The Beatty Memorial Lecture is a distinguished annual lecture coordinated by McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The lecture series was inaugurated in 1952 to honour Edward Wentworth Beatty, the first Canadian-born president of the Canadian Pacific Railway and the former chancellor of McGill, a position he held from 1921 until his death in 1943.[1] Each year, an internationally renowned visitor presents a public lecture on a subject of their choice, providing an opportunity for the McGill community and the general public to "further their education on topical issues."[2]
The motto of the lecture series is, "Change Through Exchange".[3]
1956 – Julian Huxley, "The Possibilities of Life, Mind, Man"
1959 – Morris Bishop, "The Great River at the White Man's Coming / The Missionary and the Coureur du Bois: Sagard and Brandûlé / Champlain"
1961 – Arnold Toynbee, "The Present Day Experiment in Western Civilization: The Experiment in Hellenization / The Attraction of the Western Way of Life / Parliamentary Democracy on Trial"
1961 – Douglas Copland, "The Changing Structure of the Western Economy"
1963 – A. L. Rowse, "The Political Uses of History / The Role of Germany in Modern History / The Responsibility of the Historian"
1964 – Edwin Rich (historian), "Montreal and the Fur Trade – The French Background/The American Frontier/The Northwest Company"
1967 – Max Beloff, "Commonwealth Weakness, Britain"
1977 – E. O. Wilson, "The Evolution of Social Behaviour"
1979 – Jane Goodall, "Chimpanzees in the Wild: Perspectives on Primate Behaviour"
1979 – Richard Feynman, "Light and Matter – The Modern View: Photons – Particles of Light / Quantum Behaviour / Interaction of Light and Matter"
1979 – Ved Mehta, "Mahatma Gandhi and Modern India"
1981 – Ralf Dahrendorf, "A Swing to the Right? Socio-political Changes in the Western World / The European Community at the Beginning of the 1980s"
1981 – Saunders Mac Lane, "How Mathematicians Get New Ideas / Distortion of Science by Politics"
1982 – Gwendolen M. Carter, "Apartheid: Dying or Resurgent / The African States Seek Economic Liberation"
1983 – I. F. Stone, "The Trial of Socrates Revisited: What Plato Doesn't Tell Us: The Case for the Prosecution / How Easily Socrates Might Have Won Acquittal / Plato on Trial: The Hidden Horrors of a Perfect City"
1984 – Lord William McCarthy, "The Limits of Trade Union Power"
1985 – Francis Crick, "How Do We See Things? / The Search-Light Hypothesis/The Problem of Awareness"
1987 – John Mortimer, "The Art of Advocacy / Clinging to the Wreckage"
1987 – Christopher Hill, "Milton and the English Revolution / Bunyan and His World / The End of the World"
1988 – Kirk Varnedoe, "Fine Disregard: Inventions in Early Modern Art – New Space: Near and Far / New Time: Fragmentation and Repetition / Overview: The Flight of the Mind"
1989 – Sally Falk Moore, "Nationalism, Cultural Pluralism and the State"
1990 – Gerald Edelman, "Morphology and Mind: Topobiology: The Problem of Morphology / Neural Darwinism: The Problem of Perception / The Remembered Present: Problems of Consciousness"
1990 – Norman Myers, "Safeguarding the Biosphere: What Cost? What Payoff?"
An anthology featuring 15 past Beatty Lectures titled With the World to Choose From: Celebrating Seven Decades of the Beatty Lecture at McGill University[31] was published by McGill-Queen's University Press in 2021, including lectures by Barbara Ward, Robert Sinsheimer, Mikhail Gorbachev, Muhammad Yunus, Charles Taylor, and Roxane Gay.[32]
^Gregorian, Vartan (January 1996). "A Place Elsewhere: Reading in the Age of the Computer". Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 49 (4). American Academy of Arts and Sciences: 54–64. doi:10.2307/3824383. JSTOR3824383.
^Redford, Kent H.; Sanderson, Steven E. "No Roads, Only Directions"(PDF). Conservation and Society. Archived from the original(PDF) on 10 November 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2017.