Nobel Week Dialogue

John C. Polanyi

Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1986. Laureate John Polanyi researches the molecular motions in chemical reactions in gases and at surfaces at the University of Toronto. He has written extensively on science policy, the control of armaments, and peacekeeping.

John Polanyi, educated at Manchester University, England, was a postdoctoral fellow at Princeton University, U.S.A. and the National Research Council, Canada. He is presently a faculty member in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto. His research is on the molecular motions in chemical reactions in gases and at surfaces.

He is a Fellow of the Royal Societies of Canada, London, and Edinburgh, also of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the Pontifical Academy of Rome and the Russian Academy of Sciences. He is a member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada, and a Companion of the Order of Canada. His awards include the 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the Royal Medal of the Royal Society of London, and over thirty honorary degrees from six countries.

He has served on the Prime Minister of Canada’s Advisory Board on Science and Technology, the Premier’s Council of Ontario, as Foreign Honorary Advisor to the Institute for Molecular Sciences, Japan, and as Honorary Advisor to the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, Germany.

He was a founding member of both the Committee on Scholarly Freedom of the Royal Society, and a further international human rights organisation, the Canadian Committee for Scientists and Scholars, of which he is the current president. Additionally he was the founding chairman of the Canadian Pugwash Group in 1960, and has been active for 40 years in International Pugwash. He has written extensively on science policy, the control of armaments, and peacekeeping. He is co-editor of a book, ‘The Dangers of Nuclear War’, and was a participant in the recent ‘Canada 21’ study of a 21st-century defence posture for Canada. He was co-chair of the Department of Foreign Affairs International Consultative Committee on a Rapid Response Capability for the United Nations.

More about John Polanyi and the 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.