List of fellows of the Royal Society elected in 1976

This is a list of fellows of the Royal Society elected in 1976.[1]

Fellows

  • Sir Ludwig Guttmann (1899–1980)
  • William Watt (1912–1985)
  • Peter Frederick Baker (1939–1987)
  • Thomas Gerald Pickavance (1915–1991)
  • Sir Karl Raimund Popper (1902–1994)
  • Roger Wolcott Sperry (1913–1994)
  • Henry Charnock (1920–1997)
  • Edward George Gray (1924–1999)
  • Elsie May Widdowson (1906–2000)
  • Sir William MacGregor Henderson (1913–2000)
  • Albrecht Frohlich (1916–2001)
  • John Derek Smith (1924–2003)
  • John Michael Hammersley (1920–2004)
  • George Bellamy Mackaness (1922–2007)
  • Roger John Blin-Stoyle (1924–2007)
  • Seymour Benzer (d. 2007)
  • Frank William Ernest Gibson (d. 2008)
  • Leonard George Goodwin (d. 2008)
  • Joseph Murdoch Ritchie (d. 2008)
  • Hubert Rees (d. 2009)
  • Sir James Whyte Black (d. 2010)
  • Daniel Joseph Bradley (d. 2010)
  • Patricia Hannah Clarke (d. 2010)
  • Howard Harry Rosenbrock (d. 2010)
  • Sir Frederick Edward Warner (d. 2010)
  • Francis Gordon Albert Stone (1925–2011)
  • Sydney Percy Smith Andrew (1926–2011)
  • Robin Holliday (1931–2014)
  • Sir Geoffrey Allen
  • Peter Martin Biggs
  • Sir John Ivan George Cadogan
  • William Gilbert Chaloner
  • Geoffrey Eglinton (1927-2016)
  • Sir Roger James Elliott
  • Lloyd Thomas Evans
  • Sir John Harold Horlock
  • Dan Peter McKenzie
  • Walter Heinrich Munk (1917–2019)
  • John Frederick Nye
  • Stephen Joseph Robinson
  • Stanley Desmond Smith
  • Brian Arthur Thrush
  • Charles Hard Townes
  • Michael John Whelan
  • Ronald Karslake Starr Wood
gollark: AQA ones might be different, but we do Edexcel and they're mostly fairly trivial.
gollark: The only "difficult but rewarding" stuff here is extension papers like STEP and they don't really have... teaching... for that.
gollark: Not only does it do horrible abuse of notation but it does a "left-handed Riemann sum" with fixed thing widths, and thus breaks on certain exotic functions.
gollark: I know, yes.
gollark: Ironically, the spec here contains it (not by name) but the textbook gets it slightly wrong.

References

  1. "Fellows of the Royal Society", Royal Society. "Fellowship from 1660 onwards" (xlsx file on Google Docs via the Royal Society)
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