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Martin A. Nowak
Prof.
Alternative spellings: M. A. Nowak Martin Nowak
B:1965Klosterneuburg Biblio: Professor für Biologie und Mathematik an der Harvard University and Direktor des Insituts für evolutionäre Dynamik
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Martin Andreas Nowak (born April 7, 1965) is an Austrian-born professor of mathematical biology, at Harvard University since 2003. He is one of the leading researchers in the field that studies the role of cooperation in evolution. Nowak has held professorships in Oxford and Princeton before being recruited to Harvard in 2003 when Jeffrey Epstein donated a large sum of money to set up a center for studying cooperation in evolution. Nowak's best known work outside of academia is his 2011 book SuperCooperators: Altruism, Evolution and Why We Need Each Other to Succeed. This book is partly an autobiography and partly a popular presentation of his work in mathematical biology on the evolution of cooperation. In the book Nowak also wrote favorably about his interactions with Jeffrey Epstein, who had donated to Harvard to enable the creation of an institute headed by Nowak. In 2020 Nowak was disciplined by being suspended from teaching for two years and having his institute permanently closed down as a punishment for having continued to let Epstein access the university's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences ten years after his conviction for sex crimes. (Source: DBPedia)