The VIZE 97 Prize

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The VIZE 97 Prize (also The Vision 97 Award;[1] in Czech: Cena Nadace Dagmar a Václava Havlových VIZE 97) is an international prize awarded to significant thinkers by the Dagmar and Václav Havel Foundation VIZE 97 (Nadace Dagmar a Václava Havlových VIZE 97). Starting in 1999, it has been awarded annually to people who through their work "cross the traditional framework of scientific knowledge, contribute to the understanding of science as an integral part of general culture, and in an unconventional way deal with the fundamental questions of knowledge, being and human existence." The prize is awarded in Prague, Czech Republic, and the laureates receive the "crosier of St. Adalbert of Prague."[2]

DescriptionAwarded to significant thinkers crossing traditional scientific frameworks
CountryCzech Republic
Presented byDagmar and Václav Havel Foundation VIZE 97
RewardCrosier of St. Adalbert of Prague
Quick facts VIZE 97 Prize, Description ...
VIZE 97 Prize
DescriptionAwarded to significant thinkers crossing traditional scientific frameworks
CountryCzech Republic
Presented byDagmar and Václav Havel Foundation VIZE 97
RewardCrosier of St. Adalbert of Prague
Websitehttp://www.vize.cz/en/prize.php Edit this on Wikidata
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Laureates

More information Year, Laureate ...
Year Laureate Nationality and profession
1999 Karl H. Pribram American neurosurgeon, psychologist and psychiatrist[3]
2000 Umberto Eco Italian semiotician, philosopher, literary critic and novelist[4]
2001 Zdeněk Neubauer Czech philosopher and biologist[5]
2002 Joseph Weizenbaum American computer scientist and thinker of German origin[6]
2003 Robert B. Reich American economist[7]
2004 Petr Vopěnka Czech mathematician and philosopher[8]
2005 Philip Zimbardo American psychologist[9]
2006 Zygmunt Bauman Polish sociologist[10]
2007 Stanislav Grof American psychologist and psychiatrist of Czech origin[11]
2008 Julia Kristeva Bulgarian-French philosopher, literary critic, psychoanalyst[12]
2009 Václav Cílek Czech geologist and writer[13]
2010
Konrad Paul Liessmann Austrian philosopher and literary theorist[14]
2011
Iva Mojžišová Slovak art theorist[15]
2012 Miloslav Petrusek Czech sociologist[16] (in memoriam)
2013
Jiří Fiala Czech mathematician and analytic philosopher[17] (in memoriam)
2014
Andrew Lass American anthropologist
2015 Timothy Snyder American historian
2016 Jan Sokol Czech philosopher
2017 N. David Mermin American physicist[18]
2018 Josef Jařab Czech professor of American Literature, literary critic, translator, former Czech senator, former president of Palacký University and Central European University
2019 Martin Bútora Slovak sociologist, writer and diplomat
2020 Ivan Chvatík Czech philosopher[19]
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References

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