Bernard Lecture
The Bernard Lectureship features a prominent authority on mathematics or computer science who engages members of the college community, including students, faculty, alumni, and the general public, in discussions and lectures.
2026 Lecture
Dr. Cynthia Dwork, Professor of Computer Science, John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University |Affiliated Faculty at Harvard Law School. Thursday, April 23, 2026 at 7:30 pm, Duke Family Performance Hall, Knoblach Campus Center, 水果派 College
Previous Lectures
- 2019 - Professor William (Bill) J. Cook, University of Waterloo and Johns Hopkins University, "The Traveling Salesman Problem: Postcards From The Edge of Impossibility"
- 2018 - Professor Ken Ono, Emory University, 鈥淲ho was 鈥楾he Man Who Knew Infinity,鈥 and why does he matter?鈥
- 2017 - Professor Gregory S. Warrington, University of Vermont, "Mathematical Analyses of Gerrymandering"
- 2016 - Professor Ronald Gould, Emory University, "Some Unusual Applications of Mathematics"
- 2015 - Professor Susan Loepp, Williams College, "Protecting Your Personal Information: An Introduction to Encryption"
- 2014 - Professor Jes煤s De Loera, University of California, "The combinatorial structure of convex polytopes"
- 2013 - Professor Emeritus Larry Baggett, University of Colorado Boulder, "In the Dark on the Sunny Side: A Memoir of an Out-of-Sight Mathematician"
- 2012 - Professor Paul Edelman, Vanderbilt University, "Mathematics and the Law: The Apportionment of the House of Representatives")
- 2011 - Professor Sue Whitesides, University of Victoria, "At the crossroads of geometry, discrete mathematics, and algorithm design"
- 2010 - Professor Manjul Bhargava, Princeton University, "Linguistics, Poetry, and Mathematics"
- 2009 - Professor Joseph Gallian, University of Minnesota Duluth, "Using Mathematics to Create Symmetry Patterns"
- 2008 - Professor Keith Devlin, Stanford University, "When Mathematics Changed the World"
- 2007 - Professor Francis Edward Su, Harvey Mudd College, "Preference Sets, Graphs, and Voting in Agreeable Societies"
- 2006 - Professor Jeffrey Lagarias, University of Michigan, "Mathematical Crystals and Quasicrystals"
- 2005 - Professor Ronald Graham, University of California, San Diego, "Searching for the Shortest Network"
- 2004 - Professor Georgia Benkart, University of Wisconsin, "Ladies of the Ring: A Tale of Two Women and Their Mathematics"
- 2003 - Professor Edward Scheinerman, Johns Hopkins University, "Mathematics Through Games"
- 2002 - Professor Underwood Dudley, DePauw University, "Why Teach Mathematics?"
- 2001 - Professor Emeritus Carl Pomerance, University of Georgia & Bell Laboratories, "Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron, Paul Erdos, and Me"
- 2000 - Professor Lenore Blum, Carnegie Mellon University, "Complexity and Real Computation--Where Turing Meets Newton"
- 1999 - Professor William R. Pulleyblank, Director of Mathematical Sciences in IBM's Research Division and Director of the IBM Deep Computing Institute, "Duality and Mathematical Optimization"
- 1998 - Professor Maynard Thompson, Indiana University, "Stratified Population Models and Applications in Ecology"
- 1997 - Professor David Bressoud, Macalester College, "Alternating Sign Matrix Conjecture"
- 1996 - Professor Robert Bryant, Duke University, "The Notions of Area and Volume and Geometry: From the Greeks to the Moderns"
- 1995 - Professor William Dunham, Muhlenberg College, "A Tribute to Euler"; author of Journey Through Genius, The Mathematical Universe, and Euler: Master of Us All
- 1994 - Professor Robert Devaney, Boston University, "The Fractal Geometry of the Mandelbrot Set"
- 1993 - Professor Brian White, Stanford University, "On Beyond Infinity"
- 1992 - Professor Victor Klee, The University of Washington, Seattle, "Some Unsolved Problems in Intuitive Geometry"