Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us Latest news News News articles

NWO Spinoza Prizes for Lodi Nauta and Bart van Wees

10 June 2016
The laureates

2016 is a good Spinoza year for the University of Groningen. Two laureates have been added to its list of honour in one go: Lodi Nauta, Professor of the History of Philosophy, and Bart van Wees, Professor of Applied Physics. The winning academics both receive EUR 2.5 million for research. In total the University of Groningen now has seven winners of the Spinoza prize.

Lodi Nauta is the first philosopher to receive the Spinoza Prize. ‘I consider this to be not merely the recognition of my own work, but also of the importance of philosophy and its history.‘ Bart van Wees still needs to have a good think about how he will spend the money: ‘I could use it for my current research, but I will certainly use some of it to explore new territory too.

Lodi Nauta and Bart van Wees will present their research at a celebration in the Nieuwe Kerk in The Hague on Tuesday 13 September.

Read more about Lodi Nauta  and Bart van Wees  on our special Spinoza website and watch the movies we have made about them.

Very proud

Elmer Sterken is ‘very proud’ of Lodi Nauta and Bart van Wees. ‘They are researchers who encourage and inspire their co-workers, open-minded academics whose enthusiasm is catching and who take young people under their wing and thus lead by example. The same was true for their predecessors.’

Highest distinction in Dutch academia

The NWO Spinoza Prize is the highest distinction in Dutch academia. The award was introduced by NWO, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, a national organization that funds and stimulates academic research in the Netherlands. A maximum of four prizes are awarded annually. The winning academics receive EUR 2.5 million for research, and are given complete freedom to choose their research subject and involve other, mostly young, researchers. Thus, the prize is part recognition for accomplished researchers and part stimulus to conduct further research.

Last modified:14 April 2020 10.20 a.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 03 April 2025

    IMChip and MimeCure in top 10 of the national Academic Startup Competition

    Prof. Tamalika Banerjee’s startup IMChip and Prof. Erik Frijlink and Dr. Luke van der Koog’s startup MimeCure have made it into the top 10 of the national Academic Startup Competition.

  • 01 April 2025

    NSC’s electoral reform plan may have unwanted consequences

    The new voting system, proposed by minister Uitermark, could jeopardize the fundamental principle of proportional representation, says Davide Grossi, Professor of Collective Decision Making and Computation at the University of Groningen

  • 01 April 2025

    'Diversity leads to better science'

    In addition to her biological research on ageing, Hannah Dugdale also studies disparities relating to diversity in science. Thanks to the latter, she is one of the two 2024 laureates of the Athena Award, an NWO prize for successful and inspiring...