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• Deadline: September 30, 2010

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“Water – The Crisis Ahead” Executive Summary

Foundation News Vol. 12

• Fall 2009  [1.9 MB PDF]

“Anthropogenic Climate Change: A Worst-case Scenario” Executive Summary

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All Foundation publications are available for download from our Publications page.

 

Planned Events

11th Annual Kistler Prize

• September 22, 2010

Peter Ward Lecture

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“Global Transitions and Asia 2060” Workshop

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• November 3–6, 2010

 

RECENT Events

Talk by Sesh Velamoor

• "Managing the Future"
• July 2010

“Water – The Crisis Ahead”

• Humanity 3000 Workshop
• April 2010  [AUDIO FILES]

Brian Fagan Lecture

• Walter P. Kistler Lecture Series
• November 2009

10th Annual Kistler Prize

• October 2009

Donald Johanson Lecture

• Walter P. Kistler Lecture Series
• September 2009

 

 

 

 

Awards

Walter P. Kistler
Science Documentary Film Award

 

HOME | NOMINATION PROCESS | RECIPIENTS 2007

 

Origins Executive Producer Thomas Levenson Wins First Annual Walter P. Kistler Science Documentary Film Award

Thomas Levenson was presented the first Walter P. Kistler Science Documentary Film Award for his work on Origins, a NOVA miniseries that aired on PBS in 2004. Levenson was Executive Producer of the four-part series, and writer, producer, and director of the fourth program, Back to the Beginning. He is Associate Professor of Science Writing in the MIT Program in Writing and Humanistic Studies, Cambridge, MA. His previous television documentaries include Building Big: Domes (PBS) and Einstein Revealed (NOVA).

Origins addresses questions on how the universe became suitable to harbor life and what the births of our Earth and Moon were like. Back to the Beginning focuses on the Big Bang and the race among scientists to capture lingering echoes of the event. The miniseries, produced for WGBH/Boston, was hosted and narrated by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, who was also Executive Editor of the series.

Professor Levenson received the Walter P. Kistler Science Documentary Film Award on June 21, 2007, in a celebration at Pacific Science Center, Seattle, WA. The award was presented personally by the originator of the award program, Walter Kistler, benefactor of the Foundation For the Future.

The award includes a cash prize of US$10,000 and a certificate. It will be given annually to producers of science-based documentary films that significantly increase the knowledge and understanding of the public regarding subjects that will shape the future of our species.

 

Take an ordinary TV set, the old-fashioned kind, before cable. All you need to do is change the channel until you come between two stations. Most of that static comes from stray local radio waves hitting these rabbit ear antennas, but amazingly, about one percent of the snow and noise comes from microwaves produced in the Big Bang itself.

Right now, we're all eavesdropping on the birth pangs of the cosmos.

—Narration from Origins: Back to the Beginning