Thomas T. Hoopes Prize

The Hoopes Prize is an award given annually to Harvard University undergraduates. The prize was endowed by Thomas T. Hoopes, Class of 1919[1]

Awarded for outstanding scholarly work or research by students, recipients are selected by a committee of faculty from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, representing the three branches of study—the humanities, the natural sciences, and the social sciences. All submissions must be nominated for consideration by the project's advisor. Winning students and their advisors both receive cash awards.

Recipients

gollark: Also, humans can possibly maybe* be evaluated on a Turing machine.
gollark: Some programs are too big to fit into humans' mental storage capacity.
gollark: > but surely, if a human is given the source code of any program, given a finite amount of time i can figure out if it halts or not with a certain input<@738361430763372703> WRONG!
gollark: ↓ philosophy
gollark: Go epiphenomenon yourself.

References

  1. "Hoopes Prize". Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2018-05-03.

See also

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