Galileo Project entry:

La Roche's fame rests solely on his Larismetique published in 1520. This work introduced into France the Italian knowledge of arithmetic and useful notions of powers and roots. In 1880 Aristide Marre published Chuquet's Triparty which only existed in manuscript form and suddenly La Roche was a plagiarist. Recent scholarship, though agreeing that parts of the Triparty were blatantly copied and other parts suppressed or curtailed in La Roche's Larismetique, has emphasized the audience that La Roche was trying to reach with his work. At worst La Roche can be accused of patching together the works of three authors, Luca Pacioli, Philippe Frescobaldi (a banker in Lyon), and Nicolas Chuquet, whose works were inaccessible to the average French merchant. La Roche simply made their information available to a previously neglected audience.

MacTutor entry. La Roche taught commercial arithmetic in Lyon for 25 years. Clearly he was well thought of as a teacher of arithmetic since he was often called master of ciphers.


David Lambert Lack


(1910-1973)

Biologist. Ornithologist. Lack was director of the Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology in Oxford, England for more than twenty-five years, beginning 1945. During 1938 and 1939, he participated in a biological expedition to the Galapagos Islands. Previous posts: Dartington Hall School, Devonshire, England, biology master, 1933-38, 1939-40. President, International Ornithological Congress, 1962-66. Education: Magdalene College, Cambridge, B.A., 1932, M.A., 1936, Sc.D., 1948.

Member: Royal Society (fellow), British Ecological Society (president, 1964); also member of numerous British and foreign ornithological societies. British Army, Anti-aircraft, 1940, Operational Research, 1940-45. Anglican.

Author: Life of the Robin, Witherby, 1943, 4th edition, F. Watts, 1965; Darwin's Finches: An Essay on the General Biological Theory of Evolution, Harper, 1947, reprinted, Peter Smith, 1968; The Natural Regulation of Animal Numbers, Clarendon Press, 1954; Swifts in a Tower, Methuen, 1956, reprinted, Halsted, 1973; Evolutionary Theory and Christian Belief, Methuen, 1957; Enjoying Ornithology, Methuen, 1965; Population Studies of Birds, Clarendon Press, 1966; The Natural Regulation of Animal Numbers, Clarendon Press, 1967; Ecological Adaptations for Breeding in Birds, Barnes & Noble, 1968; Ecological Isolation in Birds, Harvard University Press, 1971; Evolution Illustrated by Waterfowl, Harper, 1974; Island Biology, University of California Press, 1976. Contributor of scientific papers on birds to professional journals.

Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2004.

Papers of DAVID LAMBERT LACK, F.R.S. 1910 - 1973

Obituary


René Théophile Hyacinthe Laennec


(1781-1826)

French physician. Considered father of thoracic medicine;introduced practice of auscultation with the stethoscope, which he invented (c.1819). Published De l'auscultation mediate (1819); Professor at College de France (1822); physician at Hopital de la Charite, Paris (1823).

Catholic Encyclopedia entry

Biography in Doctors Who Followed Christ: Thirty-Two Biographies of Eminent Physicians and Their Christian Faith, by Dan Graves. Kregel Resources, Grand Rapids, MI, 1999. ISBN 0-8254-2734-7.


Thomas Fantet de Lagny


(1660-1734)

*** Not in Gale

French mathematician.

Galileo Project entry

Lagny is remembered for his contribution to computational mathematics. From 1687 to 1733 he published seven works.

Member: Académie Royal des Sciences, 1695-1734, Royal Society

The Index biographique de l'académie lists the steps of his membership:

1696, académicien géomètre, académicien externe.

1699, associé géomètre, premier titulaire.

1699, associé mécanicien (replacing Sauveur)

1719, pensionnaire surnuméraire.

1723, pensionnaire géomètre (replacing Varignon)

1724, sous-directeur.

1725, directeur.

1733, pensionnaire vétéran.

MacTutor entry


Charles Dean Lakin


(1936-2017)

(Born in Liberal, Missouri, United States). Petroleum engineer. Achievements include research in petroleum lubricants, fuels and additives; prevention of ground water and air contamination; disposal of hazardous waste; and product recycling. Director product and environ. svcs., MFA Oil Co., Columbia, Mo., 1988; Director safety, MFA Oil Co., Columbia, Mo., 1985; Manager Agriculture chem. division, MFA Oil Co., Columbia, Mo., 1971-86; product researcher, MFA Oil Co., Columbia, Mo., 1964-71; biologist, MFA Oil Co., Columbia, Mo., 1960-64. Advisory board Missouri Department of Agriculture, Jefferson City, 1983; Board of Directors Imperial, Inc., Shenandoah, Iowa; Member Missouri L.P. Gas Advisory Council, Jefferson City, 1985. Education: BS, Kans. State University, 1957; Graduate, American Institute Coops., 1975.

Member: ASTM, American Petroleum Institute, Entomol. Society America, SAE International, American Management Association, Engineering Society for Advancing Mobility-Land-Sea-Air and Space, Columbia Cosmopolitan Club. Deacon, elder Broadway Christian Church, Columbia, 1965. 1st lt. U.S. Army, 1957-59.

Contributor of articles to Pesticide Recommendations, Pesticide Formulation Procedures, L.P. Gas Safety.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Obituary


Antoine de Lalouvere, S.J.


(1600-1664)

aka Lalouère / La Loubère / Lalovera

*** Not in Gale

French mathematician. Catholic, who entered the Jesuit order in 1620.

Galileo Project entry

Lalouvere's chief book is the Quadrature circuli, on the quadrature of the circle, published in 1651 and dedicated to Louis XIV. In 1658 he was drawn into the dispute with Pascal on cycloids for which his name is best known. He was professor of humanities, rhetoric, Hebrew, theology, and mathematics in the Jesuit college at Toulouse.

Friendship and correspondence with Fermat. Close relationship with Pardies and Willis.


Len Lamerton


(1915-1999)

*** Not in Gale

Radiobiologist. One of the founders of radiation biology in Britain. He was Professor of Biophysics as Applied to Medicine, London University 1960-1980 and Dean of the Institute of Cancer Research, London 1967-1977. Quaker.

G. Gordon Steel. "Professor Len Lamerton, 1915-1999," from The Times, 20th October 1999, and Kit Hill, "Professor Len Lamerton," from The Guardian, 10th November, 1999.

Times obituary.

Guardian obituary

Famous Quakers entry


Kendall R(aye) Lamkey


(1958-)

(Born in Springfield, Illinois, United States). Research geneticist, corn breeder. Achievements include development of improved maize germplasm. Kendall R. Lamkey is the Pioneer Distinguished Chair in Maize Breeding (2002-present) and director of the Raymond F. Baker Center for Plant Breeding at Iowa State University (2002-present). Professor of Agronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, (1997-present); school geneticist, USDA-ARS, Ames, Iowa, 1984.

Archived committee membership page (see about halfway down)
Lamkey is a research geneticist with the USDA-ARS and a professor of agronomy in the Department of Agronomy at Iowa State University. He is a full member of Iowa State's Graduate Faculty. In addition, he is a member of the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, Biometrics Society, ENAR, Genetics Society of America, The Society for the Study of Evolution and the American Genetic Association. His research focuses specifically on the origin, maintenance, and utilization of genetic variation for important agronomic and grain quality traits in maize. In addition to funding from USDA, Lamkey has received funding from Pioneer Hi-Bred International. This private sector support represents approximately 5 percent of his research funding over the past 5 years. Lamkey received his B.S. in agronomy in 1980 and his M.S. in plant breeding in 1982, both from the University of Illinois. He received his Ph.D. in plant breeding in 1985 from Iowa State University. Currently, Lamkey is a technical editor for the journal Crop Science, and associate editor for the Journal of Heredity.

Chair Board of directors, First Christian Church, Ames, 1997, deacon, 1995-96.

Honor: Recipient Raymond and Mary Baker award for agronomic excellence Iowa State University, 1994.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Kendall R. Lamkey. Faculty page

Refereed Publications,

"Welcome to the homepage of Kendall R. Lamkey's maize breeding and quantitative genetics research project. Link. Our project is part of the Cooperative Federal-State Maize Breeding Program located on the campus of Iowa State University. My research project is focused on the origin, maintenance, and utilization of genetic variation in maize."


Walter Lammerts


(1904-1996)

*** Not in Gale

Botanist. Geneticist.

Rhode Island Rose Society profile

Creation-Evolution Headlines profile

Inventory of the Walter E. Lammerts Papers


Bernard Lamy


(1640-1715)

French ecclesiastic and scholar. Member of the Congregation of the Oratory; disciplined for teaching Cartesian doctrines. Wrote Nouvelles reflexions sur l'art poetique (1668), Traite de la grandeur en general (1680), Harmonie evangelique (1689).

Galileo Project entry

MacTutor entry or here

Catholic Enycyclopedia entry

MEMO - Le site de l'Histoire (French entry)


Francesco Lana-Terzi, S.J.


(1631-1687)

*** Not in Gale

From Fairfield University entry

The Father of Aeronautics, Fr. Francesco Lana-Terzi, S.J., (1631-1687) Professor of physics and mathematics at Brescia. Histories of flight refer to his work Prodromo dell'Arte Maestra (1670) as the "the first publication to establish a theory of aerial navigation verified by mathematical accuracy and clearness of perception".

Balloon Prints from the Vail Collection

Linda Hall Library entry


Giovanni Maria Lancisi


(1654-1720)

Italian physician, clinician, and botanist. Physician to three popes. Considered first modern hygienist; related prevalence of malaria in swamps to presence of mosquitoes and recommended drainage as preventive measure. Wrote De subitaneis mortibus on sudden deaths in Rome (1707), De motu cordis et aneurysmatibuson cardiac pathology (1728), treatises on influenza, malaria, rinderpest, etc.

Galileo Project entry:

Lancisi is considered the first modern hygienist.

SciHi blog entry

Italian entry 1

Italian entry 2


Bohumir Alfons Lang


(1924-)

(Born in Vyskov, Moravia, Czechoslovakia). Molecular biologist, researcher. Professor, Palacky University, Olomouc, 1993; researcher, Masaryk Meml. Cancer Institute, Brno, 1987; head clin. biochem. dept., Masaryk Meml. Cancer Institute, Brno, 1977-86; head clin. biochemistry dept., Brno, Czech Republic, 1969-76; Assistant Professor, Institute Medical Chemistry, Olomouc, 1957-68; house officer, Tchg. Hospital, Clinic of Neurology, Olomouc, 1955-56; house officer, Polio Rehab. Institute, Velké Losiny, Czech Republic, 1950-54. Science council medical faculty, Olomouc, 1990-99; medical faculty Consultant Institute Chemistry, Olomouc, 1996. Education: MD, Palacky University, Olomouc, Czech Republic, 1950; Ph.D., Palacky University, Olomouc, Czech Republic, 1964.

Member: Czechoslovak Medical Society J. E. Purkyne (Deyl prize 1968), International Society Neurochemistry, International Society Oncodevelopment Biology and Medicine, International Union Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Fed. European Biochemical Society. President, Moravian-Silesian Christian Academy, Brno, 1990-99, Honorary President, 2000.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.


Karl Nikolaus Lang


(1670-1741)

*** Not in Gale

Swiss paleontologist, natural historian, physician.

Galileo Project entry

In addition to practicing medicine for his entire career, Lang was called upon by certain organizations to prepare reports on water quality. In 1720, with Mauriz Kappeler, he was appointed to investigate the springs at Schachenwald, Hackenrain, and Doggeli-Loecher. This report still exists. In addition, he was commissioned by the government of Uri to investigate Gades Unterschaechen and the privately owned spring at Suessberg.

Memberships: Academia Leopoldina, Berlin Academy, Institute Bologna. John Woodward sucessfully opposed his membership in the Royal Society. 1703, member of the Academia Physico-Criticorum, Siena; 1705, member of the Academia Caesareo-Leopoldina Naturae Curiosorum. Member of the Prussian Academy. Member of the Academia Scientiarum, Bologna. Connections: He was a good friend of the French botanist Joseph Pitton.


Dr. R. Alan Langford


*** Not in Gale

Dermatologist. Microbiologist. Coordinator, Pre-Medical Studies Program, Franklin College of Arts & Sciences, University of Georgia. Dr. Langford now teaches UGA courses in microbiology and pharmacy and is a clinical faculty member with the Medical College of Georgia. Dr. Langford serves as Faculty Advisor for the Georgia Alpha Chapter of Alpha Epsilon Delta Premedical Honor Society, which meets frequently on campus and welcomes any student to participate in its meetings.

In 1997, R. Alan Langford, M.D., F.A.A.D., became Coordinator of the Premedical Studies Program for the Franklin College. He is a graduate of the University of Georgia, the Medical College of Georgia, trained in an internship in internal medicine at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, served as a military flight surgeon in primary patient care in the U.S. Army and completed a residency in dermatology. In 2003, he received a Post Graduate Diploma in Infectious Diseases from the University of London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He served on the faculties of two medical schools, and as a Consultant in Dermatology at the Carl Vincent V.A. Medical Center in Dublin, Georgia, where he had a solo practice in surgical and medical dermatology for 17 years and served a term as the Chief of the Medical Hospital Staff.

Faculty webpage, Franklin College of Arts & Sciences,


Philip van Lansberge


(1561-1632)

aka Philips Lansbergen

*** Not in Gale

Belgian mathematician, astronomer. Calvinist.

Galileo Project entry

Lansberge published on the geometry of triangles, including spherical triangles in 1583--i.e, on trigonometry--apparently an important work. Another work offered a new method to calculate the value of pi, which he computed to 28 places. Lansberge was a Copernican who published defenses of Copernicanism already in 1619, and again in 1629. He did not accept Kepler's ellipses, and he published astronomical tables intended to rival the Rudolphine Tables.

MacTutor entry


Robert A. H. Larmer


*** Not in Gale
Professor of Philosophy. Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Philosophy, University of New Brunswick,Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada. University of Ottawa, Thesis Topic: Philosophy and the Principle of the Conservation of Energy, Ph.D. (Philosophy), 1985; University of Ottawa Thesis Topic: The Question of Miracle, M.A. (Philosophy), 1981; Carleton University BA (Philosophy), 1979.

Author: Questions of Miracle, 1996; Water Into Wine: An Investigation of the Concept of Miracle, (Montreal: McGill-Queen's Press, 1988, paperback edition McGill-Queen's, 1996); Ethics In The Workplace: Selected Readings in Business Ethics, editor (New York: West Educational Publishing).


David A. Larrabee


Ph. D. in physics.

From personal website:

"My passion is hiking in the mountains, sometimes alone, but always seeing the glory of God in the magnificence of creation. My love of science, especially physics, makes the beauty of nature all the more wonderful."

"I am deeply committed to the Biblical idea that we are here to serve all of nature. We have forgotten that humanity is part of nature and cannot survive independently of nature. The biosphere gives us air to breathe, water to drink and food to eat. The ancient religions understood our reliance on nature. Today we ignore this fact; economically, technologically, spiritually, and morally. We do so at our own peril, and we endanger the rest of creation as well."

"Spiritual healing comes from the spiritual disciplines, and part of those disciplines is discipleship. For me, that means being a disciple of Jesus Christ. Serving God’s creation is part of that discipleship."

IEEE profile page

Academia page


Dawson Franklin Lasseter


(1949-)

Oil and gas consultant. Registered professional engineer, Oklahoma, Texas; Certified professional geological scientist. Reservoir engineer, staff geologist Mustang Fuel Corp., Oklahoma City, 1972-76; reservoir engineer Ramsey Engineering, Oklahoma City, 1976; district reservoir engineer, proration engineer Texas Oil & Gas Corp., Oklahoma City, 1976-79; v.p. exploration and engineering GEC Prodn. Co., Norman, Oklahoma, 1979-82; President, founder Geological Engineering Consultant, Norman, 1979. B.S. in Geological Engineering, University Oklahoma, 1972.

Honors: Recipient James K. Anderson award University Oklahoma, 1972.

Member: Society Petroleum Engineers, American Association Petroleum Geologists, American Institute Professional Geological Scientists, Society Indiana Petroleum Exploration Scientists, National Society Professional Engineers, Oklahoma Society Professional Engineers. Baptist.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Oklahoma Dept. of Environmental Quality


Helen Lau


Canadian Scientific and Christian Affiliation member. Ph.D. in Geological Oceanography.

Personal website with vitae

Q and A


Jacques-Desire Laval


(1803-1864))

*** Not in Gale

Physician. Initally torn between the priesthood and medicine, Jacques was educated at local schools, Evraux, and Stanlislaus College in Paris, and received his medical degree in 1830. Established his medical practice in Saint André and Saint Ivry-la-Bataille in his native Normandy.

Website (French)


Joao Baptista Lavanha


(1550-1624)

*** Not in Gale

Portugues-born cartographer, geographer, mathematician, instrument-maker and expert in navigation. Catholic, converted Jew.

Galileo Project entry

MacTutor entry


Antoine Laurent Lavoisier


(1743-1794)

French chemist. Founder of modern chemistry and the author of the oxygen theory of combustion. He was the first scientist to explain how things burn. He developed the first rational system for naming chemical compounds, which is still in use today, and established the practice of accurate measurement, which is the basis for all valid quantitative experiments. He reformed chemical nomenclature, held various government offices. Member of Ferme Generale (1768-91); Director of state gunpowder works (1776); member of commission to establish uniform system of weightsand measures (1790); arrested by order of the Convention and guillotined. Conducted quantitative experiments; disproved the phlogiston theory; explained combustion (1772) as the union of the burning substance with the part of the air that he later (1777) termed oxygen; with Pierre Laplace proved that respiration is a form of combustion (1780); propounded a theory of formation of chemical compounds; conducted experiments to determine composition of water and various organic compounds; with Berthollet, Guyton de Morveau, and Fourcroy, devised system of chemical nomenclature that served as basis of present system (pub. 1787); published chief work Traite elementaire de chimie (1789). Catholic.

Free Dictionary entry

The Complete Works of Lavoisier (in French)

Wolfram's World entry


Michael J. Lawrence


*** Not in Gale

(Not geologist Michael J. Lawrence of Croydon, New South Wales, Australia)

Information systems specialist. Emeritus Professor, School of Information Systems, Technology and Management University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, 1975-present. Director, International Institute of Forecasters. School of Information Systems Technology and Management (SISTM), Faculty of Commerce, University of New South Wales, 1975 - present; Professor of Information Systems 1991 - present, and Head of School of Information Systems, 1996 - 1998; Associate Professor, 1983 -1991 and Head 1987, 1988; Senior Lecturer 1975 - 1983. Bachelor of Science, University of Sydney, N.S.W., 1962; Master of Science - Bachelor of Engineering (First Class Honours) University of Sydney, N.S.W., 1964; Doctor of Philosophy - University of California, Berkeley, California, USAMajor: Operations Research, (College of Engineering) 1967.

Faculty page

Visiting Positions: Visiting Professor, Management Science Department, Lancaster University, Lancaster, England September 1998- May 1999; Visiting Professor, London Business School, June 1990 - January 1991, and April 1994 - September 1994;Visiting Professor, City University, London; January 1994 - April 1994; Visiting Professor, INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France; December 1984 - June 1985; Visiting Scholar, Imperial College of Science and Technology, July - November 1981.

Honor: Elected Fellow of the Australian Computer Society, 1987.

Testimony in On the Seventh Day: Forty Scientists and Academics Explain Why They Believe in God, edited by John F. Ashton, Ph.D. Master Books, Inc., Green Forest, AR, 2002. ISBN 0-89051-376-7.


Dawn M. Lawson


(1963-)

Information scientist. Lawson is a telecommunications specialist with the Defense Information Systems Agency in Falls Church, Virginia. Education: George Mason University, MA, telecommunications management, 1998, UNC-Greensboro, BS, clothing and textiles, 1986; Chicago State University, leadership seminar, 1999; Leadership Development Institute, 1999.

Member: Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc, state legislative coordinator, 1998-02; Blacks In Government, life member, national corresponding secretary, 2000-01; National Secretary 2001-02; League of Women Voters; NAACP; University of North Carolina at Greensboro Alumni Association, life member; Fairfax County Commission on Organ & Tissue Donation and Transplantation; Fairfax County Complete Count Committee, 2000; West Springfield Civic Association; Antioch Baptist Church; Armed Forces Communication & Electronics Association (AFCEA); Fairfax County Telecommunications Task Force.

Honors: Blacks in Government, Meritorious Service Award, 1999, council involvement Award, 1998, outstanding mentor/community service Award, 1996; Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, certificate of recognition, 1998; Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc, Doris R. Asbury Connection Award for legislative involvement, 1997, 1998; US Geological Survey Performance Awards, 1993-96, 1998-99; Joan Orr Air Force spouse of the year, 1995; US Dept of Interior, Service Award, 1995; AT&T FTS2000 Award for management and administrative excellence, 1993; DISA special Act Service Award, 2000; Technology All-Star during the first annual Women of Color Government and Defense Technology Awards conference, 2001; DISA Wall of Heroes, 2002. Listed in the June/July 2001 U.S. Black Engineer Information Technology magazine.

"Dawn M. Lawson." Who's Who Among African Americans, 17th ed. Gale Group, 2004.


Jenice Evelyn Lawson


(1952-)

Quality assurance professional, pharmacist. Senior scientist, Clorox Tech. Center, Pleasanton, California, 2000-2002; regulatory compliance specialist, Clorox Tech. Center, Pleasanton, California, 1989; Manager, Lynn Drug Co., Columbus, 1987-88; computer programmer, consultant, College. pharmacy, Ohio State University, Columbus, 1986-87; pharmacist, Boehringer Ingelheim, Ingelheim, Fed. Rep. Germany, 1985; graduate Research, teaching Associate, Ohio State University, Columbus, 1980-84; staff pharmacist, Easter's Ben Franklin Pharmacy, Maryville, Missouri, 1979; staff pharmacist, St. Francis Hospital, Maryville, Missouri, 1976-78; staff pharmacist, The Corner Drug, Maryville, Missouri, 1975; pharmacy intern, Federmann Drug Store, Kansas City, 1974. Education: AA, East Central College, 1972; BS, University Missouri, Kansas City, 1975; BS, Northwest Missouri State University, 1979; MS, Ohio State University, 1985.

Member: American Pharmaceutical Association Contra Costa German-American Club, Society Risk Analysis and Exposure Assessment, Diamond Toastmasters (secretary district 57 club 4582, 1991, Treasurer 1991, President 1991, Competent Toastmaster award 1991, Able Toastmaster award 1993), Kappa Epsilon (Nellie Wakeman award 1983). Worker Trinity Baptist Church, Livermore.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.


Gaspar Lax


(1487-1560)

*** Not in Gale

Spanish scholastic philosopher, mathematician. Catholic.

Galileo Project entry

Lax was engrossed in nominalist logical subtleties; he was known as the Prince of Sophists. In his own age he was better known as a mathematician, a field in which he published. He also published a Quaestiones phisicales, 1527.

MacTutor entry


Henrietta Swan Leavitt


(1868-1921)

Henrietta Swan Leavitt was an American astronomer of the first magnitude. Her research resulted in numerous advances within the field, the effects of which extended well beyond her lifetime. She discovered a means to rank stars's magnitudes using photographic plates, which became a standard in the field. Leavitt also discovered a means by which astronomers became better able to accurately measure extra galactic distances known as the period-luminosity relation. She also discovered more variable stars than any other astronomer in her time.

UCLA biographical entry

PBS biography

Biographical entry

Biographical entry


Henry Louis Le Chatelier


(1850-1936)

Chemist.

Society of Catholic Scientists entry

Le Chatelier's Principle

Biographical entry


Charles de L'Écluse


(1526-1609)

aka Carolus Clusius / Carlus Clusius / Jules-Charles L'Écluse

French botanist, natural historian, pharmacologist, cartographer. Credited with introducing the potato into Europe; published Rariorum plantarum historia (1601), etc.

Galileo Project entry

L'Écluse's Rariorum plantarum historia (1601) records approximately 100 new species; Exoticorum libri decem (1605) is an important work on exotic flora and includes everything that he published on the subject. Those two works contain all of his original contributions in botany and natural history and are still often consulted. He also published other works and translated several works of his contemporaries in natural science.

He edited De piscibus marinis libri xviii, (1554). He published Antidotarium, sive de exacta componendorum miscendorumque medicamentorum ratione libri tres (1561) and another similar work in 1567.

Beyond his interest (like that of every other natural historian of the age) in the medicinal properties of plants, l'Écluse did not practice medicine. He prepared two major maps for Ortelius, one of Gallia Narbonensis (or southern France) and the other of Spain.

Biographical entry:

"In 1593 Clusius (also known as Carlus Clusius, Charles de L'Écluse, and Jules-Charles L'Écluse) succeeded Dodoens as the chair of botany at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands, where he started their (later famous) botanical garden. Clusius is most famous among mycologists for a picture of a stinkhorn that Robert Gerard lifted and included in his "Gerard's Herbal"... but upside-down, because it looked more like a plant that way. This, of course, demonstrates the atrocious intellectual standard of the herbals of the time (or perhaps just Gerard's) but little else.
"Clusius made many contacts while wandering Europe after fleeing France (he was a Protestant, and the French Church went on one of its periodic rampages), and used them to obtain plants unavailable in Western Europe at the time: Isley credits him with the introduction of the peony, tulip, hyacinth and potato to Western European gardening, and likewise credits him with establishing the Netherlands as the tulip center of the world.
"The Fungorum Historia appendix to his Normal Rariorum Plantarum Historia describes over a hundred fung (including his famous stinkhorn), the most in one place for quite some time."

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Universiteit Leiden branch, History


Esmond Lee


ASA member. Ph. D. in regenerative medicine.

ResearchGate page


Luther Lee


(1800-1889)

Luther Lee, clergyman and abolitionist, was a leading figure in the anti-slavery movement within the Methodist Episcopal Church.

Luther Lee, Natural theology, or, The existence, attributes and government of God : including the obligations and duties of men, demonstrated by arguments drawn from the phenomena of nature, Syracuse, Wesleyan Methodist publishing house, 1866.

Online Books page


Mark Lee


(1952-)

Colonel, USAF. Astronaut. With wife Jan Davis, first husband-and-wife team in space, 1992. Chief of the Astronaut Office EVA Branch. Shuttle flights included missions on the Atlantis (1989), Endeavor (1992) and Discovery (1994, 1997). Lee graduated from Viroqua High School, Viroqua, Wisconsin, in 1970; received a bachelor of science degree in civil engineering from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1974, and a master of science degree in mechanical engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1980.

Following pilot training at Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas, and F-4 upgrade at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona, Lee spent 2-1/2 years at Okinawa Air Base, Japan, flying F-4's in the 25th Tactical Fighter Squadron. Following this assignment, he began his studies at MIT in 1979 specializing in graphite/epoxy advanced composite materials. After graduation in 1980, he was assigned to Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, in the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) Program Office, as the operational support manager. His responsibilities included resolving mechanical and material deficiencies which affected the mission readiness of the AWACS aircraft. In 1982 he returned to flying, upgrading in the F-16 and serving as executive officer for the 388th Tactical Fighter Wing Deputy Commander for Operations, and as flight commander in the 4th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, until his selection as an astronaut candidate.

He has logged 4,500 hours flying time, predominantly in the T-38, F-4 and F-16 aircraft.

Lee was selected as an astronaut candidate by NASA in May 1984. In June 1985, he completed a one-year training and evaluation program, qualifying him for assignment as a mission specialist on future Space Shuttle flight crews. His technical responsibilities within the Astronaut Office have included extravehicular activity (EVA), the inertial upper stage (IUS), Spacelab and Space Station systems. Lee has also served as a spacecraft communicator (CAPCOM) in the Mission Control Center, as Lead "Cape Crusader" at the Kennedy Space Center, Chief of Astronaut Appearances, Chief of the Astronaut Office Mission Development Branch, Chief of the EVA Robotics Branch, and Chief of the EVA Branch. He also worked Space Station assembly issues for the Astronaut Office.

A veteran of four space flights, Lee has traveled over 13 million miles going around the world 517 times and spending 33 days in orbit. He flew as a mission specialist on STS-30 (May 4-8, 1989) and STS-64 (September 9-20, 1994), and was the Payload Commander on STS-47 (September 12-20, 1992), and STS-82 (February 11-21, 1997). During STS-64, he logged EVA hours totaling 6 hours and 51 minutes. During STS-82 he logged 19 hours and 10 minutes in 3 EVAs.

Lee retired from NASA and the Air Force effective July 1, 2001.

Member: Registered professional engineer in the State of Colorado. Member of the American Angus Association and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Honors: Distinguished Flying Cross, Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Air Force Meritorious Service Medal, 2 Air Force Commendation Medals, 4 NASA Space Flight Medals, NASA Distinguished Service Medal, NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, NASA Public Service Group Achievement Award, and 2 NASA Exceptional Service Medals.

MARK C. LEE (COLONEL, USAF, RET.) NASA ASTRONAUT (FORMER)

Windows to the Universe profile


Arie Leegwater


ASA member, Ph. D. in chemistry.

Faculty page and publications


Dr. Wayne Lees, DVM


** Not in Gale

Veterinarian. Epidemiologist. Animal Disease Surveillance Unit, Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), Oak Lake, Manatoba, Canada.

Member: Christian Veterinary Missions, Canada.

Wayne Lees. "Unraveling the mysteries of CWD". July 26, 2003.

Dr. Wayne Lees Named New Manitoba Chief Veterinary Officer


Nicaise Le Febvre


(c. 1610-1669)

*** Not in Gale

French pharmacologist, iatrochemist. Calvinist.

Galileo Project entry

Le Febvre's principal contribution to science is his textbook, the Traité de la chymie (Paris, 1660). His other published work was a description of a polypharmaceutical preparation. In the tradition of iatrochemistry, the Traité was directed to medicinal preparations.

Memberships: Royal Society, 1663-1669. He was admitted on the nomination of Sir Robert Moray.


Jean LeFevre


(1652-1706)

aka Jean LeFebvre

*** Not in Gale

(Not the instrument maker of the same name who lived at the same time.)

French astronomer, cartographer.

Galileo Project entry

Around c. 1682, LeFevre did calculations for Picard. After Picard's death, he continued pedestrian aspects of Picard's work, calculating astronomical tables, publishing the Connaissances des Temps, making a few observations and assisting R. de la Hire in surveying. In 1682, this work got him elected to the Académie.

Member: Académie Royal des Sciences, c.1682-1701.


Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz


(1646-1716)

German philosopher and mathematician. In service of archbishop elector of Mainz (1667-76); on diplomatic missions to Paris (1672-76) and London (1673), meeting many scholars; laid foundations (1675)of integral and differential calculus, published (1684) before Newton's, thus causing long-debated controversy; developed the dynamic theory of motion (1676). In service at Hanover of dukes of Braunschweig-Luneburg as librarian and privy councilor (1676-1716); proposed basis for general topology (1679); wrote (1686, pub.1819) Systema theologicum, an attempt to find common ground for Catholic and Protestant faiths; suggested founding of Academy of Sciences (1700). Developed rationalistic system of metaphysics basedon his theory of monads; also wrote on mathematics, natural science, philosophy, theology, history, law, politics, and other subjects; his principal work in theology Essais de theodicee (1710), in the main a discussion of problem of evil and a defense of optimism.

Galileo Project entry

Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz

MacTutor entry

Biographical entry

Philosophy Pages entry

Wolfram's World entry

Biographical entry

Biographical entry

German entry

Biographical entry

French entry


Matti Leisola


(1947-)

*** Not in Gale

Chemist. Bioprocess Engineer. Professor, Department of Chemical Technology, Helsinki University of Technology, Helsinki, Finland (1997 - present). Research Director Cultor Ltd 1991-1997; Department manager Cultor Ltd, 1989-1991; Senior scientist Cultor Ltd, 1988-1989; Senior teaching Assistant, ETH-Zürich, 1984-1988;Research Fellow ETH-Zürich, 1981-1983; Professor (acting) HUT 1978; Senior teaching ass HUT, 1976-1981; Research assistant The Academy of Finland ,1974-1976; Research help The Academy of Finland, 1972-1973; Habilitation ETH-Zürich, Institut für Biotechnologie, 1988. Education: D.Sc. (Tech.) Helsinki University of Technology (HUT), 1979; Lic.Science Technician, HUT ,1975; M.Sci (Tech.) HUT, 1972. Scientific expert: Oulu university, Professor of bioprocess engineering, 1998 - 2000 ; HUT, docent of biochemistry, 1998; Evaluator for EU-biotech programs, 1991-1995; scandinavian representative, 1996; Expert for US-Department of Energy, 1988.

Awards: Latsis-Preis, ETH-Zürich, 1987; Biotechnology award of Alko Ltd , 1997; Innovation award (Foundation for new technology, with O.Turunen and F. Fenel), 2000.

Patents: 1. Visuri K, Niemi H, Leisola M, Palosaari S ja Kaipainen E (1990) Menetelmä proteiinien kiteyttämiseksi korkean paineen avulla.Finnish patent no.; 2. Apajalahti J and Leisola M (1996) Novel yeast strains for the production of xylitol. French patent no. 9209109 + patent applications in several countries; 3. Leisola M ja Jokela J (2000) Process for the preparation and simultaneous separation of enzyme-catalysed products. Kansainvälinen patenttihakemus; 4.Turunen O, Fenel F ja Leisola M (2000) Method to improve the stability and optimal pH of family G/11 xylanases. Kansainvälinen patenttihakemus.

Finnish Scientist Rejected Darwinism - Dr. Matti Leisola


Jérôme Jean Louis Marie Lejeune


(1926-1994)

French geneticist. Physician. The father of modern genetics. In 1959, Lejeune identified the human chromosomal abnormality linked to Down syndrome, or trisomy 21, one of the most common forms of mental retardation and the first chromosomal disorder to be positively identified. Lejeune's discovery marked a turning point in the new science of cytogenetics (the scientific study of genetic variations at the chromosomal level). Institute Progenese, Paris; Professor fundamental genetics Faculty Medicine, Necker-Enfantsmalades, Paris, l969-94; chief Service, Hopital Enfants Malades, Paris, l964-94; Director, National Science School Center, Paris, l963-64; attending, National Science School Center, Paris, l952-63. Education: The University of Paris (M.D., 1951; Ph.D., 1960).

Member: Royal Society Medicine (London), American Academy Arts and Sciences, Pontifical Academy of Sciences, Royal Academy of Sciences (Stockholm), Academy Moral and Political Sciences, National Academy Medicine (Paris). Roman Catholic.

Honors: Recipient Kennedy prize, l962, Znanie diploma, l964, William Allen Meml. award, l969, Feltrinelli prize, l984.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

The Jérôme Lejeune Foundation. "The main target of the Jerome Lejeune Foundation, a state-recommended foundation, is research into Intelligence Disability.
The Foundation supports both fundamental and clinical research projects aimed at leading, directly or indirectly, to the discovery of treatments for genetic intelligence diseases, in particular, trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)."

Further information Professor Lejeune cited as the father of modern genetics. "The establishment known as the Jérôme Lejeune Foundation, created in 1995, is intended to follow up the work to which Professor Jérôme Lejeune devoted his life :
- Medical research into intelligence diseases and genetic diseases,
- Care and treatment of patients, in particular those suffering from Trisomy 21 or other genetic anomalies, whose lives and dignity must be protected from the moment of conception until they die."

French entry

Access Research Network, Volume 13, Number 1. "What is in the Fridge?". Testimony of French geneticist Jérôme LeJeune in the Tennessee "Frozen Embryo" case.


Abbé Georges Édouard Lemaître


(1894-1966)

The Belgian astronomer Abbé Georges Édouard Lemaître originated what came to be called the "big bang" theory of cosmogony.

After 1927, Lemaître served as a professor of astrophysics at the University of Louvain, teaching and conducting research. Throughout his career he continued to refine his theory, but he also investigated such subjects as the three-body problem, calculating machines, and cosmic rays. He remained, throughout his life, active in the Catholic Church. He saw no conflict between his scientific work and his religious beliefs. He once said, as quoted in the New York Times: "All problems in life can be solved either by religion or science, but not by both combined." In an interview with the New York Times Magazine, he put much of the blame for the perception of a conflict on scientists: "Once scientists can grasp that the Bible does not purport to be a textbook of science, the old controversy between religion and science vanishes." He acknowledged, however, this is more difficult for some branches of science to do than others, but physicists and astronomers "have been religious men, with a few exceptions. The deeper they penetrated into the mystery of the universe, the deeper was their conviction that the power behind the stars and behind the electrons of atoms was one of law and goodness."

Biographical entry

Biography in Scientists of Faith: 48 Biographies of Historic Scientists and Their Christian Faith, by Dan Graves. Kregel Resources, Grand Rapids, MI, 1996. ISBN 0-8254-2724-X.


Louis Lémery


(1677-1743)

*** Not in Gale

French chemist, anatomist, physiologist. Son of Nicolas Lemery.

Galileo Project entry

The bulk of Lémery's scientific writings, which deal mainly with problems of chemical analysis, were published in the Mémoires de l'Académie royale des sciences. His most important observations on organic analysis are contained in four papers published in 1719-1721. His anatomical papers deal with the circulation of the blood in the fetal heart and with the origin of monaters. In addition to his Academy memoirs, he published two monographs, Traité des alimens (1702) and Dissertation sur la nourriture des os (1704).

Member: Académie Royal des Sciences, 1712-1743. He was sous-directeur in 1716 and 1717.


Nicolas Lémery


(1645-1715)

French chemist, pharmacologist. Apothecary to the king (1674-81); noted teacher. Two sons both followed him into the Academy as chemists: Louis and Jacques.

Galileo Project entry:

Lémery's chief contributions to pharmacy were his two complementary works, the Pharmacopée universelle (1697) and the Traité des drogues simples (1698). They represent a comprehensive dictionary of pharmaceuticals. His last major work, Traité de l'antimoine (1707), contains the results of his investigation into the properties and preparations of mineral antimony. His textbook on chemistry, the Cours de chymie (Paris, 1675), went through more than thirty editions.

Member: Académie Royal des Sciences, 1699-1715.

Rare Books entry

Biograhical entry:

First to distinguish between vegetable (organic) and mineral (inorganic) chemistry. Adopted an atomic theory assuming that fundamental particles have characteristic shapes. Discovered a commercial process for the production of sulfuric acid. Obtained boric acid from borax. Investigated chemistry of antimony sulfide. Analyzed camphor and honey.


E. Stan Lennard, M.D., Sc.D.


*** Not in Gale

General surgeon. Associate Professor of Surgery, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A. Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery (beginning 1987), Evergreen Hospital Medical Center, Kirkland, Washington, U.S.A. (Retired). Specialist, thorax and abdomen.

Personal page


John C(arson) Lennox, M.A., D.Phil. (MA Ph.D. Camb. DSc Wales)


(1943-)

*** Not in Gale

(Not Professor of English John Lennox, York University, Toronto, Ontario)

Mathematician. Research Fellow in Mathematics, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, England.

John Lennox was Exhibitioner and Senior Scholar at Emmanuel College Cambridge from which he gained MA and Ph.D. degrees (1970) and has worked for 29 years as Reader in mathematical research at the University of Cardiff, Wales, for which he was awarded a DSc. He spent a year at each of the universities of Wuerzburg, Freiburg (as an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow) and Vienna, and has lectured extensively in both Eastern and Western Europe on mathematics, apologetics and the exposition of Scripture. He is currently Fellow in Mathematics and the Philosophy of Science at Green College, University of Oxford, Visiting Fellow at the Mathematical Institute Oxford, and a Senior Fellow of the Whitfield Institute. He also teaches a module in Science, Faith and Philosophy in the Medical Faculty at Oxford. In addition to around 70 papers and two books in mathematical publications, he is the author of a number of books on the relations of science with religion, the most recent of which is: Hat die Wissenschaft Gott begraben (Has Science Buried God?), Brockhaus, 2002.

From Europen Leadership Forum page:

John has lectured extensively in Europe, both Western and Eastern, including many visits to Russia as a guest of the Academy of Science. John is very involved in the science-religion debate, having been active in Christian work since his student days. He gave the Whitefield Institute annual public lecture in 1998 on the topic, "Is the Watchmaker Really Blind?" in which he challenged the materialistic atheists like Dawkins et al.

Author: Did Science Bury God? A critical analysis of modern conditions for thinking, R. Brockhaus: Wuppertal 2002.

John Lennox."Science and Creation," (In French) Translated and transcribed by A.Kitt.


Xavier Le Pichon


(1937-)

Geophysicist.

Faculty page

Society of Catholic Scientists page

Interview with Le Pichon

ResearchGate oage


James M. Lepkowski


(1948-)

Biostatitician, research scientist. James Lepkowski is a research professor at the Institute for Social Research and an Associate Professor of biostatistics at the University of Michigan. He is also a research professor in the Joint Program in Survey Methodology at the University of Maryland.

He is the first director of the Michigan Program in Survey Methodology. He conducts survey methodology research including the design and analysis of area probability and telephone samples, compensating for missing data, and telephone sampling methods.

He is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association and was elected to membership in the International Statistical Institute. He received a BS in mathematics from Illinois State University (1970), an MPH in Biostatistics (1976) and Ph.D. in Biostatistics (1980), both from the University of Michigan.

Faculty webpage, James M. Lepkowski, Ph.D., Associate Professor Department of Biostatistics, Research Professor, Institute for Social Research, Research Professor University of Maryland, Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, MI.

Member: American Statistical Association, International Statistical Institute, International Association of Survey Statisticians, Society Epidemiologic Research. Baptist.

The National Academies Committee Membership


Jacques-François Le Poivre


(1642-1710)

*** Not in Gale

French mathematician.

Galileo Project entry

Le Poivre is known by his short treatise, Traité des sections du cylindre et du cone considerées dans le solide et dans le plan, avec les demonstrations simples & nouvelles (Paris, 1704).


Paul A. Lepse


(193702019)

Chemist. From ASA entry:

"Academically gifted, Paul rapidly completed his education at Ballard High School, Seattle Pacific College and a doctorate in organic chemistry from the University of Washington. The title of his dissertation was 'Kinetics of the Oxidation of Benzaldehyde with Chromyl Acetate.'...After a year of post-doctoral research in Munich Germany he joined the faculty at Seattle Pacific College (later University) where he taught chemistry for 39 years."

ResearchGate page


John G. Leslie


Ph. Ds in Experimental Pathology (University of Utah) and Archaeology and Biblical History (Trinity Southwest University).

CMI profile

Faculty page

From personal website:

"We live in a fallen world, the result of man's (the initial man and those after him) sin. Yet, there is a loving, compassionate God, the Almighty Creator of All, that continues to reach out into the lives of people seeking to help them return to Him so that He might heal and restore them to the purposes He has for their lives. This website is dedicated to promoting the concept that the physical creation can reveal something of the character of God to mankind. Yet, the scriptures tell us that it, the physical creation, is corrupted and thus it also reveals the impact of sin. God's Holy Word, the Bible, can help each of us understand the difference between the character of God and the corruption of sin as seen in the earth. It, the Bible, can also lead each of us into a knowledge of the saving grace of Jesus Christ: the forgiveness of our sins, a spiritual rebirth, and a hope for eternal life."


Dr. Thomas M. Lessl


(1954-)

Scholar. Speech Communication. Associate Professor, Department of Speech Communication, University of Georgia, Athens, GA. Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin.

Field of interest: Speech Communication; Research: Rhetoric of Science.

Dr. Thomas Lessl. Christian Student Survival Conference, Session 3: "Sexuality: Straight, Gay or Bi"

Faculty page

Origins of Science in the Age of Faith

The Galileo Legend


Lane Patman Lester, Ph.D.


(1938-2022)

Genetics, biology educator, computer programmer. Professor of Biology at Emmanuel College in Franklin Springs, Georgia. Biology teacher Evans High School, Orlando, Florida, 1963-67; Assistant Professor of biology University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, 1970-73; mini-course developer Biology Sciences Curriculum Study, Boulder, 1973-74; Professor of biology, Christian Heritage College, El Cajon, California, 1974-75; Professor of biology, Liberty University, Lynchburg, Virginia, 1979-present, Director Center for Creation Studies, 1985. B.S.E., University of Florida, 1963; M.S. in ecology, Purdue University, 1967, Ph.D. in genetics from Purdue University, 1971. NDEA Fellow, 1967-70. On board of directors of Creation Research Society, Sigma Xi.

Author: (with J.N. Hefley) Cloning: Miracle or Menace?, 1980; (with R.G. Bohlin) The Natural Limits to Biological Change, 1984; contributor articles to professional journals.

AiG profile

Christian Answers profile

Lane Lester. "Genetics: No Friend of Evolution". First published in Creation 20(2):20-22, March-May 1998.

Obituary


Raymond J. Lewis


ASA member. Ph. D. in biology.

Faculty page

From Biologos page:

"Raymond J. Lewis is an associate professor in the Department of Biology at Wheaton College in Illinois. He holds a B.A. (highest honors) in biology from the University of California at Berkeley, a M.Sc. in botany from the University of British Columbia, and a Ph.D. in biological science from the University of California at Santa Barbara. Raymond has studied the genetics and physiology of marine algae, with a focus on the large brown algae known as kelps. He is a fellow of the American Scientific Affiliation and serves as the president of the Wheaton/Naperville chapter of the ASA. He is a member of several professional biological societies that focus on studies of algae."

ResearchGate page


Gordon Rowland Lewthwaite


(1925-2013)

Geographer. From ASA entry:

"Following his undergraduate degree at the University of Otago, and Masters degrees in Geography and History, he came to America as a Fulbright Scholar to pursue a PhD in Geography at the University of Wisconsin, where he met his wife, Lydia. After receiving his PhD in 1956, he taught at the Universities of Oklahoma and Auckland (NZ) before joining the then newly founded California State University, Northridge in 1959. He taught Geography at CSUN for 32 years before retiring in 1992."

CSUN memorial


John Coakley Lettsom


(1744-1815)

*** Not in Gale

From Consumer Health News profile:

John Coakley Lettsom was a famous English physician, philanthropist and chronicler of the human condition. On this date in 1791, he wrote in a letter that medicine "is not a lucrative profession. It is a divine one." Born in the British Virgin Islands on a cotton plantation, Lettsom attended school in Great Britain and returned to the Virgin Islands in 1776 to provide medical treatment to the inhabitants there. His Quaker beliefs spurred him to free the slaves on his family's plantation. Upon returning to England, Lettsom started both the Medical Society of London and the Royal Humane Society.

"John Coakley Lettsom's Welsh Connections." Copyright InteliHealth, Inc., 2000. All rights reserved.

Quakers in Britain profile

HathiTrust profile

Biography in Doctors Who Followed Christ: Thirty-Two Biographies of Eminent Physicians and Their Christian Faith, by Dan Graves. Kregel Resources, Grand Rapids, MI, 1999. ISBN 0-8254-2734-7.


Benjamin Shuet-Kin Xerjen Leung


*** Not in Gale

Biochemist. Animal scientist. Gynecologist. Professor, Obstetrics & Gynecology Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1982-present. Primary Research Interest and Area of Expertise: Mechanism of cancer growth, metastasis and apoptosis regulated by steroid hormones and growth factors. Breast, ovarian, endometrial and cervical cancers. Receptors, signal transduction, ubiquitination and caspase cascades. Interested in partnering with industry to conduct pre-clinical trials, consult and conduct joint research. Previous positions: Assistant Professor & Director, Universtiy of Oregon Health Science Center, Surgery & Biochemistry, 1971-1976; Senior Research Scientist, Director of Research, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Surgery & Biochemistry, 1976-1978; Professor, graduate faculty, University of Minnesota, Animal Science, 1982-present; Associate Professor, University of Minnesota, Obstetrics & Gynecology, 1978-1982.
Education: Student in chemistry and zoology, Hong Kong Baptist College, 1960-61; B.S. cum laude, Chemistry and Zoology, Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA, 1961-1963; Ph.D in Biochemistry, Colorado State University, Collins, CO, 1966-1969; Postdoc, Hormone Action, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 1969 - 1971.

Professional Memberships: American Association for Cancer Research, Inc., 1984-present; American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 1976 - 1995; Endocrine Society , 1974; Society of Chinese Bioscientists in America, 1990-present; Society for Gynecologic Investigation, 1982-1996; American Society for Cell Biology, 1998-present; Minnesota Chromatography Forum (Chairman program Committee 1983-1984), International Platform Association.

Editor: Hormonal Regulation of Mammary Tumors, Vols. I and II, 1982; member Editorial Board Oncology and Biotech. News; Contributor of over 80 articles to professional journals.

ResearchGate page


Urbain LeVerrier


(1811-1877)

French astronomer. Produced improved tables of Mercury's orbit; investigated (1845) disturbance in the motion of Uranus, making calculations indicating the presence of an unknown planet which was discovered (1846) by J.G. Galle and named Neptune; carried out complete revision of planetary theories. Director of Paris Observatory (1854-70, 1873-77).

MacTturor entry

NASA entry

David Darling encyclopedia entry

Free Dictionary entry


L. Gaunce Lewis, Jr.


(1950-2006)

Mathematician.

Syracuse University memorial:

"Gaunce Lewis earned his AB from Harvard in 1971, was a junior officer in the US Navy 1972-1975, and earned an SM in 1976 and a Ph.D. in 1978 from the University of Chicago, writing a dissertation under J. Peter May. He was a T. H. Hildebrandt Research Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor 1978-1981, joined SU as an assistant professor, and was promoted to associate professor 1984 and to professor in 1993. He was an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow 1989-1990."

"His research interests were in algebraic topology, specifically equivariant homotopy theory and stable homotopy theory, and algebra, specifically Mackey functors and representation theory. He has published 15 papers, many very long and deep, and with coauthors the 503 page Springer Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol. 1213 entitled Equivariant Stable Homotopy Theory in 1986. He gave AMS special session talks at South Bend 1991, Syracuse 1993, and Baltimore 1998, and one at the Canadian Mathematical Society in Kingston 1998. He gave a talk at the NSF/CBMS Regional Research Conference in Fairbanks in August of 1993. He also spoke at AMS Summer Research Institutes in Seattle 1996 and Boulder 1999, the Midwest Topology Conference in February 2000, and a 'by invitation only' workshop at Stanford in August 2000."

"Gaunce served on the department's Executive Committee 1992-1994, 1995-1997 and 2001-2002, Graduate Committee 1990-1991 and Undergraduate Committee 1985-1988 and 2000-2001. In the College of Arts and Sciences he served on the Academic Committee 1994-1995 and the Promotion and Tenure Committee 1997-1998."

Tribute article

Publications


Guillaume-François-Antoine de L'Hospital


(1661-1704)

aka Guillaume François Antoine L'Hospital / Guillaume François Antoine, Marquis de l'Hôpital

French mathematician.

Galileo Project entry:

L'Hospital's fame was based on his book Analyse des infiniment petits pour l'intelligence des lignes courbes (1696), the first textbook of the differential calculus. At his death he left the completed manuscript of a second book, Traité analytique, which was published in 1720.

MacTutor entry:

"Guillaume De l'Hôpital served as a cavalry officer but resigned because of nearsightedness. From that time on he directed his attention to mathematics. L'Hôpital was taught calculus by Johann Bernoulli from the end of 1691 to July 1692.

"L'Hôpital was a very competent mathematician and solved the brachystochrone problem. The fact that this problem was solved independently by Newton, Leibniz and Jacob Bernoulli puts l'Hôpital in very good company.

"L'Hôpital's fame is based on his book Analyse des infiniment petits pour l'intelligence des lignes courbes (1696) which was the first text-book to be written on the differential calculus. In the introduction L'Hôpital acknowledges his indebtedness to Leibniz, Jacob Bernoulli and Johann Bernoulli but L'Hôpital regarded the foundations provided by him as his own ideas.

"In this book is found the rule, now known as L'Hôpital's rule, for finding the limit of a rational function whose numerator and denominator tend to zero at a point."

W. W. Rouse Ball. "The Development of Analysis on the Continent," From A Short Account of the History of Mathematics (4th edition, 1908).

Catholic Encyclopedia entry

Guillaume François Antoine, Marquis de l'Hôpital. Free Dictionary entry: His name is also spelled l'Hospital. The circumflex in "l'Hôpital" is a neologism; it was not in use at the time l'Hôpital was alive.

German entry

French entry

Spanish entry


Edward Lhwyd


(1660-1709)

aka Llhwyd, Lhuyd, Llwyd, Lloyd, Floyd, Luidius

*** Not in Gale

Welsh paleontologist, natural historian, botanist, geologist. Anglican.

Galileo Project entry

Lhwyd collected plants around the hill mass of Snowdon in Wales and established the existence of a distinct alpine flora and fauna there. Ray published Lhwyd's list of plants around Snowdon in his Synopsis, 1690.

He assisted Martin Lister in cataloguing mollusks and fossils in Oxfordshire. This topic became his primary scientific interest and resulted ultimately in Lithophylacii botannici ichnographia, 1699.

Fossils involved him in geology. Ichnographia included six letters on geological subjects. The fossil content of stones led him to question the deluge account.

Lhwyd undertook a general natural history of all the celtic parts of Britain (including also Ireland and Brittany). Achaeologia britannica, 1707, was to have been the first volume of this work, but Lhwyd did not live to publish the rest. That volume is more linguistic than scientific; it inaugurated the study of comparative celtic philology.

Membership: Royal Society, 1708. Informal Connections: Friendship with Hans Sloane, Martin Lister, John Ray, John Morton, John Aubrey, Thomas Molyneux, Tancred Robinson, and most of the naturalists of his day in Britain. Intimate frienship with Thomas Hearne. His correspondence with his friends is published in Gunther.

Quarrelled with Dr. Woodword about the origin of marine fossils.

Oxford University Museum of Natural History

Who was Edward Lhwyd?


Andreas Libavius


(1560-1616)

aka Libau

German chemist, iatrochemist, alchemist, physician and author who made important chemical discoveries but is most noted as the author of the first modern chemistry textbook.

Galileo Project entry

German entry

Rare Books entry

Linda Hall Library entry


Charlie Liebert


(1941-)

*** Not in Gale

Chemist. AAS degree in Chemical Technology from the State University of New York at Farmingdale, 1959, BS in Chemistry from Fairleigh Dickenson University (Teaneck, NJ), 1967, and an MBA in Marketing from the Graduate Division of Iona College (New Rochelle, NY), 1972. From 1961 to 1967 he worked for Lever Brothers Company in their Research and Development Division doing laundry detergent application research and development. In 1967 he joined Geigy Chemical Corporation (which became CIBA-GEIGY and is now known as Ciba Industrial Chemicals.) advancing from laboratory technician to supervisor. In 1973 he moved to the marketing department, where responsibilities included; market research, customer service, order processing, transportation, technology development, strategic planning, and budgeting. He retired at age 53 after 27 years with Ciba in November 1994. Founder, Piedmont Association for Creation Education and Research, has been working in the Piedmont region of North Carolina since 1991 to promote the acceptance of the creation model of origins. The Lieberts now belong to Covenant Fellowship in Greensboro, North Carolina.

From

Paul Chesser. "Liberated Lieberts" originally appeared in the September 15, 2000 edition of the Charlotte World (North Carolina, USA). Testimony.

Liebert's website


Kenneth Arnold Lincoln


(1922-2014)

Chemisty. From ASA entry:

"Ken spent two years at San Jose State College and twelve years at Stanford Uniersity where he received his Ph.D. in Physical chemistry. In between he spent some time in the US Navy. While studying for his graduate degree, he did research for Kaiser Aluminum Corp. He then went to work at the Navy Lab in San Francisco and finally to NASA at Moffett Field, retiring from there in 1995."

"It was significant that the Jupiter Galileo spacecraft Ken worked on when he began at NASA in 1970 arrived at the planet after he retired. At the onset, most of his time was spent research heat-shield materials for the probe, that part of the dual spacecraft designed to plunge into the dense atmosphere of Jupiter. He was also part of the team that managed the design of the probe and accommodation for the six on-board instruments."

Online books page

NASA technical memorandum


Francis Line, S.J.


(1595-1675)

*** Not in Gale

From Fairfield University entry:

In 1669 King Charles II felt he needed a spectacular sundial for his garden in Whitehall. Francis Line (1595-1654), renowned dial maker and Professor of physics in Liege, was chosen for the job. Some sort of gentleman's truce was arranged, Line came to Whitehall and built a elaborate dial modeled after his famous sundial at Liege. It was an immediate and immense success, and consisted of a series of glass spheres floating freely in fluid inside larger glass spheres. Because this fascinating sundial had interesting demonstration possibilities - even for inquisitors, a friend of Galileo requested Line to bring one to Rome to help Galileo defend the heliocentric theory.

Francis Line's magnetic clock

Jesuit “dialls,” finest in the world


Derek Arthur Linkens, BSc(Eng), MSc, Ph.D., DSc(Eng), ACGI, CEng, FIEE, FInstMC


*** Not in Gale

Biomedical and industrial engineer. Professor and Dean of the Department of Automatic Control and Systems Engineering, University of Sheffield. Derek Arthur Linkens received a BSc (Eng) degree in Electrical Engineering from Imperial College, London, MSc in Systems Engineering from the University of Surrey, Ph.D. from the University of Sheffield and DSc(Eng) from the University of London. After working in underwater weapon and aerospace technology he joined the University of Sheffield in 1969. He is currently Research Professor in the area of intelligent system engineering relating to both biomedical and industrial engineering problems. He is also the Director of the Institute for Microstructural and Mechanical Process Engineering, The University of Sheffield (IMMPETUS). He has published over 300 refereed pape rs and has been Author and Editor of 7 books. He is a Fellow of the IEE and the Inst MC of which he was President in 1993.

Honors: Elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, for his research on biological systems modelling and control.

Faculty webpage, Automatic Control and Systems Engineering, The University of Sheffield

Contact page

ResearchGate page


D. Wayne Linn


(1929-2023)

Biologist. From ASA entry:

"Wayne received a master’s degree from Oregon State University and his PhD from Utah State. He taught at Southern Oregon University from 1964 to 1994, including serving as Biology Dept Chair from 1969 to 1973. He retired as the Coordinator of MS degree, Environmental Education. Teaching allowed Wayne to hold summer jobs at Rocky Mountain National Park as a wildlife biologist, Grand Teton National Park as a fisheries biologist, and at Crater Lake National Park as a naturalist. Sabbatical leaves afforded opportunities to work in Malawi, Africa, as a Peace Corps volunteer (1973–1975), and at the University of Swaziland, Africa, as a professor of biology (1983–1985). From his time in Malawi, he was honored and humbled to have an aquarium fish from Lake Malawi named after him—Nimbochromis linni."

Nimbochromis linni page


Carl Linnaeus


(1707-1778)

The Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus established the binomial system of biological nomenclature, formalized biological classification, and gave the first organization to ecology.

NAHSTE profile

Biographical entry

Dedicated website

Biography in Scientists of Faith: 48 Biographies of Historic Scientists and Their Christian Faith, by Dan Graves. Kregel Resources, Grand Rapids, MI, 1996. ISBN 0-8254-2724-X.


Ralph Linton


(1893-1953)

American cultural anthropologist. Professor, University of Wisconsin (1928-37), Columbia (1937-46), Yale (1946-53). Contributed to development of cultural anthropology. Author of The Material Culture of the Marquesas Islands (1924), The Tanala, a Hill Tribe of Madagascar (1933), The Study of Man (1936), The Cultural Background of Personality (1945), The Tree of Culture (1955).

Honor: Huxley Memorial Medal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1954.

Biographical memoir

Biographical profile

Ralph Linton, Anthropologue américain, 1893-1953 -- French entry


Jason Lisle


Astrophysicist with a Ph.D. from the University of Colorado.

CMI profile

Faculty page and Q and A page

From Biblical Science Institute page:

"Dr. Jason Lisle is a Christian astrophysicist who researches issues pertaining to science and the Christian Faith. A popular speaker and author, Dr. Lisle presents a rational defense of a literal Genesis, showing how science confirms the history recorded in the Bible. Brought up in a Christian family, at a young age he received Christ as Lord. Since then Lisle has always desired to serve the Lord out of love and gratitude for salvation, and to spread the Gospel message to all people."

"Dr. Lisle double-majored in physics and astronomy with a minor in mathematics at Ohio Wesleyan University. He then went on to obtain a Master’s degree and Ph.D. in astrophysics at the University of Colorado in Boulder. There, he used the SOHO spacecraft to analyze the surface of the sun, and made a number of interesting discoveries, including the detection of giant cell boundaries. Since then, Lisle has worked in full-time apologetics ministry."


Joseph Lister


(1827-1912)

The English surgeon Joseph Lister, 1st Baron Lister of Lyme Regis, discovered the antiseptic technique, which represents the beginning of modern surgery. Quaker. Listerine mouthwash is named after him for his work in antisepsis. He credits Ignaz Semmelweis for earlier work in antiseptic treatment: "Without Semmelweis, my achievements would be nothing."

Free Dictionary entry

NAHSTE entry

Joseph Lister & Antiseptic Surgery

DR. JOSEPH LISTER: MEDICAL REVOLUTIONARY

History Learning Site entry

Biographical entry

Free Dictionary entry

Lister's 1826 Microscope

Biography in Doctors Who Followed Christ: Thirty-Two Biographies of Eminent Physicians and Their Christian Faith, by Dan Graves. Kregel Resources, Grand Rapids, MI, 1999. ISBN 0-8254-2734-7.


Joseph Jackson Lister


(1786-1869)

English optician. Wine merchant by trade. Investigated principles of construction of the object glasses of microscopes and discovered fundamental principle (law of the aplanatic foci) of the modern instrument (1830); first to ascertain true form of red corpuscleof mammalian blood (1834). Founder member of the Microscopical Society. Father of Joseph Lister.

Joseph Jackson Lister's microscope

SciHi blog entry

Magnet Lab entry


Martin Lister


(1632-1712)

*** Not in Gale

English naturalist and physician, was born at Radclive, near Buckingham. He was nephew of Sir Matthew Lister, physician to Anne, queen of James I., and to Charles I. He was educated at St Johns College, Cambridge, 1655, graduated in 1638/9, and was elected a Fellow in 1660. He became F.R.S. in 1671. He practiced medicine at York until 1683, when he removed to London. In 1684 he received the degree of M.D. at Oxford, and in 1687 became F.R.C.P. He contributed numerous articles on natural history, medicine and antiquities to the Philosophical Transactions. His principal works were Historiae animalium A ngliae tres tractatus (f678); Historiae Conch yliorum (1685 1692), and Conchyliorum Bivalvium (1696). As a conchologist he was held in high esteem, but while he recognized the similarity of fossil mollusca to living forms, he regarded them as inorganic imitations produced in the rocks. In 1683 he communicated to the Royal Society (Phil. Trans., 1684), An ingenious proposal for a new sort of maps of countries; together with tables of sands and clays, such as are chiefly found in the north parts of England. In this essay he suggested the preparation of a soil or mineral map of the country, and thereby is justly credited with being the first to realize the importance of a geological survey.

From 1911 Encyclopedia entry

Galileo Project entry

Timeline

Martin Lister (1639-1712) and Fools' Gold.


Yingguang Liu


From CMI profile:

"Yingguang Liu earned his Master of Medicine at Shanghai Medical University and his Ph.D. in Biological Sciences at Ohio University. Liu practiced as a physician in China, specializing in infectious diseases. He did research in the field of molecular virology for 12 years, with publications in the field. He is currently Associate Professor of Microbiology in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Sciences at Liberty University, Lynchburg, Virginia, USA."

Faculty page

ResearchGate page


David Livingstone


(1813-1873)

Scottish missionary, physician and explorer. Operative in cotton mill from age of ten; ordained missionary (1840). Embarked as missionary, reached Bechuanaland in Africa (July 1841); repulsed by Boers in missionary efforts. He later organized exploration expeditions into interior; discovered Lake Ngami (1849), Zambezi River (1851); on great expedition northwardfrom Cape Town through west Central Africa to Luanda and back to Quilimane (1853-56) collected vast amount of information and discovered Victoria Falls of the Zambezi (1855); welcomed back in Britain with enthusiasm; published his Missionary Travels (1857). With mutual regrets he severed connection with missionary society. Returned as consul of Quilimane (1858-64); commanded expeditions exploring Zambezi, Shire, and Rovuma rivers, discovered lakes Chilwa and Nyasa (1859); recalled (1863) and on second visit to England published The Zambesi and its Tributaries (1865) with intent to expose Portuguese slave traders and get missionary and commercial settlement established near head of the Rovuma. Led expedition to explore watershed of Central Africa and sources of Nile (1866); discovered lakes Mweru (1867) and Bangweulu (1868), explored country to Nyangwe on the Lualaba River, returned almost dying to Ujiji, where he was rescued (1871) by newspaper reporter Henry M. Stanley, saying "Dr. Livingstone, I presume." Unable to persuade Livingstone to return to England, Stanley reequipped him and departed from him near Tabora on March 14, 1872. Livingstone sought source of Nile, pushing eastward to Unyanyembe, then south to village of Chitambo's (now in Zambia). A month before his death, he wrote in his journal: "Nothing earthly will make me give up my work in despair. I encourage myself in the Lord my God, and go forward." He was later found dead, kneeling in prayer. The Last Journals of David Livingstone were published in 1874. Livingstone was buried in great honor in London's Westminster Abbey.

Award: Royal Geographical Society Gold Medal, 1855.

ThinkQuest entry

BelieversWeb entry

Christianity Today profile

Livingstone, David (1813-1873): Geographer and missionary in Africa


D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones


(1899-1981)

*** Not in Gale

Physician, pastor. Trained in London for a medical career and was associated with the famous Doctor Thomas Horder. During his medical years he was a much sought after physician and was well respected in his field.

The Martyn Lloyd-Jones Recordings Trust official website

Introduction page

Sir Fred Catherwood. "Dr. D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones: His Life and Ministry"

Biographical entry

Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones Online


Mathias de L'Obel


(1538-1616)

*** Not in Gale

Belgian botanist, pharmacologist. Catholic.

Galileo Project entry:

L'Obel's Stirpium adversaria nova (1571, written with Pierre Pena) is one of the milestones of modern botany. Later, Stirpium observationes, a sort of complement to the Adversaria, was joined to it under the title Plantarum seu stirpium historia (1576). Also other books on botany.

His botanical work was directed toward the pharmacological use of plants. L'Obel published an essay on the pharmacology of Rondelet as part of a reissue of his Adversia in 1605. He referred to Lord Zouch's garden as the garden of medicine.

Biographical entry

Edward Worth Library entry


John Locke


(1632-1704)

English philosopher, physician who an initiator of the Enlightenment in England and France. Secretary to diplomatic mission to Brandenburg (1665); went to live in house of Anthony Ashley Cooper (later Earl of Shaftesbury) as physician and confidential adviser (from 1667) and tutor; secretary of Council of Trade and Plantations (1672-73). In France (1675-79); suspected of complicity in Shaftesbury plots (1684), fled to Holland; returned to become commissioner of appeal (1689-1704) and adviser to government on coinage. Spent some 20 years developing his empirical theory of epistemology, published in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690); outlined his liberal constitutionalist ideas on government in TwoTreatises on Government (1690). Author also of three Letters on Toleration (1689, 1690, 1692), Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693), The Reasonableness of Christianity (1695). Known as the father of English empiricism. Political theories influenced writers of U.S. Constitution.

Disclaimer: We have found claims of Unitarianism but they come from doubtful sources which will be not accepted as authoritative.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry

Galileo Project entry

"John Locke (1632-1704): 'The Philosopher of Freedom'"

Dedicated website

John Locke Bibliography


Sir Charles Locock


(1799-1875)

***Not in Gale

(Scottish obstetric physician. Physician-Accoucheur to Queen Victoria.

From "Biography of Sir Charles Locock (1799-1875)":

For three years Locock was resident private pupil of Sir Benjamin Brodie in London, and afterwards graduated M.D. at Edinburgh in 1821. Brodie recommended him to devote himself specially to midwifery, and he was fortunate in receiving the commendations of Dr. Gooch, who was retiring from practical midwifery. After 1825 he rapidly rose to the first rank, and long had the best practise in London as an accoucheur. In 1843-5 he lectured at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, and was for many years physician to the Westminster Lying-in Hospital. He was admitted a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1836, and was a member of its council in 1840-1-2. In 1840 he was appointed first physician-accoucheur to Queen Victoria, and attended at the birth of all her children. Besides contributing some practical articles to the Cyclopæ dia of Medicine and to the Library of Medicine, he made a valuable contribution to medicine by the discovery of the efficacy of bromide of potassium in epilepsy (see Reports of Discussions, Royal Med.-Chir. Society; Lancet and Medical Times, 23 May 1857). In 1857 he was created a baronet, although he declined the honour in 1840. He was president of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society in 1857, was elected F.R.S. and created D.C.L Oxon. in 1864.

Royal College of Physicians entry


Thomas Stanton Loeber


(1922-2005)

(Born in San Francisco, California, United States). Biologist (retired). Achievements include co-developer of first computerized library catalog. Biological Consultant, Pacific SW Biological Services, National City, California, 1986-1987; technical writer Nuc. Generating Station, So. California Edison, San Onofre, California, 1983-1986; program exec., Oregon Department of Transp., Portland, 1978-1981; instructor, Mt. Angel College, 1966-1967; Research analyst, State Libr., Salem, Oregon, 1963-1967; Director National Malaria Eradication Service, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, 1957-1960. Malariologist International division, USPHS, 1956-60; Assistant Professor SW Oregon C.C., 1967-73; instructor National University, San Diego, 1984; U.S. rep. Regional Conf. WHO, Baghdad, 1957, Addis Ababa, 59; Consultant Governor's Commission for Handicapped, Salem, Oregon, 1968, Manpower Study Prudential Properties, Agoura, California, 1974; tutor in Mathematics and English Latino elem. school children, 2001; founder Los Amigos Fund (Presbyterian Church), 2003; medical mission Global Health Outreach, Honduras, 2003. Education: BA in Zoology, Pomona College, 1948; MS in Entomology, University Mass., 1950; MA in International Rels., UCLA, 1963. Certification: Certified Vector Control Specialist California Department of Health, 1955, Fundamentals of Procedure Writing Gen. Physics Corp., 1985

Member: Director, UCLA International Student Center, 1962-63; Member Christian Medical-Dental Assoc./Global Health Outreach; staff adminstructor 58th Biennial session Oregon House of Representatives; deacon Presbyterian Church, 2002-present. Member: Nature Conservancy, Sigma Xi, Pi Gamma Mu, Pi Sigma Alpha.

Honor: Grantee, Ford Foundation, 1962.

Author: Foreign Aid Our Tragic Experiment, 1961, Three Case Studies in Public Library Development, 1966, A Brief History of Time Since 1960, 1999; co-author: A Computer-Based Approach to Planning in Underdeveloped Areas, 1965; Contributor of articles to professional journals.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Obituary


James Logan


(1674-1751)

American public official and jurist, b. Lurgan, Ireland, of Scottish parentage. To America (1699) as secretary to William Penn; member of the provincial council (1703-47); mayor of Philadelphia (1722); acting executive of the province (1736-38). Chief justice, Pennsylvania supreme court (1731-39). Interested in botany; the family Loganiaceae and the genus Logania were so named by Linnaeus in his honor.

Marion Parris Smith. "James Logan."Dictionary of American Biography Base Set. American Council of Learned Societies, 1928-1936: "His most important scientific work was a series of "Experiments Concerning the Impregnation of the Seeds of Plants," the results of which he reported to his friend Peter Collinson in London and to the Royal Society (1736; see Charles Hutton and others, Philosophical Transactions ... Abridged, 1809, VII, 669). His conclusions he later published in a Latin treatise, Experimenta et Meletemata de Plantarum Generatione (Leyden, 1739). Translated into English by Dr. John Fothergill, the celebrated Quaker physician, it was published in London in 1747. Other papers contributed by Logan to the Royal Society of London include "An Account of Mr. T. Godfrey's Improvement of Davis' Quadrant" (Philosophical Transactions, Abridged, VII, 669); "Some Thoughts on the Sun and Moon, When Near the Horizon Appearing Larger than When Near the Zenith" (Ibid., VIII, 112); "Concerning the Crooked or Angular Appearance of the Streaks or Darts of Lightning in Thunderstorms" (Ibid., VIII, 68). He also published two translations: Cato's Moral Distiches, Englished in Couplets (1735), and M. T. Cicero's Cato Major; or His Discourse of Old Age (1744), the latter said by Charles Evans (American Bibliography, II, 1904, p. 258) to be generally considered the best specimen of printing from Franklin's press."

Galileo Project entry

Famous Americans entry

US History entry

College at Penn entry


Mikhail Vasilyevich Lomonosov


(1711-1765)

The Father of Russian Poetry and the Father of Russian science. Writer, chemist, meteorologist, astronomer. Studied in Germany (1736-41), esp. under Christian von Wolff and Johann Henckel; adjunct in physics (1742-45), professor of chemistry (from 1745), St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences; established (1748) first scientific chemical laboratory in Russia and introduced (1752) a course of instruction in physical chemistry; set up a colored-glass works (1753) and produced the first colored-glass mosaics in Russia. As a scientist he rejected the phlogiston theory of matter commonly accepted at the time, and he anticipated the kinetic theory of gases. He regarded heat as a form of motion, suggested the wave theory of light, and stated the idea of conservation of matter. Lomonosov was the first person to record the freezing of mercury, and to observe the atmosphere of Venus during a solar transit in 1761, concluding that Venus had an atmosphere "similar to, or perhaps greater than that of the earth."

Lomonosov drew up plans for Moscow State University (opened 1755) and appointed a councilor (1757). While imprisoned (1743-44), wrote 276 Notes on Corpuscular Philosophy and Physics containing dominant ideas of his scientific work; developed an atomistic theory of matter based on a materialistic monadology; evolved a corpuscular, mechanical theory of heat based on Boyle; did work on the law of the conservation of matter and energy, crystallization of liquids, electricity, meteorology, metallurgy, origin of icebergs; invented (1759) several astronomical and navigational instruments.

He also made significant contributions to the philological study of the Russian language, including the development of a scientific vocabulary, and wrote a controversial history of Russia. He wrote poetry, much of it on scientific subjects; worked on unfinished heroic epic on Peter the Great; his tragedy Tamira and Sellim produced in St. Petersburg (1750). A leader in reformation of Russian language and versification, esp. with Russian Grammar (1755-57).

"Combining the formidable will-power and the formidable strength of perception, Lomonosov embraced all the branches of learning. A thirst for a deeper appreciation of things proved an overwhelming passion with that impassioned spirit. A historian, rhetorician, mechanic, chemist, mineralogist, artist and poet, he had experienced it all and perceived it all ..." (Alexander Pushkin)

Two Letters of Mikhail Vasilevich Lomonosov (1711-1765) to his Patron, I. I. Shuvalov. [excerpted from Anthology of Russian Literature From the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Leo Wiener, ed. and Tr. Pt. 1 (New York, 1902), pp. 242-246

Lomonosov "Aerodynamic": Lomonosov invented a prototype of helicopter in 1754!

2001: 290TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE BIRTH OF MIKHAIL LOMONOSOV!

About Lomonosov works on chemistry (in Russian)

Biography, in Russian

M. V. Lomonosov: velikiy syn Rossii, in Russian

Velikie himiki: Lomonosov, in Russian

Lomonosov i metallurgiya, in Russian

Other biographical articles in Russian

Free Dictionary entry

Biographical entry

From Lomonosov's collected essays: "The Creator gave the human race two books. In one He revealed His majesty, in the other - his will. The first is the visible world, which He created so that man - beholding the magnitude, the beauty, and the harmony of His creation - could acknowledge God's omnipotence. The second book is Holy Scripture."


Crawford Williamson Long


(1815-1878)

American physician, surgeon, anesthesiologist and pharmacist.

Crawford Williamson Long received his M.D. at the University of Pennsylvania in 1839. He performed the first surgical operation in general anesthesia induced by ether (8 operations between 1842 and 1846). Although William T.G. Morton is well-known for performing his historic anesthesia on October 18, 1846, C.W. Long is now known to be the first doing an ether-based anesthesia. After observing the same effects with ether that where already described by Humphrey Davy 1800 with nitrous oxide, C.W. Long used ether the first time on March 30, 1842 to remove two tumors from the neck of his patient, Mr. James M. Venable. The results of this trials where published several years (December 1849) later only being second after Mortons publication. An original copy of his publication is held in the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Crawford Long Museum

Crawford Long Collection, Emory University

Georgia Encyclopedia entry


Stephen Long


Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, UC Santa Barbara. Dr. Stephen Ingalls Long (Born 1946) received the IEEE Microwave Applications Award in 1978 for development of InP millimeter wave devices. In 1988 he was a research visitor at GEC Hirst Research Centre, U.K. In 1994 he was a Fulbright research visitor at the Signal Processing Laboratory, Tampere University of Technology, Finland and a visiting professor at the Electromagnetics Institute, Technical University of Denmark. He is a senior member of the IEEE and a member of the American Scientific Affiliation.

Faculty page

Stephen Long. One Christian's Perspective on Work: A Personal Testimony

ResearchGate page


Adam Lonitzer


(1528-1586)

aka Lonicerus

German botanist, natural historian, physician, mathematician. The genus Lonicera was named after him.

Galileo Project entry:

As well as acting as municipal physician, he wrote books on public health, such as regulations for controlling the plague (with Johann Palmerius, 1572) and regulations for midwives (1573). Education: 1536, University of Marburg, received a B.A. (1540), and M.A. (1545). He studied medicine at Marburg and at Mainz. He received his M.D. in 1554 from Marburg.


Dame Kathleen Lonsdale


(1903-1971)

Kathleen Lonsdale was an early pioneer of X-ray crystallography, a field primarily concerned with studying the shapes of organic and inorganic molecules. In 1929, Kathleen Lonsdale was the first to prove experimentally that the hexamethylbenzene crystal, an unusual form of the aromatic compound, was both hexagonal and flat in shape. In 1931, she was the first to use Fourier analysis to illustrate the structure of hexachlorobenzene, an even more difficult organic structure to analyze. In 1945, Lonsdale was the first woman, along with microbiologist Marjory Stephenson, admitted as a Fellow to the Royal Society. She was the first female professor at University College, London, the first woman named president of the International Union of Crystallography, and the first woman to hold the post of president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. She accepted her achievements as a pioneering woman scientist with characteristic humility. In 1966, the "lonsdaleite," a rare form of meteoric diamond, was named for her.

Professor of Chemistry at the University of London, 1949-68. Dame Commander of Order of the British Empire, 1956; Davy Medal of Royal Society, 1957; honorary D.Sc. from University of Cardiff, University of Manchester, University of Leicester.

Special interests include social responsibility of scientists, science and religion, and contacts between scientists in all countries, especially in times of political difficulties-interests reflected in her lectures during visits to Europe, Soviet Union, United States, People's Republic of China, Japan, Australasia, Canada, South Africa, United Arab Republic.

Author: Simplified Structure Factor and Electron Density Formulae for the 230 Space-Groups of Mathematical Crystallography, G. Bell and Sons, 1936; Crystals and X-Rays, G. Bell and Sons, 1948; International Tables for X-Ray Crystallography, Kynoch Press, Volume 1, 1952, Volume 2, 1959, Volume 3, 1962;Removing the Causes of War, (Swarthmore Lectures), Allen & Unwin, 1953; Is Peace Possible?, Penguin Books, 1957; (With J. Kasper) International Tables for X-Ray Crystallography, Volume 2, Kynoch Press, 1959; International Tables for X-Ray Crystallography, Volume 3, Kynoch Press, 1962; I Believe (Arthur Stanley Eddington Memorial lecture), Cambridge University Press, 1964.

Kathleen Yardley Lonsdale

Woman of substance

Dr. Peter E. Childs. "The Life and Work of Kathleen Yardley Lonsdale (1903-1971)" . A lecture by Dr. Peter E. Childs to mark the official opening of the Kathleen Lonsdale Building, University of Limerick, 20th. April 1998


Raúl E López


From CMI profile:

"Raúl E López has an M.S. and a Ph.D. in Atmospheric Science from Colorado State University. He worked for 23 years as a research meteorologist with the Environ­mental Research Laboratories of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He has published about 50 journal papers and 90 conference papers and technical reports."

ResearchGate page


Frank Lorimer


(1894-1985)

Educator, clergyman, sociologist, demographer, and author. Lorimer's inquiries as a scientist of human populations covered such diverse areas as Soviet and African societies, fertility differentiation among separate groups, and eugenics-the science of breeding for purposes of genetic improvement. Professor Emeritus, American University, from 1964; Professor sociology Graduate School, American University, 1938-64; President, Population Association America, 1946-47; secretary, Population Association America, 1934-39; Research Fellow, Eugenics Research Association, 1930-34; Research Director, Brooklyn Conference in Adult Education, 1929-30; Lecturer in social theory, Wellesley (Mass.) College, 1928-29; Assistant Professor philosophy, Wells College, Aurora, N.Y., 1927-28; minister, N.Y.C. Baptist Mission Society, 1922-25; Associate Director, Abraham Lincoln Center, Chicago, 1920-1921. Education: AB, Yale University, 1916; AM, University Chicago, 1921; BD, Union Theol. Seminary., 1923; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1929, and from 1922 to 1925, he served as a minister of the New York City Baptist Mission Society.

Author: The Growth of Reason: A Study of the Role of Verbal Activity in the Growth of the Structure of the Human Mind, 1929, The Making of Adult Minds in a Metropolitan Area, 1931, Dynamics of Population; Social and Biological Signifigance of Changing Birth Rates in the United States (with F. Osborn), 1934, Foundations of American Population Policy (with E. Winston and L. Kiser), 1940, Population of the Soviet Union: History and Prospects, 1946, Culture and Human Fertility, 1954, Demographic Information on Tropical Africa, 1961.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Online Books


Dr. Adriaan (Ard) A. Louis


*** Not in Gale

Royal Society University Research Fellow, Cambridge University, England.

Ard Louis grew up in Gabon, West Africa, where his parents are missionaries. His first degree was from the University of Utrecht, the Netherlands, and his Ph.D. in theoretical physics was from Cornell University, USA. Since 1998 he has been working at Cambridge University, UK, where he is director of studies in physics and chemistry at Hughes Hall, and leads an interdisciplinary research group in theoretical chemistry that focuses on the statistical mechanics of complex fluids.

Webpage

Curriculum Vitae for Adriaan (Ard) A. Louis

Recommends Science and Christianity: Conflict or Coherence? by Henry F. Schaefer III. The Apollos Trust, Watkinsville, GA, 2003. ISBN 0-9742-975-0X.


Colonel Jack Lousma


(1936-)

U.S. astronaut and space shuttle pilot. Crew member, Skylab 3, 1973, Columbia space shuttle, 1982.

Awarded the Johnson Space Center Certificate of Commendation (1970) and the NASA Distinguished Service Medal (1973); presented the Navy Distinguished Service Medal and the Navy Astronaut Wings (1974), the City of Chicago Gold Medal (1974), the Robert J. Collier Trophy for 1973 (1974), the Marine Corps Aviation Association's Exceptional Achievement Award (1974), the Federation Aeronautique Internationale's V. M. Komarov Diploma for 1973 (1974), the Dr. Robert H. Goddard Memorial Trophy for 1975 (1975), the AIAA Octave Chanute Award for 1975 (1975), the AAS Flight Achievement Award for 1974 (1975); inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame (1982). NASA Distinguished Service Medal (1982), Department of Defense Distinguished Service Medal (1982), NCAA Silver Anniversary Award (1983). Inducted into the Michigan Aviation Hall of Fame (1988).

Free Dictionary entry

Official website

Space Museum page

NASA profile

Testimony in Scientists Who Believe: 21 Tell Their Own Stories, edited by Eric C. Barrett and David Fisher. The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago, IL. ISBN 0-8024-7634-1. "I think that it is impossible to work in the field of space technology and exploration - to be acquainted with the magnitude and precision of space, and to be exposed to the principles of the universe - without being sure that it could not all have just happened by mere chance. It had to be engineered by a Master Planner and Designer. My work in the space program has reinforced my faith in God, the Creator."


Richard Lower


(1631-1691)

English physician and physiologist. Made first direct transfusion of blood from one animal to the veins of another (in dogs, 1665); studied cardiopulmonary system; published Tractatus de corde (1669). Richard Lower was a pioneer in seventeenth century medicine because of his studies in experimental physiology. His observations about the circulation and transfusion of blood led to some of the most significant discoveries in the history of medicine. Lower studied at Westminster School and Christ Church College, Oxford, where he earned an M.A. in 1655 and an M.D. in 1665. He was named Sedleian professor of natural philosophy in 1660. He is still regarded as one of Oxford's finest doctors.

Lower is famous for his anatomical work on the brain and nerves, carried out as the assistant of Thomas Willis in Oxford in the early 1660s, and for his own anatomical and physiological investigation of the structure and action of the heart, on which he published in 1669. He was also involved in the first experimental transfusions of blood into a human subject in 1666. He was one of the most skilled and accomplished vivisectionalists of his time.

Galileo Project entry

Richard Lower: Anatomist and Physiologist

Online books


Margaret D. Lowman


(1953-)

Naturalist.

Burgundy Wildlife Camp, science teacher, 1969-75; University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia, lecturer in adult education department, 1978-81; Ruby Hills (sheep and cattle ranch), Walcha, Australia, co-owner, 1983-90; Williams College, Williamstown, MA, Professor of biology and environmental studies, 1990-92; Selby Gardens, Sarasota, FL, director of research and conservation, 1992-present, appointed to Jessie B. Cox Chair in Tropical Botany, 1993-present. Canopy Construction Associates, founder, 1992. Russell Sage College, Geneva Sayre Lecturer, 1995; West Georgia College, Professor Lampton Annual Lecturer, 1995; adjunct Professor at Williams College, University of Florida, University of South Florida, and New College of the University of South Florida, 1992-present; speaker at colleges and universities, including University of California, Santa Barbara, Pennsylvania State University, University of Hawaii at Manoa, and Carleton College, Northfield, MN. Earthwatch, member of board of directors, 1990-present; Massachusetts Tropical Conservatory, member of board of education, 1991-present; Jason Project in Science Education, chief scientist, 1994 and 1999; Monteverde Institute (Costa Rica), member of board of directors, 1996; TREE Foundation, member of advisory board, 1998-present; International Canopy Network, member of board of directors, 1999. Work featured in Heroes of the High Frontier, a National Geographic television special, 1999.

Personal webpage

Biographical entry

Faculty page


Ernest Lucas


(1945-)

Theological educator. Education: BA, Oxford (U.K.) University, 1967; BA, Oxford (U.K.) University, 1976; Ph.D., University Kent, Canterbury, U.K., 1970; Ph.D., Liverpool (U.K.) University, 1989. Memberships: Royal Society Chemistry, Christians in Science (Executive Committee 1986), Society of Genealogists, Human Values in Health Care Forum (vice chair 1993-95). Part-time lecturer, Bristol University, 1994; tutor in bibl. studies, Bristol (U.K.) Baptist College, 1994; director studies, Institute for Contemporary Christianity, London, 1986-94; senior tutor, Liverpool Bible College, 1982-86; tutor, Liverpool Bible College, 1978-82; minister, Durham (U.K.) City Baptist Church, 1976-78; part-time lecturer, Oxford Polytechnic, 1973-75; research Fellow, Organic Chemistry Laboratory, Oxford University, 1972-73; research Associate biochemistry, University N.C., Chapel Hill, 1970-72.
Co-author: Our World, 1986 (C.S. Lewis Gold Medal 1988).

Science and the Bible lectures

Faraday Institute page


Shannon W. Lucid


(1943-)

(Born in Shanghai, China). Biochemist. Aerospace administrator. Astronaut. Chief scientist, NASA Solar System Exploration division, 2002-present. First woman to fly on the shuttle three times; mission specialist remained aloft 188 days stationed on Space Station Mir, 1996; mission specialist flight STS 76 & 79, NASA, 1996; mission specialist flight STS-58, NASA, 1993; mission specialist on Shuttle Atlantis Flight, NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 1991; mission specialist flights STS-51G and STS-34, NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center; astronaut, NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, Houston, 1979; chemist, Kerr-McGee, Oklahoma City, 1966-68; Research Associate, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, from 1974; Senior lab. technician, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, 1964-66. On February 12, 2002, NASA chose Lucid to be the new chief scientist of its Solar System Exploration division (part of the California-based Jet Propulsion Laboratory). In this position, she will direct, establish, and develop the agency's science agenda, leading a three-person science council that will shape the future of U.S. space exploration.

Education: University of Oklahoma, B.S. in Chemistry, M.S. and Ph.D in Biochemistry.

Honors: Recipient Freedom Forum's highest award, the Free Spirit Award, 1997.

International Space Hall of Fame, Shannon W. Lucid.

Biographical profile

Women in Space

"NASA Astronaut, Dr. Shannon Lucid, Selected as Chief Scientist," by NASA,12 February 2002

"[Oklahoma Governor] Keating Congratulates Shannon Lucid On Receiving Congressional Space Medal Of Honor"

"The Incredible Shannon Lucid"

Astronautix.com profile

NASA profile


Saint Luke


(Fl. 1st century)

Physician. St. Luke (active 50 AD) was one of the four Evangelists. Author of the Third Gospel and its sequel, the Acts of the Apostles. Luke's name-of Latin origin-indicates that he apparently was not of Jewish derivation. The earliest surviving testimony describes him as a Syrian from Antioch. His abundant acquaintance with the Antiochean Church, as well as his knowledge of literary Greek, both illustrated in his writings, supports this testimony. Tradition and one text of St. Paul's (Colossians 4:14) say that Luke was a trained physician. His Gospel exhibits a Greek literary style absent from the other Gospels and documents of the New Testament. Luke, apparently, was a well-educated man. His Greek was as polished as that of such classical writers as Xenophon.

Catholic Encyclopedia entry

Biography in Doctors Who Followed Christ: Thirty-Two Biographies of Eminent Physicians and Their Christian Faith, by Dan Graves. Kregel Resources, Grand Rapids, MI, 1999. ISBN 0-8254-2734-7.


Richard D. Lumsden


(1938-1997)

*** Not in Gale

Richard D. Lumsden, Ph.D. Biology He had a B.S. and M.S. in Zoology from Tulane University, a traineeship in Cell Biology at Harvard (non-degree), a Ph.D. in Biology from Rice University, and a Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship in Medical Pathology from the Tulane University School of Medicine. Dr. Lumsden was former Professor of Parasitology and Cell Biology and Dean of the Tulane University Graduate School. He received over 21 Research Grants and Contracts from such organizations at the National Institutes of Health, The National Science Foundation, and the FDA. He published some 90 peer-reviewed papers, mostly in parasitological journals often describing new species, and presented over 100 program abstracts. An issue of the Journal of Parasitology [87(3), June 2001], featured a study by a group of workers at UCLA on human brain tapeworm parasites (pages 510-521), and it references work by Dr. Lumsden done over 21 years ago on electron microscopy of the tapeworm. He won the Henry Baldwin Ward medal, the highest award in parasitology. Dr. Lumsden was a member of the American Society of Parasitologists, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Society of Zoologists, the Society for Cell Biology, the Helminthological Society of Washington, and the New York Academy of Sciences.

ICR profile

Creation-Evolution profile


Jonathan I. Lunine


Planetary scientist and astrophysicist. Head of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Jonathan Lunine Appointed Chief Scientist of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Prior faculty page

Catholic Scientists entry


Kenneth H. Luther


Mathematician. Environmental scientist. Assistant Professor, Mathematics and Computer Science and Chair, Environmental Science Program, Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Indiana. "My area of research is mathematical modeling of groundwater flow. I am particularly interested in modeling groundwater flow using the analytic element method. This method is an alternative to grid based numerical methods such as the finite difference method or the finite element method. The AEM uses concepts from potential theory to construct solutions to flow problems which are analytic almost everywhere. Most of my work involves construction of 3D solutions, although I have dabbled in 2D as well. My professional activities include being on the Board of Directors of the Valparaiso Water Department, membership in the Indiana Water Resources Association. I will be president of the IWRA in 2004."

Education: B.S. in Mathematics Mount Union College, M.S. in Mathematics from the University of Delaware, Ph.D.. in Environmental Science from Indiana University. "I studied mathematical and computer modeling of groundwater flow in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs SPEA)."

Dr. Luther is president of the IWRA. Indiana Water Resources Association.

Indiana Water Resources Association

The Indiana Water Resources Association (IWRA) was founded in 1979 as a state affiliate of the American Water Resources Association to promote water resources research, education, and communication in Indiana. The IWRA is an organization of several hundred professionals and students working in all aspects of water resources. Its members include scientists, engineers, regulators, educators, policy-makers, and students from government agencies, universities, industry, consulting firms, and other water related groups.

Dr. Ken Luther, Old faculty page

Research interests page


Ludmila Alekseevna Lutova


(1945-)

(Born in Leningrad, Russia). Geneticist, researcher. Professor of biology, St. Petersburg State University, 1996; Department chief dept. of biology, St. Petersburg State University, 1994-95; Associate Professor, St. Petersburg State University, 1988-95; Assistant Professor biology, St. Petersburg State University, 1980-88; science rschr., St. Petersburg State University, 1969-80. Education: MSc, St. Petersburg State University, 1969; Ph.D., St. Petersburg State University, 1977; DSc, St. Petersburg State University, 1994.

Member: N.Y. Academy of Sciences, Genetics and Breeding Society (council 1972). Orthodox Christian.

Honors: Personal Soros grantee, 1993, RFFI grantee, 1994-95, St. Petersburg Mayor's Office grantee, 1995.

Author: (handbook) Biotechnology of Higher Plants, 1990. Patentee in field of biology plant protection.

Marquis Who's Who, 2004.

Loop Research Network page


Richard N(eal) Luxton


(1950-)

South American literature educator, researcher, explorer and writer. Also worked as ship's steward, migrant farm laborer, schoolteacher, and construction worker. Chair Department of Human Studies, Western New England College, 1992; Professor, Western New England College, Springfield, Massachusetts, 1989; Professor, Chapman College, Sacramento, 1985-89; Professor, National University, Sacramento, 1985-89.Education: BA, Essex University, Colchester, Eng., 1972; Ph.D., Essex University, Colchester, Eng., 1978. Member: Latin American Indian Literary Assn. (symposium chairman, 1986, v.p. 1986-89, president, 1989-92).

British Academy fellow, 1979, Harvard University fellow, 1981.

Honors: Poulter Scholarship in archaeology from University of Essex, 1974-76; British Academy grant, 1979-80; Harvard fellow at Dumbarton Oaks, 1981.

Author: The Mystery of the Mayan Hieroglyphs, 1981, The Book of Chumayel, The Counsel Book of the Yucatec Maya (1539-1638).

Contact page


Heinz Lycklama


Ph. D. in experimental nuclear physics from McMaster University, Canada.

From biographical entry:

"Dr. Heinz Lycklama earned a Bachelor’s degree in Engineering Physics (1965) and a Ph. D. degree in experimental Nuclear Physics (1969) from McMaster University in Canada. Since then he has worked in the telecommunications and computer software industries at Bell Telephone Laboratories in NJ and at Interactive Systems Corporation in CA – as an individual contributor and in management positions. In 1992 Dr. Lycklama formed Open Systems Technology Associates (OSTA) to offer his technology management consulting services to various start-ups in the high technology industry. In 2013 Heinz founded the Apologetics Forum to help equip believers in the defense of The Faith."

Personal and ministry website

CMI interview


Howard William Lyon


(1923-2004)

Chemist.

ASA entry

From memorial, University of Northern Iowa:

"Mr. Lyon received his B. A. and M. A. from the University of Iowa. He was professor of chemistry at Northwestern College, Orange City, from 1949 to 1956. He was then employed at the University of Northern Iowa, retiring as professor emeritus in 1992. He also served in the U. S. Navy during World War II. He was a 50-year member of the American Chemical Society, an active volunteer with Habitat for Humanity, and a member of the Metropolitan Chorale and New Horizons Band. He was an elder and deacon at First Presbyterian Church and taught Sunday School for many years."


Lawrence Ernest Lyons


(1922-2010)

From Encyclopedia of Australian Science and Innovation:

"Lawrence Ernest Lyons was appointed Emeritus Professor at the University of Queensland after his retirement in 1987. He had been Professor of Physical Chemistry at the university since 1963 and Head of the Department of Chemistry from 1970 to 1973. The driving force behind his years of research was to a produce cheap alternative to the silicon solar cell."

From ASA entry:

"His research over the years garnered him two Fulbright scholarships, in 1957 and 1979, the HG Smith Medal for Chemistry (1968) and the Burfitt Prize for Chemistry (1968). He was also made a Leverhulme senior fellow at the University of Tokyo and Debye lecturer at Cornell University in the United States, as well as working at Cambridge, Oxford, Harvard and Princeton, among many other institutions. Capping a lifetime of achievement, in 1971 he was elected a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, the highest scientific honour Australia offers its scientists, while in 1987 the University of Queensland appointed him an emeritus professor. Apart from his science, a driving force in his life was his Christian faith. With his wife and other evangelical academics, he founded three Anglican residential halls at Sydney University and New College at the University of NSW. He was also instrumental in the construction of the building used by the then Kenmore Presbyterian Church, and now by Kenmore Uniting Church."


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