American Academy of Arts and Sciences facts for kids
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Abbreviation | AAA&S |
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Formation | May 4, 1780 |
Type | Honorary society and independent research center |
Headquarters | Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Membership
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5,700+ active members |
Subsidiaries | Daedalus |
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAA&S) is one of the oldest and most respected groups of thinkers in the United States. It was started in 1780 during the American Revolution. Important leaders like John Adams, John Hancock, and James Bowdoin helped create it.
The Academy's main office is in Cambridge, Massachusetts. To become a member, people go through a careful process of applying and being chosen. The Academy also publishes a quarterly journal called Dædalus. This journal shares new ideas and research. The Academy also does research on public policy, which means they study how government decisions affect people.
Contents
History of the Academy
The Academy was officially started by the state of Massachusetts on May 4, 1780. Its goal was to "cultivate every art and science." This meant they wanted to encourage all kinds of learning and discovery. They hoped this would help a free and independent country grow.
The first 62 members were important people from politics, business, and different jobs. In 1781, new members were chosen. These included famous figures like Benjamin Franklin and George Washington. Even international members from other countries joined.
The Academy started publishing its findings in 1785. Later, in the 1950s, they launched their journal Daedalus. This showed their interest in a wider range of ideas and social issues.
Since the mid-1900s, doing independent research has become very important to the Academy. They have studied big topics like arms control, which is about limiting weapons. The Academy also helped create the National Humanities Center in North Carolina.
In the late 1990s, the Academy made a new plan. They decided to focus on four main areas:
- Science, technology, and global safety
- Social policy and education
- Humanities (like history and literature) and culture
- Education
In 2002, the Academy started a program for visiting scholars. These scholars come to study at the Academy, often working with Harvard University. Many universities across the country support this program. The Academy has also given out awards and offered special programs for scholars.
In 2013, the president of the Academy, Leslie Berlowitz, resigned.
Academy Projects
The Humanities Indicators
One important project of the Academy is called The Humanities Indicators. This project helps people understand the state of the humanities in the United States. The humanities include subjects like history, literature, and philosophy.
This project provides data and tools for many groups. These include researchers, universities, museums, and libraries. They can use this information to learn about:
- How humanities are taught in schools and colleges.
- Who works in humanities jobs.
- How much money is spent on humanities programs.
- How the public understands and is affected by the humanities.
This project is similar to the Science and Engineering Indicators. That report is published by the National Science Board for the U.S. Congress.
Membership in the Academy
People become members of the Academy by being nominated and elected by other members. From the very beginning, members have included not just scientists and scholars. They also include writers, artists, and people from many different jobs and public life.
Throughout its history, over 10,000 people have been elected as members.
Founding members
The first members of the Academy in 1780 were:
- John Adams
- Samuel Adams
- John Bacon
- James Bowdoin
- Charles Chauncy
- John Clarke
- David Cobb
- Samuel Cooper
- Nathan Cushing
- Thomas Cushing
- William Cushing
- Tristram Dalton
- Francis Dana
- Samuel Deane
- Perez Fobes
- Caleb Gannett
- Henry Gardner
- Benjamin Guild
- John Hancock
- Joseph Hawley
- Edward Augustus Holyoke
- Ebenezer Hunt
- Jonathan Jackson
- Charles Jarvis
- Samuel Langdon
- Levi Lincoln
- Daniel Little
- Elijah Lothrup
- John Lowell
- Samuel Mather
- Samuel Moody
- Andrew Oliver
- Joseph Orne
- Theodore Parsons
- George Partridge
- Robert Treat Paine
- Phillips Payson
- Samuel Phillips
- John Pickering
- Oliver Prescott
- Zedekiah Sanger
- Nathaniel Peaslee Sargeant
- Micajah Sawyer
- Theodore Sedgwick
- William Sever
- David Sewall
- Stephen Sewall
- John Sprague
- Ebenezer Storer
- Caleb Strong
- James Sullivan
- John Bernard Sweat
- Nathaniel Tracy
- Cotton Tufts
- James Warren
- Samuel West
- Edward Wigglesworth
- Joseph Willard
- Abraham Williams
- Nehemiah Williams
- Samuel Williams
- James Winthrop
Famous Members
Many famous people have been members of the Academy. Some of these include:
- John Adams
- John James Audubon
- Sissela Bok
- Willa Cather
- T. S. Eliot
- Duke Ellington
- Josiah Willard Gibbs
- Joseph Henry
- Washington Irving
- Thomas Jefferson
- Edward R. Murrow
- Martha Nussbaum
- J. Robert Oppenheimer
- Augustus Saint-Gaudens
- Jonas Salk
- Eudora Welty
The Academy also has international honorary members from around the world. These include:
- Albert Einstein
- Leonhard Euler
- Marquis de Lafayette
- Alexander von Humboldt
- Charles Darwin
- Carl Friedrich Gauss
- Pablo Picasso
- Werner Heisenberg
- Alec Guinness
Maria Mitchell, an astronomer, was the first woman elected to the Academy in 1848.
Today, there are over 5,700 active members. These members are from the United States and other countries. More than 250 Academy members have won a Nobel Prize. Over 60 members have won a Pulitzer Prize.
Many members are connected to top universities. The table below shows universities with 300 or more members.
Institution | Members (1780–2021) |
---|---|
Harvard | 1,406 |
MIT | 611 |
Yale | 433 |
Berkeley | 425 |
Stanford | 404 |
Chicago | 367 |
Columbia | 344 |
Princeton | 322 |
† This list does not include members who only worked at national laboratories.
Membership Categories
As of 2023, the Academy's members are divided into five main groups. These groups cover many different areas of knowledge.
Class I – Mathematical and physical sciences
- Section 1. Mathematics, applied mathematics, and statistics
- Section 2. Physics
- Section 3. Chemistry
- Section 4. Astronomy, astrophysics, and earth sciences
- Section 5. Engineering and technologies
- Section 6. Computer sciences
Class II – Biological sciences
- Section 1. Biochemistry, biophysics, and molecular biology
- Section 2. Cellular and developmental biology
- Section 3. Neurosciences
- Section 4. Evolution and ecology
- Section 5. Medical sciences
Class III – Social and behavioral sciences
- Section 1. Psychological sciences
- Section 2. Economics
- Section 3. Political science
- Section 4. Law
- Section 5. Archaeology and anthropology
- Section 6. Sociology, demography, and geography
- Section 7. Education
Class IV – Arts and humanities
- Section 1. Philosophy
- Section 2. History
- Section 3. Literature and language studies
- Section 4. Literature
- Section 5. Visual arts
- Section 6. Performing arts
- Section 7. Religious studies
Class V – Public affairs, business, and administration
- Section 1. Journalism, media, and communications
- Section 2. Business, corporate, and philanthropic leadership
- Section 3. Educational and academic leadership
- Section 4. Public affairs and public policy
- Section 5. Scientific, cultural, and nonprofit leadership
Presidents of the Academy
The Academy has had many presidents since it was founded in 1780. Here is a list of them:
- 1780–1790 James Bowdoin
- 1791–1814 John Adams
- 1814–1820 Edward Augustus Holyoke
- 1820–1829 John Quincy Adams
- 1829–1838 Nathaniel Bowditch
- 1838–1839 James Jackson, M.D.
- 1839–1846 John Pickering
- 1846–1863 Jacob Bigelow
- 1863–1873 Asa Gray
- 1873–1880 Charles Francis Adams
- 1880–1892 Joseph Lovering
- 1892–1894 Josiah Parsons Cooke
- 1894–1903 Alexander Agassiz
- 1903–1908 William Watson Goodwin
- 1908–1915 John Trowbridge
- 1915–1917 Henry Pickering Walcott
- 1917–1919 Charles Pickering Bowditch
- 1919–1921 Theodore William Richards
- 1921–1924 George Foot Moore
- 1924–1927 Theodore Lyman
- 1927–1931 Edwin Bidwell Wilson
- 1931–1933 Jeremiah D. M. Ford
- 1933–1935 George Howard Parker
- 1935–1937 Roscoe Pound
- 1937–1939 Dugald C. Jackson
- 1939–1944 Harlow Shapley
- 1944–1951 Howard Mumford Jones
- 1951–1954 Edwin Herbert Land
- 1954–1957 John Ely Burchard
- 1957–1961 Kirtley Fletcher Mather
- 1961–1964 Hudson Hoagland
- 1964–1967 Paul A. Freund
- 1967–1971 Talcott Parsons
- 1971–1976 Harvey Brooks
- 1976–1979 Victor Frederick Weisskopf
- 1979–1982 Milton Katz
- 1982–1986 Herman Feshbach
- 1986–1989 Edward Hirsch Levi
- 1989–1994 Leo Beranek
- 1994–1997 Jaroslav Pelikan
- 1997–2000 Daniel C. Tosteson
- 2000–2001 James O. Freedman
- 2001–2006 Patricia Meyer Spacks
- 2006–2009 Emilio Bizzi
- 2010–2013 Leslie C. Berlowitz
- 2014–2018 Jonathan Fanton
- 2019– David W. Oxtoby
See Also
In Spanish: Academia Estadounidense de las Artes y las Ciencias para niños
- American Philosophical Society
- National Academy of Engineering
- National Academy of Medicine (formerly the Institute of Medicine)
- National Academy of Sciences
- List of American Academy of Arts and Sciences members