List of Cornell University faculty
This list of Cornell University faculty includes notable current and former instructors and administrators of Cornell University, an Ivy League university located in Ithaca, New York.
Cornell's faculty for the 2005–06 academic year included three Nobel laureates, a Crafoord Prize winner, two Turing Award winners, a Fields Medal winner, two Legion of Honor recipients, a World Food Prize winner, an Andrei Sakharov Prize winner, three National Medal of Science winners, two Wolf Prize winners, four MacArthur award winners, four Pulitzer Prize winners, two Eminent Ecologist Award recipients, a Carter G. Woodson Scholars Medallion recipient, four Presidential Early Career Award winners, 20 National Science Foundation CAREER grant holders, a recipient of the National Academy of Sciences Award for Initiatives in Research, a recipient of the American Mathematical Society's Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement, a recipient of the Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics, three Packard Foundation grant holders, a Keck Distinguished Young Scholar, two Beckman Foundation Young Investigator grant holders, and two NYSTAR early career award winners.
Nobel laureates
Physics- Hannes Alfvén – Physics 1970
- Hans Bethe – Physics 1967; National Medal of Science
- Richard Feynman – Physics 1965; National Medal of Science
- Pierre-Gilles de Gennes – Physics 1991
- Brian D. Josephson – Physics 1973
- David Lee – Physics 1996
- Anthony James Leggett – Physics 2003; Wolf Prize in Physics
- Robert Coleman Richardson – Physics 1996
- John Robert Schrieffer – Physics 1972; National Medal of Science
- George Paget Thomson – Physics 1937
- Kip Thorne – Physics 2017
- Kenneth G. Wilson – Physics 1982; Wolf Prize in Physics
, father of the Green Revolution
- Norman Borlaug – Peace 1970; National Medal of Science
- Linus Pauling – Peace 1962
- Octavio Paz – Literature 1990
- Amartya Sen – Economics 1998; National Humanities Medal
- Wole Soyinka – Literature 1986
- Richard Thaler – Economics 2017; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Peter Debye – Chemistry 1936; National Medal of Science
- Manfred Eigen – Chemistry 1967
- Richard R. Ernst – Chemistry 1991
- Paul Flory – Chemistry 1974; National Medal of Science
- Otto Hahn - Chemistry 1944
- Gerhard Herzberg – Chemistry 1971
- Roald Hoffmann – Chemistry 1981; National Medal of Science
- Linus Pauling – Chemistry 1954; the bulk of his most influential scientific book The Nature of the Chemical Bond was completed while he was at Cornell and was published by Cornell University Press in 1939
- James B. Sumner – Chemistry 1946
- Henry Taube – Chemistry 1983; National Medal of Science
- Vincent du Vigneaud – Chemistry 1955; Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
- James P. Allison – Physiology or Medicine 2018, Wolf Prize in Medicine
- Robert F. Furchgott – Physiology or Medicine 1998
- Herbert Spencer Gasser – Physiology or Medicine 1944
- Paul Greengard – Physiology or Medicine 2000
- Haldan Keffer Hartline – Physiology or Medicine 1967
- Robert W. Holley – Physiology or Medicine 1968
- Har Gobind Khorana – Physiology or Medicine 1968; National Medal of Science
- Fritz Albert Lipmann – Physiology or Medicine 1953; National Medal of Science
- Peter Medawar – Physiology or Medicine 1960
- Harold E. Varmus – Physiology or Medicine 1989; National Medal of Science
MacArthur awards
- Archie Randolph Ammons – poetry 1981
- William Dichtel - chemistry 2015
- Craig Fennie - materials science 2013
- Mitchell J. Feigenbaum – physics 1984; Wolf Prize in Physics, member of the National Academy of Sciences and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Alice Fulton – poetry 1991
- Deborah Estrin – computer science 2018; member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Henry Louis Gates, Jr. – literary critic ; National Humanities Medal recipient
- Paul Ginsparg - physics 2002
- Jon Kleinberg - computer science 2005
- Stephen Lee - chemistry 1993
- Michal Lipson - optical physics 2010; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Robert Parris Moses – educator and philosopher
- Rebecca J. Nelson – plant pathologist
- Sheila Nirenberg – neuroscience 2013
- Margaret W. Rossiter – historian of science 1989
- Gregory Vlastos – classicist and philosopher 1990
Natural sciences and related fields
Mathematics
- William J. Cook – University Professor of the University of Waterloo, member of the National Academy of Engineering, American Mathematical Society Fellow, INFORMS Fellow and SIAM Fellow, recipient of the Frederick W. Lanchester Prize of INFORMS
- Eugene Dynkin – mathematics
- Walter Feit – mathematician, co-author of the Feit–Thompson theorem
- William Feller – mathematician, known in probability theory; recipient of the National Medal of Science, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Richard S. Hamilton – mathematician who laid groundwork for the Poincaré conjecture proof
- Allen Hatcher – mathematician, proved the Smale conjecture
- Kiyosi Itô – Wolf Prize in Mathematics and Kyoto Prize ; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- John Irwin Hutchinson – mathematician
- Mark Kac – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jack Kiefer – Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and member of the National Academy of Sciences; president of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics
- Saunders Mac Lane – developer of algebra's category theory; recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Greg Lawler – Wolf Prize in Mathematics recipient
- Justin T. Moore – a set theorist and logician, known for his solution to the problem of constructing an L-space.; recipient of the "Young Scholar's Competition" award in 2006, in Vienna, Austria.
- Marston Morse – mathematician, known for Morse theory in differential topology; recipient of Bôcher Memorial Prize ; National Medal of Science
- George Nemhauser – president of the Operations Research Society of America; member of the National Academy of Engineering and recipient of John von Neumann Theory Prize
- Anil Nerode – mathematician
- Piergiorgio Odifreddi – mathematician
- Paul Olum – mathematics, President of the University of Oregon 1980–89
- Joseph Slepian -mathematics
- Frank Spitzer – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Steven Strogatz – mathematician
- Éva Tardos – mathematician, Guggeinheim fellow, winner of the Fulkerson Prize, 1988; member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Michael J. Todd – John von Neumann Theory Prize recipient
- William Thurston – mathematics; Fields Medal winner
- Charles F. Van Loan – mathematician
- Harry Vandiver – Cole Prize recipient ; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Karen Vogtmann – mathematician, American Mathematical Society Fellow, Noether Lecturer, known for Culler–Vogtmann Outer space
- Jacob Wolfowitz – member of the National Academy of Sciences
Physics
- Neil Ashcroft – solid-state physicist and member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Robert Bacher – Manhattan Project leader and member of Atomic Energy Commission; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Robert Brout - recipient of the Wolf Prize in Physics and Sakurai Prize for his significant contributions in elementary particle physics
- Dale R. Corson - as President, defused riots and armed stand-off in 1969
- Harold Craighead - applied physicist
- Persis Drell – particle physicist; director of the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, dean of the Stanford University School of Engineering and provost of Stanford University
- Freeman Dyson – physics, mathematics; recipient of the Wolf Prize in Physics, Templeton Prize etc.
- Mitchell Feigenbaum – physicist whose pioneering studies in chaos theory led to the discovery of the Feigenbaum constant
- Michael Fisher – Irving Langmuir Award, Wolf Prize in Physics, Boltzmann Medal, Lars Onsager Prize, Royal Medal, BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award ; Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and Member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Peter Goldreich – astrophysicist
- Brian Greene – theoretical physicist and author, specializing in string theory
- Alan Guth – recipient of Fundamental Physics Prize and Kavli Prize
- Arthur Kantrowitz – physicist and engineer
- Toichiro Kinoshita – Japanese-American theoretical physicist; member of the National Academy of Sciences and recipient of the Sakurai prize
- M. Stanley Livingston – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Boyce McDaniel – Manhattan Project physicist and synchrotron designer; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Paul McEuen – physicist, specializes in carbon nanotubes and graphene
- David Mermin – physicist; member of the National Academy of Sciences and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Philip Morrison – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Yuri Orlov – nuclear physicist; former Soviet dissident; human rights activist
- Edward Ott – American physicist known for his contributions to the development of chaos theory
- Albert Overhauser – physicist, known for Overhauser effect; member of the National Academy of Sciences and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; recipient of National Medal of Science and Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Prize
- John Reppy – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Bruno Rossi – National Medal of Science, Wolf Prize in Physics
- Dennis William Sciama – physicist
- Harold Scheraga – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- George Paget Thomson – Nobel Prize, Physics 1937
- Kip Thorne – astrophysicist
- Watt W. Webb – member of the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Science, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Robert R. Wilson – youngest group leader on the Manhattan Project; first director of Fermilab; National Medal of Science
Astronomy
- James L. Elliot – astrophysicist; discoverer of the ring system of Uranus while at Cornell; discoverer of the atmosphere of Pluto
- Riccardo Giovanelli – Henry Draper Medal recipient
- Thomas Gold – astrophysicist, coined the term "magnetosphere"; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Martha P. Haynes – Henry Draper Medal recipient, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jonathan Lunine – Harold C. Urey Prize recipient, member of the National Academy of Sciences, fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Geophysical Union
- Jean-Luc Margot – astronomer, awarded the H. C. Urey Prize by the American Astronomical Society, 2004
- Carl Sagan – space sciences
- Edwin Ernest Salpeter – astronomer; Crafoord Prize, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Saul Teukolsky – theoretical astrophysicist and co-author of Numerical Recipes; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Aleksander Wolszczan – discoverer of first extrasolar planets and pulsar planets
Chemistry
- :de:Héctor D. Abruña|Héctor D. Abruña – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Alfred T. Blomquist – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Geoffrey W. Coates – member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the National Academy of Sciences
- Wilder Dwight Bancroft – physical chemist
- Thomas Bruice – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- James Crafts – President of MIT, 1897–1900
- Jean Fréchet – Japan Prize ; fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Chemical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, member of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering
- Gordon Hammes – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Leon A. Heppel – member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- James L. Hoard – National Academy of Sciences
- John R. Johnson – chemist; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- John Gamble Kirkwood – chemist
- Stephen Lee – MacArthur Award and Sloan Fellow
- Franklin A. Long – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jerrold Meinwald – Member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, recipient of the National Medal of Science and Chemical Pioneer Award of the American Institute of Chemists
- Earl Muetterties – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Hans Muxfeldt, first total synthesis of tetracycline antibiotics
- Gregory Petsko – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Efraim Racker – founder of the biochemistry department at Cornell University; member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences; recipient of Warren Triennial Prize, National Medal of Science, Gairdner Award
- Frank Spedding – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Benjamin Widom
Computer science and engineering
- Carla Gomes – Director of the Institute for Computational Sustainability
- Paul Ginsparg – developer of the arXiv e-print archive, MacArthur Award
- David Gries - author of The Science of Programming
- Joseph Halpern – computer scientist; recipient of the Gödel Prize, member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Juris Hartmanis – computer scientist; Turing Award recipient, 1993; member of the National Academy of Engineering
- John Hopcroft – Turing Award recipient, IEEE John von Neumann Medal recipient, member of the National Academy of Engineering and of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jon Kleinberg – MacArthur Award and Nevanlinna Prize, member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences
- Trevor Pinch – Chair of the Science and Technology Studies department
- Theodore Paul Wright – aeronautical engineer and educator
- Dexter Kozen – computer scientist specializing in dynamic logic
- David Shmoys – ACM Fellow and INFORMS Fellow, and recipient of the Frederick W. Lanchester Prize
- Gerard Salton – father of information retrieval; recipient of Guggenheim Fellowship, ASIS Award for Best Information Science Paper, Best Information Science Book, the first Gerard Salton Award for Outstanding Contributions to Information Retrieval, the Alexander von Humboldt Senior Science Award, the ASIS Award of Merit ; ACM Fellow
- Fred B. Schneider – member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Éva Tardos – Recipient of the Fulkerson Prize, the George B. Dantzig Prize and the Gödel Prize ; Member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Fellow of the American Mathematical Society and of the Association for Computing Machinery
- Robert Tarjan – computer scientist and mathematician, known for discovering several graph algorithms, including Tarjan's off-line least common ancestors algorithm; co-inventor of splay trees and Fibonacci heaps; Distinguished University Professor of Computer Science at Princeton University; recipient of Turing Award
- David P. Williamson – Editor-in-chief of the SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics; recipient of the Fulkerson Prize and the Frederick W. Lanchester Prize
Engineering and material science
- Lynden Archer – member of the National Academy of Engineering
- Henry G. Booker – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Lance Collins
- Mark E. Lewis
- Michal Lipson – MacArthur Award, research into nanotech applications to optics
- Carlo Montemagno - Father of Bionanotechnology
- Richard D. Robinson
- Peter C. Schultz – co-inventor of the fiber optics now used worldwide for telecommunications; member of the National Academy of Engineering, inductee to the National Inventors Hall of Fame, recipient of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation
- William R. Sears – notable aeronautical engineer and educator; member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Biology, ecology, botany, and nutrition
- Louis Agassiz – zoologist, glaciologist, and geologist
- Liberty Hyde Bailey – botanist, early progenitor of the 4-H movement, namesake of Bailey Hall; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Thomas Björkman - Horticulture
- Joan Jacobs Brumberg – scholar in adolescence, body image and eating disorders, and related fields
- T. Colin Campbell – nutritionist; director of the China Project;author of The China Study
- William Henry Chandler – botanist in pomology; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Anna Botsford Comstock – nature studies, appointed first woman assistant professor at Cornell, full professor
- Thomas Eisner – pioneer of chemical ecology; member of the National Academy of Sciences, recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Rollins A. Emerson – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Barton Warren Evermann – ichthyologist
- Martin Gibbs – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jane Goodall – naturalist
- Everett Peter Greenberg – American microbiologist who received the Shaw Prize in 2015; member of the National Academy of Sciences and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Donald Griffin – zoologist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Ann Hajek – entomologist
- Maria Harrison – plant biologist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Franz-Ulrich Hartl – director of the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany ; recipient of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz-Prize, Gairdner Foundation International Award, Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research, Shaw Prize, etc., member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences
- Charles Frederick Hartt – Canadian-American geologist, palaeontologist and naturalist who specialized in the geology of Brazil
- Maria Jasin – member of the National Academy of Sciences and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences ; recipient of the Shaw Prize in Life Sciences
- William Tinsley Keeton - expert in animal navigation, namesake of William Keeton House
- Graham Kerr – chef, "The Galloping Gourmet"
- Simon A. Levin – Recipient of the National Medal of Science, Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement, Kyoto Prize
- Gene Likens – ecologist; member of American Academy of Arts and Sciences, National Academy of Sciences, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences; recipient of National Medal of Science, Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement, BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award
- John T. Lis – Guggenheim Fellow, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Thomas Lyttleton Lyon − Emeritus Professor of Soils Science for the Department of Agriculture; co-winner of the Howard N. Potts Medal
- Jerrold Meinwald – chemical ecologist; member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society ; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences ; recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Gero Miesenböck – recipient of The Brain Prize and BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award
- John Keith Moffat - Guggenheim Fellow, former associate professor in Biochemistry, Molecular, and Cell Biology at Cornell, later deputy provost at University of Chicago, noted for Advanced Photon Source and Time resolved crystallography
- Rebecca J. Nelson – MacArthur Fellow ; researcher in crop disease resistance
- Karl J. Niklas
- Katharine Payne – whale and elephant researcher
- David Peakall
- Pinstrup-Andersen Per – recipient of the World Food Prize
- Wendell L. Roelofs – recipient of Alexander von Humboldt Award, Wolf Prize in Agriculture, National Medal of Science
- Benoît Roux from the Royal Society of Canada
- W. Mark Saltzman – member of the National Academy of Medicine and of the National Academy of Engineering
- John C. Sanford – inventor of the gene gun
- Harold Hill Smith – geneticist
- Adrian M. Srb – Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Steven D. Tanksley – plant breeding and agronomy researcher; recipient of Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Award, Martin Gibbs Medal of the American Society of Plant Biologists, the Wolf Prize in Agriculture and the Japan Prize, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Stanley Temple - avian ecologist
- Helen Turley – winemaker
- Herbert John Webber – plant physiologist, developed the citrange
- Robert Whittaker – vegetation ecologist; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Burt Green Wilder – comparative anatomist
- Charles Edward Stevens – Fulbright Scholar and internationally recognized expert in the field of comparative physiology and digestive systems.
- Bruce Wallace – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Hao Wu – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Donald Zilversmit – nutritional biochemist; member of the National Academy of Sciences
Medicine
- Alexander Gordon Bearn – member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine
- Edward Boyse – member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and fellow of the Royal Society
- Eugene Floyd DuBois – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- James Ewing – pathologist; discovery of a form of malignant bone tumor that later became known as Ewing's Sarcoma
- Don W. Fawcett – member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jacob Furth – pathologist; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Duane Gish - prominent for his advocacy of creationist theory
- Elvin A. Kabat – immunologist, member of the National Academy of Sciences and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; president of the American Association of Immunologists ; recipient of the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize and the National Medal of Science
- Robert Foster Kennedy – one of the first to use electroconvulsive treatment to treat psychosis; first to link shell shock and hysteria
- Bruce Lerman - cardiologoist, Chief of the Division of Cardiology and Director of the Cardiac Electrophysiology Laboratory at Weill Cornell Medicine and the New York Presbyterian Hospital
- C. Walton Lillehei – American surgeon who pioneered open-heart surgery; recipient of the Harvey Prize, Gairdner Foundation International Award, Lasker Award
- Walsh McDermott – member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Agnes Claypole Moody – first female appointed a position in the Medical Department
- Georgios Papanikolaou – inventor of the Pap smear test for cervical cancer
- Stephen J. Roberts - Chairman of the Department of Large Animal Medicine, Obstetrics and Surgery, 1965-1966 and 1969–1972
- Juan Rosai – author and editor of a main textbook in surgical pathology; discoverer of several entities such as Rosai-Dorfman disease and desmoplastic small round cell tumor
- Alexander Rudensky – recipient of the Crafoord Prize in Polyarthritis ; member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Tom Shires – trauma surgeon; use of saline solution in shock
- Daniel Stern - studied early child development
- Ashutosh Tewari
- Theodore H. Schwartz
- Madelon Lubin Finkel, Professor of Clinical Healthcare Policy and Research
- Carl J. Wiggers – recipient of Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research; member of the National Academy of Sciences
Geology and geography
- Heinrich Ries – economic geologist
- Ralph Stockman Tarr – geographer
Social sciences and policy management
Economics
- Francine D. Blau - received her B.S. in industrial and labor relations in 1966 from Cornell
- Kaushik Basu – Indian economist; chief economist of the World Bank; fellow of the Econometric Society
- David Easley – Fellow of the Econometric Society and recipient of the Frederick W. Lanchester Prize
- George M. von Furstenberg – economist best known for monetary policy, free trade policy and international finance
- John Williams Mellor
- Louis Hyman Economic historian
- Charles Henry Hull - economist and historian. Edited The Economic Writings of Sir William Petty.
- John D. Kasarda - earned a bachelor of science degree in applied economics from Cornell in 1967 and masters of business administration degree in Organizational Theory from Cornell in 1968; developer of the aerotropolis concept, which defines the role of airports and aviation-driven economic development in shaping 21st-century urban growth and form; directs the Frank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Kenan-Flagler Business School
- James Laurence Laughlin – founded the Federal Reserve System
- Emmett J. Rice - former Governor of the Federal Reserve System
- Thomas Sowell – economist; National Humanities Medal
- Holbrook Working – economic theorist on hedging, futures prices, market maker behavior, and storage
- Brian Wansink -- famously discredited food scientist who was discovered to have repeatedly falsified scientific journal articles
Psychology
- Daryl Bem – social psychologist, creator of self-perception theory
- Sandra Bem – psychologist; created Bem Sex Role Inventory; studies gender roles
- Gilbert J. Botvin, Weill Cornell Medical College—seminal research in adolescent health promotion/disease prevention; founding editor of the journal Prevention Science
- Stephen J. Ceci - researcher of children's courtroom testimony
- Michael J. Freeman - behavior sciences
- Thomas Gilovich – researcher of decision making and behavioral economics
- Paulina Kernberg – child psychiatrist and authority on personality disorders
- Lee C. Lee – researcher in developmental psychology and Asian-American identity and history
- Kurt Lewin – founder of modern social psychology
- Neal E. Miller – American experimental psychologist and a recipient of the National Medal of Science
- Ulrich Neisser - studied intelligence and memory
- Robert Morris Ogden - Cornell University graduate, Professor of Psychology, and Cornell's Dean of Arts and Sciences, 1923–1945
- Ritch Savin-Williams – sexual orientation researcher
- Edward B. Titchener – psychologist; inventor of structuralism
- Eleanor J. Gibson - perception and developmental psychology; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; member of the National Academy of Sciences; recipient of the National Medal of Science
- James J. Gibson - perception, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Robert Sternberg – President of the American Psychological Association; Professor of Psychology and Provost at Oklahoma State University, Dean of Arts and Sciences at Tufts University; IBM Professor of Psychology and Education at Yale University; known for Triarchic theory of intelligence, Triangular theory of love and The Three-Process View; Fellow of the Society of Experimental Psychologists, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Anthropology, sociology, other social sciences
- Yutaka Tsujinaka - professor of political science
- John Adair – anthropologist
- Benedict Anderson – author of Imagined Communities
- Walter Berns – Constitutional law and political philosophy professor; recipient of National Humanities Medal in 2005
- Fred Buttel – sociologist
- John Collier - visual anthropologist
- Dian Fossey – anthropologist whose murder was recreated in the film Gorillas in the Mist
- Betty Friedan – feminist, author of The Feminine Mystique
- Rose Goldsen – pioneer in studying the effects of television and popular culture
- Charles F. Hockett – linguist; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Jay Jasanoff – Indo-European linguistics specialist
- Bronisław Malinowski – founder of social anthropology
- Robert B. McGinnis – originator of the "Cornell Mobility Model" for studying social mobility
- George McGovern - Democratic Nominee for U.S. President and Senator from South Dakota. Taught on US Foreign Policy.
- John V. Murra — professor of anthropology, with a focus on the Inca Empire
- Alan Nussbaum – Indo-European linguist and classical philologist
- Richard Swedberg – Swedish economic sociologist
- Mark P. Talbert - senior lecturer of hotel management, and subject of a viral YouTube video publicly criticizing an unknown student who was yawning loudly in one of his classes
- Nandinee K. Kutty, Policy Analysis and Management, 1993-2000 -- researcher of housing policy, poverty alleviation, Innovative Teaching Award, Bronfenbrenner Life Course Center research awards, Faculty Fellow, co-editor and contributor for book, .
- Sidney Tarrow – researcher of comparative politics, social movements, and political sociology
- James D. Thompson – sociologist
- Bassam Tibi – political scientist of Islamic countries
- Meredith Small – anthropologist and primatologist, author of several books on child development, including Our Babies, Ourselves
- Adam T. Smith – anthropologist researching the history and societies of the South Caucasus
- Barbara Wertheimer – co-ounder and director of the Institute for Women and Work at the Industrial and Labor Relations School.
Humanities
Philosophy
- Kwame Anthony Appiah – African Studies philosopher and novelist; National Humanities Medal
- Max Black
- Allan Bloom – philosophy and government, author of Closing of the American Mind, recipient of the National Humanities Medal
- Richard Boyd – philosopher
- Judith Butler - philosophy 2003-2007; Andrew White Professor at Large
- Edwin Arthur Burtt - Susan Linn Sage Professor of Philosophy in 1941, author of works on philosophy
- Harold F. Cherniss – author and expert on the philosophy of Ancient Greece
- Morris Raphael Cohen – Jewish philosopher, lawyer and legal scholar
- James Edwin Creighton – philosopher
- Terence Irwin
- Anthony Kenny
- Norman Kretzmann
- Norman Malcolm – Ludwig Wittgenstein scholar
- Evander Bradley McGilvary – philosophical scholar
- John Rawls – philosopher; author of A Theory of Justice, Political Liberalism, and The Law of Peoples; National Humanities Medal ; namesake of Asteroid 16561 Rawls
- Sydney Shoemaker – philosopher and metaphysician
- Jason Stanley
- Brian Weatherson – philosopher, metaphysician
Literature
- M. H. Abrams - author of the Mirror and the Lamp; literary critic; fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; recipient of National Humanities Medal
- Frederick Ahl – classics scholar
- Charles Edwin Bennett – classicist
- Thomas G. Bergin - author and translator
- Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen – author
- Hiram Corson – professor of literature
- Jonathan Culler - literary critic and theorist
- Louis Dyer – educator and author
- Roberto González Echevarría – literature critic; member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and recipient of the National Humanities Medal
- Max Farrand – author of American historical subjects
- Alice Fulton – poet, fiction writer, MacArthur Award
- Henry Louis Gates, Jr. – Afro-American Studies scholar; MacArthur Fellow
- Victor Lange – professor of modern languages
- Alison Lurie – fiction writer, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
- Paul de Man – Professor of Comparative Literature
- Vladimir Nabokov – author of the novel Lolita
- Adrienne Rich – feminist poet
- William Sale Jr.
- Nathaniel Schmidt – American orientalist
- William De Witt Snodgrass – poet, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- Melanie Thernstrom – author and freelance journalist
- Alvin Toffler – writer, sociologist, and futurist; Future Shock
- Helena Maria Viramontes – Chicana fiction writer
- Wendy Wasserstein – Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright
History
- Felix Adler – early 20th-century Jewish rationalist and social reformer
- Glenn C. Altschuler - Thomas and Dorothy Litwin Professor of American Studies; Weiss Presidential Fellow; Dean of the School of Continuing Education and Summer Sessions at Cornell University
- Carl L. Becker – historian; namesake of Carl Becker House
- Martin Bernal, - professor of modern Chinese history; author of Black Athena
- Sherman Cochran - Hu Shih Professor Emeritus of Chinese history
- David Brion Davis – 1967 Pulitzer Prize winner; scholar of slavery and American intellectual history; National Humanities Medal
- Anthony Grafton – a leading scholar of the Renaissance
- D.G.E. Hall - Emeritus Professor of Southeast Asian History
- Charles Henry Hull - Professor of American History, Dean of the Arts and Sciences College
- Donald Kagan – classicist; National Humanities Medal
- Michael Kammen – 1973 Pulitzer Prize winner; U.S. Constitution scholar
- Bernard Lewis – recipient of National Humanities Medal, the Harvey Prize
- Benzion Netanyahu – Professor emeritus of history at Cornell University; father of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
- Walter LaFeber – U.S. foreign policy historian
- Fredrik Logevall - - 2013 Pulitzer Prize winner
- Hunter R. Rawlings III - 10th President of Cornell University
- Goldwin Smith – historian; university reformer; namesake of Goldwin Smith Hall
- Carl Stephenson – early 20th-century medievalist
- John Szarkowski – photography curator, historian, and critic
- Eric Tagliacozzo - historian of modern Southeast Asia
- Herbert Tuttle - 19th-century historian, author
- Andrew Dickson White - first President of Cornell University; first President of the American Historical Association
- O. W. Wolters - twentieth-century historian of early Southeast Asia
Music
- Malcolm Bilson – music historian
- David Borden – composer of minimalist music
- Donald Byrd - jazz trumpeter and educator
- Adolf Dahm-Petersen – voice specialist and teacher of artistic singing
- Karel Husa – composer best known for his Music for Prague 1968; won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for his String Quartet No. 3
- Hunter Johnson – composer
- Alejandro L. Madrid – musicologist and ethnomusicologist – recipient of the Dent Medal
- Wynton Marsalis – Classical and Jazz musician, composer
- James Thomas Quarles – organist and music educator
- Steven Stucky – Pulitzer Prize-winning composer
Architecture and design
- Bristow Adams – journalist, professor, forester, illustrator
- Buckminster Fuller – architect and inventor, known for work with geodesic domes
- Colin Rowe – architectural historian and theoretician
- Romaldo Giurgola – architect, winner of the AIA Gold Medal
- Oswald Mathias Ungers – architect
Fine arts and photography
- Michael Ashkin – sculptor
- Jacqueline Livingston – feminist photographer
- Alison Lurie – Pulitzer Prize-winning author
Languages
- Herbert Deinert - Emeritus Professor of German Studies
Media
Journalism, film, television, theatre
- John Cleese – comedian and actor
- John Pilger – journalist and documentary filmmaker
Government, law, business
- Iajuddin Ahmed – President of Bangladesh, 2002–09
- Ifeoma Ajunwa – organizational behavior, law
- Alfred C. Aman, Jr. – Dean of Suffolk University Law School and Indiana University School of Law
- G. Robert Blakey professor of law and director of the Cornell Institute on Organized Crime – author of the RICO statute and chief counsel to House Select Committee on Assassinations
- Herbert W. Briggs - prominent in international law
- George W. Casey Jr. – Chief of Staff of the United States Army, 2007-11; Commander of Multi-National Force – Iraq, 2004-07
- Michael J. Freeman – inventor; business consultant, behavior sciences
- Andrew Hacker – political scientist; questioned race, class, and gender in American society
- Harry George Henn
- Robert C. Hockett
- Charles Evans Hughes – Governor of New York, 1907–10; U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice, 1910–16; U.S. Presidential candidate, 1916; U.S. Secretary of State, 1921–25; Chief Justice of the United States, 1930–41
- Irving Ives – U.S. Senator from New York, 1947–59; namesake of Ives Hall
- William A. Jacobson, attorney, Cornell Law School professor, and blogger
- Robert Jarrow – expert on derivative securities; co-developer of Heath-Jarrow-Morton framework and Jarrow-Turnbull model
- George McTurnan Kahin – expert on Southeast Asia and critic of the Vietnam War
- Alfred E. Kahn – advisor to President Jimmy Carter on deregulation; economist
- Milton R. Konvitz – head of Liberian codification project
- Cynthia McKinney – U.S. Representative from Georgia, 1993–2003, 2005–2007
- Edwin Barber Morgan – U.S. Representative from New York, 1853–59; Director of American Express
- Robert Parris Moses – a leader of the Civil Rights Movement; creator of the Algebra Project; MacArthur "genius"
- Frances Perkins ; first female U.S. Cabinet member
- Richard Neustadt – political scientist specializing in the United States presidency; advised presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Bill Clinton
- Clinton Rossiter – political scientist
- Frederick A. Sawyer – Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1873–74; Senator from South Carolina, 1968–73
- Martin Shefter – political scientist
- Arthur E. Sutherland, Jr., constitutional and commercial law expert and author; Harvard Law School professor
- Lynn Stout - Distinguished Professor of Corporate & Business Law
Education
- Arthur S. Adams – President of the University of New Hampshire ; President of the American Council on Education
- Charles Kendall Adams – President of the University of Wisconsin, 1892–1901
- John L. Anderson – President of the Illinois Institute of Technology, Provost and University Vice President of Case Western Reserve University, Dean of the College of Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University ; member of the National Academy of Engineering and Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
- Elisha Andrews – President of Denison University and Brown University ; Chancellor of the University of Nebraska
- Sanford Soverhill Atwood – President of Emory University
- Sarah Gibson Blanding – President of Vassar College, 1946–1964
- Detlev Bronk – President of Johns Hopkins University and of the Rockefeller Institute; member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Robert F. Chandler – President of the University of New Hampshire ; Winner of the World Food Prize, 1988
- James Mason Crafts – President of MIT, 1897–1900
- Cornelis W. de Kiewiet – President of the University of Rochester
- Lloyd Hartman Elliott – President of the University of Maine and George Washington University
- Thomas E. Everhart – Chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, President of the California Institute of Technology ; member of the National Academy of Engineering and foreign fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering
- W. Kent Fuchs – President of the University of Florida, 2015–
- Richard H. Gallagher – President of Clarkson University and member of National Academy of Engineering
- Charles De Garmo – President of Swarthmore College
- Theodore L. Hullar – Chancellor of UC Riverside and UC Davis
- Harry Burns Hutchins – President of the University of Michigan, 1909–1920
- William Rea Keast – President of Wayne State University, 1965–1971
- David C. Knapp – President of the University of Massachusetts
- Asa S. Knowles – President of the University of Toledo and of Northeastern University
- Edward H. Litchfield – twelfth Chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh
- Carolyn Martin – Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin, 2008–2011; President of Amherst College, 2011–
- Alan G. Merten – President of George Mason University
- John Niland – Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of New South Wales, Australia
- Paul Olum – President of the University of Oregon, 1980–1989
- Russell K. Osgood – President of Grinnell College 1998–2010
- Robert A. Plane – President of Clarkson University and of Wells College
- Don Michael Randel – President of the University of Chicago, 2000–2006
- Charles Ashmead Schaeffer – President of the University of Iowa, 1887–1898
- Benjamin Ide Wheeler - President of the University of California, 1899–1919
- Roy A. Young – Chancellor of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 1976–1980
Athletics
- Bob Blackman – member of the College Football Hall of Fame
- Charles E. Courtney – rower and rowing coach
- Melody Davidson – head coach of the Canadian national women's hockey team and the Canadian 2006 Winter Olympics women's hockey team
- Hilary Gehman - two-time Olympian; six-time member of the U.S. national rowing team
- Edward Moylan – tennis player
- Michael Slive – Commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, 2002–present
- Phil Sykes – U.S. Olympic field hockey defender