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Selected Excerpts from Winner's Speeches |
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These important awards are particularly noteworthy this year because they come at a time which has been so unsetting for people all over the world, especially for people in this region as well as those in my country, the United States. These prizes, under the auspices for the King Faisal Foundation, celebrate activities that unite persons of good will everywhere they celebrate efforts to advance civilization and human well being through progress in the arts and sciences.
EUGENE BRAUNWALD Co Winner of the 2002 King Faisal International Prize for Medicine
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In this modern world we are all very dependent upon each other and to operate efficiently nations must learn to communicate with each other. In addition to honoring intellectual achievement, I believe that the King Faisal International Prize helps in such understanding by bringing different people together.
MICHAEL BERRIDGE Winner of the 1986 King Faisal International Prize for Science
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It is a great honor for me to receive The King Faisal International Prize the "custodians" of a civilization that in former times taught sciences to the West. Islam has embraced many peoples, seeking out knowledge from the far corners of the world, writing it down, and developing science by theory and experiment. In the Dark Ages of Europe it was the Muslim world that kept alive the flame of science.
The Science of alchemy was brought into Europe in the Middle Ages by the writings Al-Razi and provided a key strand in the development of medical chemistry in Europe. The writings of Ibn Sina provided Europe's principal text on medicine for centuries; for example Ibn Sina is mentioned in the “Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer, one of the most important manuscripts of English literature, and dating from the 14th century. This was an age in which the cross fertilization of Europe and the Muslim world was at its most intense. In our own age, the King Faisal Foundation stands for such traditions of thought and scholarship that transcend the barriers of language and culture.
GREGORY PAUL WINTER Co Winner of the 1995 King Faisal International Prize for Medicine |
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While preparing for this trip to Saudi Arabia I was thinking about the crucial contributions of Arab and Muslim scholars and scientists to our civilization. Six hundred years before Descartes, Averroes and Avecenne imposed the tripe axes on space by exporting from the human body the ideas of height, width, and depth. This idea is completely non trivial and has incredible consequences for quantitative science.
For several centuries of Muslim history there was great activity in many areas of science and philosophy and art. This activity was stimulated by the prosperity and the enlightenment of the great centers of Muslim civilization.
Can some of this glorious history of science happen again in the Muslim world? Some of the elements necessary are present.
DENNIS PARNELL SULLIVAN Winner of the 1994 King Faisal International Prize for Science
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