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Home > International activities
MEETINGS OF NOBEL LAUREATES IN LINDAU
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Participants from Australia attending the Meeting of Nobel Laureates at Lindau, 2005.
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Initiated in 1950 as a European conference of leading scientists in medicine, the guiding principle of the first Lindau Congress of Nobel Laureates was to encourage international scientific dialogue with Nobel Laureates. The first congress of medical specialists has since evolved into open-minded encounters between Laureates, young researchers and students in other fields of the natural sciences: for over half a century now, Nobel Prize winners in medicine/physiology, chemistry and physics convene, alternating, for one week each summer at Lindau.
Usually about twenty Nobel Prize winners attend, to share insights into their life’s work and to interact with 600 outstanding young researchers and graduate students from around the world (up until now mainly from Western Europe, but increasingly in recent years from the USA, Central America, Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, Russia, Eastern Europe Africa and Australia).
In line with the initiators’ concept of building bridges between nations and cultures, the Lindau forum offers the upcoming generation of scientists an opportunity to instigate and foster what can be called a 'Dialogue among Cultures', both on scientific issues and on a more peaceful future. The bridges they build have a lasting impact beyond the Meetings. In the course of their personal encounters, participants jointly develop new ideas, and create networks of cooperation and international friendship, to the benefit of scientific progress.
For more information on the Meetings of Nobel Laureates in Lindau, please visit the Lindau-Nobel website.
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