Robert Fox (historian)


Dr. Robert Fox MA, DPhil, FRHistS is a leading British authority on the history of science. He is interested in the history of sciences and technology in Europe from the 18th century onwards. He has published extensively. His book The Savant and the State examines science, culture and politics in France between 1814 and 1914, while Science without Frontiers examines developments from the late nineteenth-century until the Second World War. In 2015, Fox received the George Sarton Medal, the premier award of the international History of Science Society. He was recognized as a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by France's Ministry of Culture in 2006.

Education

Robert Fox attended the Imperial College of Science and Technology at the University of London from 1957–1958, followed by Oriel College, Oxford. He received a BA in Physics in 1961, an MA in 1965, and a D.Phil. from the Faculty of Modern History in 1967, supervised by Alistair Cameron Crombie. His thesis was The study of the thermal properties of gases in relation to physical theory from Montgolfier to Regnault.

Career

Robert Fox taught at the University of Lancaster between 1966 and 1988, first as a lecturer and later as professor of the History of Science.
Between 1986 and 1988, Fox was director of research at the Centre de recherche en histoire des sciences et des techniques at the Cité des sciences et de l'industrie in Paris, and assistant director of the Science Museum, London.
In 1988, Fox became a professor of history of science at the University of Oxford; retiring from that position in 2006. Fox is now an Emeritus Professor of the history of science at the University of Oxford, England, an Emeritus Fellow of Linacre College and an Honorary Fellow of Oriel College. He was succeeded as chair of the history of science by Pietro Corsi.
Fox was the first organizer of the annual Thomas Harriot Lectures at Oriel College, Oxford. He has edited two volumes based on the lecture series: Thomas Harriot. An Elizabethan Man of Science and Thomas Harriot and His World. Mathematics, Exploration, and Natural Philosophy in Early Modern England.
Since 2006, Fox has been a visiting professor at Johns Hopkins University, East Carolina University, the Czech Technical University in Prague, the Horning Visiting Scholar at Oregon State University, and the Gordon Cain Distinguished Fellow at the Chemical Heritage Foundation in Philadelphia.
Fox was the founding president of the European Society for the History of Science, which was founded on 12 October 2003. Fox has also served as president of the British Society for the History of Science and the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science.
Between 2008 and 2014, Fox edited Notes and Records: the Royal Society Journal of the History of Science.
Fox has appeared on the BBC radio program In Our Time, discussing the work of the Curie family: Marie and Pierre Curie, their daughter Irène Joliot-Curie and her husband Frédéric Joliot-Curie.

Awards and honors