Edward O. Wilson

Edward O. Wilson

Professor, Harvard University

Edward Osborne Wilson is an American biologist (Myrmecology, a branch of entomology), researcher (sociobiology, biodiversity), theorist (consilience, biophilia), and naturalist (conservationism).  Wilson is known for his career as a scientist, his advocacy for environmentalism, and his secular humanist ideas concerned with religious and ethical matters.

A Harvard professor for four decades, he has written twenty books, won two Pulitzer prizes, and discovered hundreds of new species. Considered to be one of the world's greatest living scientists, Dr. Wilson is often called "the father of biodiversity," (a word that he coined). He is the Pellegrino University Research Professor, Emeritus in Entomology for the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University and a Fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. He is a Humanist Laureate of the International Academy of Humanism.

3mins
To understand ourselves, our creativity and emotions, we must grapple with our pre-human existence.
8mins
Famed evolutionary biologist E.O. Wilson argues that humans came to dominate the Earth thanks to a social condition called eusociality.
6mins
The legendary biologist talks about ultimate biology breakthroughs we can expect in the next several decades and how the creation of artificial life, coupled with the advancement of artificial intelligence, will change the human race.
7mins
Biologist Edward O. Wilson takes us through several natural stimuli that humans don't understand yet are used by various animals to navigate and communicate within communities.
8mins
The famous biologist discusses his life's work in conservation and his efforts to save the ecosphere.
11mins
The Pulitzer-winning biologist draws from our own knowledge of evolution and Darwinian theory to posit the physical and mental characteristics of extraterrestrial life.
9mins
Biologist Edward O. Wilson calls philosophy a "highly endangered academic species" and suggests that explaining the meaning of human existence necessarily falls to science instead.
2mins
Prof. E.O. Wilson says move over, physics. It’s biology’s century.
3mins
Prof. E.O. Wilson on his breakthrough follow-up to the Pulitzer-Prize winning book, The Ants.
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E.O. Wilson’s secret foray into military research.
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Prof. E.O. Wilson talks about ways to disseminate high-quality knowledge online.
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Prof. E.O. Wilson compares biology class today vs. 60 years ago.
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Prof. E.O. Wilson talks about the scope of the massive project to document every living organism.
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Wilson served as a lightning rod back in the 1970’s when he first made the outrageous suggestion in a book called “Sociobiology” that human nature exists and it probably has […]
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Ones totally devoted to their subject, says Wilson.
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Ant societies are entirely instinct driven whereas we have a little wiggle room.
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Sure can because the more we learn about how life works, the more we learn how we fit into this environment and how we can maintain and then reduce on […]
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The more that you move toward that part of the advancing frontier of scientific knowledge, the better career you will have in terms of opportunities opening now in this century […]
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The great problem in recognizing the peril of the living environment, one that ultimately affects our lives, is ignorance.
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If we intelligently plan the establishment of reserves, where we get the maximum protection for the largest number of species, we can save the environment.