Biography of Lee Smolin
Lee was born in New York City in 1955 and raised there and in
Cincinnati. After leaving high school early, he attended
Hampshire College and the University of Cincinnati, graduating from
Hampshire in 1975 with a degree in Physics and Philosophy. He
attended Harvard University for graduate school receiving a Ph.D. in
theoretical physics in 1979. He held postdoctoral positions at
the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, The Institute for
Theoretical Physics (now KITP) in Santa Barbara and the Enrico Fermi
Institute at the University of Chicago. This was followed by faculty
positions at Yale, Syracuse and Penn State Universities, where he
helped to found the Center for Gravitational Physics and Geometry.
He also held visiting positions at varioous times at Cambridge
and Oxford Universities and at SISSA and the Universities of Rome and
Trento in Italy. He was a Visiting Professor at Imperial College
from 1999 to 2001. In September of 2001 he moved to Canada to be
a founding member of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics,
where he has been ever since.
Lee's main contributions to research are so far to the field of quantum
gravity. He was, with Abhay Ashtekar and Carlo Rovelli, a founder
of the approach known as loop quantum gravity, but he has contributed
to other approaches including string theory and causal dynamical
triangulations. He is also known for proposing the notion of the
landscape of theories, based on his application of Darwinian methods to
Cosmology. He has contributed also to the foundations of
quantum mechanics, elementary particle phyiscs and theoretical biology.
He also has a strong interest in philosophy and his three books,
Life of the Cosmos, Three Roads to Quantum Gravity and The Trouble with
Physics are in part philosophical explorations of issues raised by
contemporary physics.
Lee's hobbys include jazz guitar and dingy sailing. Recently he enjoys making a fool of himself on an old contender.