List of Nobel Laureates By University Affiliation - Yale University

Yale University

Affiliations Graduate Attendee or Researcher Academic staff before or at the time of award Academic staff after award
Yale University Note: Cowles Foundation Nobel Laureates only include those on research staff after 1955, when the Foundation moved to Yale
50
  1. George Akerlof
  2. Raymond Davis Jr.
  3. John F. Enders
  4. John B. Fenn
  5. Murray Gell-Mann
  6. Alfred G. Gilman
  7. Ernest Lawrence
  8. Joshua Lederberg
  9. David Lee (physicist)
  10. Sinclair Lewis
  11. Lars Onsager
  12. Edmund Phelps
  13. Dickinson W. Richards
  14. William Vickrey
  15. George Whipple
  16. Eric Wieschaus
  17. Paul R. Krugman
  18. Peter Diamond
  19. Brian Kobilka
  1. Venkatraman Ramakrishnan
  2. Elizabeth Blackburn
  3. Erwin Neher

Cowles Foundation:

  1. Herbert A. Simon
  2. Robert J. Aumann
  3. Joseph Stiglitz
  4. James Heckman
  5. John Harsanyi
  6. Harry M. Markowitz
  1. Sidney Altman
  2. John B. Fenn
  3. Tjalling Koopmans
  4. George Palade
  5. Edward Tatum
  6. Charles K. Kao
  7. GĂ©rard Debreu
  8. Wangari Maathai
  9. Philip John Noel-Baker, Baron Noel-Baker
  10. Irwin Rose
  11. Thomas Schelling
  12. Paul Greengard
  13. Paul R. Krugman
  14. Thomas A. Steitz
  15. Oliver Williamson
  16. Lars Onsager
  17. John Vane
  18. Joseph E. Stiglitz
  19. James Tobin
  20. Daniel L. McFadden
  21. J. J. Thomson
  22. Philip Noel-Baker
  23. Toni Morrison
  1. Willis E. Lamb
  2. Max Theiler

Read more about this topic:  List Of Nobel Laureates By University Affiliation

Famous quotes by yale university:

    Whereas the comic confronts simply logical contradictions, the tragic confronts a moral predicament. Not minor matters of true and false but crucial questions of right and wrong, good and evil face the tragic character in a tragic situation.
    —Marie Collins Swabey. Comic Laughter, ch. 7, Yale University Press (1961)

    While it may not heighten our sympathy, wit widens our horizons by its flashes, revealing remote hidden affiliations and drawing laughter from far afield; humor, in contrast, strikes up fellow feeling, and though it does not leap so much across time and space, enriches our insight into the universal in familiar things, lending it a local habitation and a name.
    —Marie Collins Swabey. Comic Laughter, ch. 5, Yale University Press (1961)