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Notable alumni
Edgar Adrian, British neuroscientist and physiologist, recipient of the 1932 Nobel Prize for PhysiologyAlasdair MacIntyre, British philosopher
Academics
Sir Gilbert Barling – British surgeon, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham
Florence Mahoney – Gambian educator, academic, first woman to obtain a PhD from Gambia
Sir William Turner – British anatomist, Principal of the University of Edinburgh, 1903-1916
Historians and philosophers
Malcolm Bowie – British academic and literary critic
George Hockham – British engineer; together with Nobel Prize winner Charles Kao, widely recognised a pioneer in the field of optical fibres (PhD Electronic Engineering, 1969)
Ashitey Trebi-Ollennu - Ghanaian robotics engineer at NASA and chief engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory[7]
Lawyers and judges
Dame Laura Cox – British lawyer, English High Court judge
Sir Ronald Ross, British medical doctor, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on the transmission of malaria, becoming the first British Nobel laureateSir Henry Hallett Dale – British pharmacologist and physiologist, shared the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Sir James Paget – British surgeon and founder of scientific medical pathology
Stephen Paget – British surgeon, the son of the distinguished surgeon and pathologist Sir James Paget, proposed the "seed and soil" theory of metastasis
Percivall Pott – British surgeon, one of the founders of orthopedics, and the first scientist to demonstrate that a cancer may be caused by an environmental carcinogen
W. H. R. Rivers – British psychiatrist, psychiatric anthropologist
Sir Ronald Ross – British medical doctor, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on the transmission of malaria[11]
Davidson Nicol – Sierra Leonean academic and diplomat, Permanent Representative of Sierra Leone to the United Nations, High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations
1 2 3 4 5 Gay, H. (2007). The History of Imperial College London, 1907–2007. Higher Education and Research in Science, Technology and Medicine. World Scientific. pp.563–715.
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