Grande Médaille

The Grande Médaille of the French Academy of Sciences, established in 1997, is awarded annually to a researcher who has contributed decisively to the development of science. It is the most prestigious of the Academy's awards, and is awarded in a different field each year. Its creation results from the combination of the original French Academy of Sciences Lalande Prize of 1802 with the Benjamin Valz Foundation Prize in 1970 and then with another 122 foundation prizes in 1997.[1][2]

Winners

gollark: I'd also worry that governments would insist on them having some overrides to stop people if they try murder or something (because murder is bad and if you disagree with this policy you're clearly pro-murder) which would then inevitably be expanded to other crimes and "crimes".
gollark: Unless they design the software ground-up with strong security and formal verification or something. But that doesn't seem to be what's happening.
gollark: With the current state of software security I do *not* want brain implants.
gollark: Gender Bose-Einstein condensate WHEN?
gollark: Survival rate is 93%, which is pretty good.

See also

References

  1. "La Grande Médaille". Institut de France Académie des sciences. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
  2. Liste des 143 fondations.
  3. Grand Medal 2018
  4. "Lauréat 2016 de la Grande médaille de l'Académie des sciences". Institut de France - Académie des Sciences. Archived from the original on 2017-02-03. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  5. Grand Medal 2014
  6. Grand Medal 2013
  7. Grand Medal 2011 Archived 2011-08-22 at the Wayback Machine
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