Howard H. Pattee

Howard H. Pattee
Born (1926-10-05) October 5, 1926
Pasadena, CA
Residence
Fields
Institutions
Education BA, Stanford University, 1948
PhD Physics, Stanford University, 1953
Thesis The Compound Reflection X-ray Microscope, Stanford, 1953.
Doctoral advisor Paul H. Kirkpatrick
Doctoral students
Influences
Notable awards
Website
www.binghamton.edu/ssie/people/pattee.html

Howard H. Pattee (born October 5, 1926) is an American biologist, Professor Emeritus at Binghamton University and Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He graduated at Stanford University in 1948 and completed a Ph.D. there in 1953.


Contributions

Professor Pattee's main research interests are theoretical biology with a focus on origin of life, artificial life, biosemiotics, semiotic control of dynamic systems, and the physics of codes and symbols. His many contributions to the "symbol-matter" problem within the cell have had much influence on theoretical biology, biosemiotics, complex systems and artificial life.[1][2]

Present title

Previous positions

Fellowships and awards

References

Publications


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