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World's Most Prestigious Think Tank Gets Backing from The Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation.
What has been dubbed as the "world's smartest website" and think tank from the UK's Guardian and
Observer, amongst others, The Edge Foundation, has just received substantial backing from science
philanthropist and Edge member, Jeffrey Epstein, and his foundation The Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation.
Founded in 1996 by John Brockman, a cultural author, agent and expeditor of everything thought-
provoking and avant-garde, the Edge Foundation, Inc., otherwise known as "Edge", is an online venue for
the greatest minds in the sciences, social sciences and literature to share their ideas—but not just random
ideas: cutting-edge ideas outside the frontiers of common knowledge. Ideas that challenge the constancy of
the speed of light, the existence of a gravitron and things like that.
"We live in a mass-produced culture where ...people, even ...established cultural arbiters,
limit themselves to secondhand ideas. Show me people who create their own reality, who don't accept an
ersatz, appropriated reality. Show me the empiricists ...who arc out there doing it, rather than talking
about and analyzing the people who are doing it," Brockman asserts.
The roster at Edge is nothing less than a treasure trove of over 660 virtuosi, geniuses, masterminds and
prodigies including countless heads of university departments, authors, doctors and a host of Nobel
Laureates including: physicist, Frank Wilczek, chemist, Kary Mullis, economist, Daniel Kahneman,
theoretical Physicist, Gerard e Hooft, theoretical physicist, Waren Heisenberg, biochemist, Eric Kandel,
chemist and physicist, Leon Lederman, neurologist and biochemist, Stanley Prusiner. Well-known writers
include Brian Greene, Richard Dawkins, Leonard Susskind, Freeman Dyson and Ian McEwan.
Unlike the exclusive salons of the I 8th Century, or present day mensa-type institutes, The Edge is proudly
open to the public. Anyone can go to its website www.edge.org and read the daily conversations and essays
by Edge members and the responses to Brockman's annual question to members, which this year is: "What
is your favorite, deep, elegant or favorite explanation?" This open approach stems perhaps from its humble
roots: a roving gathering of intellectuals in New York City, called The Realty Club, which regularly met
from 1981 to 1996 in restaurants, artist lofts, board rooms at Rockefeller University, the New York
Academy of Sciences, ballrooms, museums and elsewhere. But its openness also comes from Brockman's
philosophy of challenging the public with mind-breaking ideas.
"Great ideas are meaningless, if they are not shared," Jeffrey Epstein remarked, whose own foundation
supports science education and research around the world. "They challenge, teach and inspire a whole new
generation of maverick thinkers. And that is what we need, less we become too arrogant to improve
ourselves."
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EFTA01985424
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