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The Faraday Institute for Science and Religion is an interdisciplinary academic research institute based in Cambridge, England. It is named after the 19th-century English scientist Michael Faraday , the pioneer of electromagnetic induction .
The Faraday Institution is the United Kingdom's research institute aiming to advance battery science and technology. It was established in 2017 as part of the UK's wider Faraday Battery Challenge. [ 1 ]
The Michael Faraday Medal and Prize is a gold medal awarded annually by the Institute of Physics in experimental physics. [1] The award is made "for outstanding and sustained contributions to experimental physics." The medal is accompanied by a prize of £1000 and a certificate. [2] Michael Faraday (1791 - 1867)
Named after Michael Faraday, the first Faraday Lecture was given in 1869, two years after Faraday's death, by Jean-Baptiste Dumas. [2] As of 2009, the prize was worth £5000, with the recipient also receiving a medal and a certificate. [1] As the name suggests, the recipient also gives a public lecture describing his or her work.
The Faraday Institution, an independent energy storage research institute established in 2017, also derives its name from Michael Faraday. [99] The organisation serves as the UK's primary research programme to advance battery science and technology, education, public engagement and market research.
Since 2017 the Westminster College site has also been home to the Woolf Institute of Abrahamic Faiths and Faraday Institute for Science and Religion. [7] Westminster College is also affiliated with the American writer and Presbyterian theologian, Frederick Buechner. The College awards an annual prize for Excellence in Writing named after the ...
Denis Alexander in Eden Baptist Church, Cambridge, January 2012. Dr. Denis Alexander has spent 40 years in the biomedical research community. He is an Emeritus Fellow of St. Edmund’s College, Cambridge and an Emeritus Director of the Faraday Institute for Science and Religion, Cambridge which he co-founded with Bob White in 2006.
He has lectured at the Faraday Institute for Science and Religion on "Evolution and fine-tuning in Biology". [10] He gave the University of Edinburgh Gifford Lectures for 2007 in a series titled "Darwin's Compass: How Evolution Discovers the Song of Creation". [11]