LONDON, Oct. 9, 2007

The Nobel: Coveted, Controversial, Covert

How Do You Get A Nobel Prize? It’s A Secret Known By A Select Few

  • Play CBS Video Video Nobel Prize Mysteries

    The winners of the Nobel Prize have not always been obvious. Mark Phillips reports on everything you didn't know about the coveted award.

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    Images from the awards for the world's best in science, economics, literature and peacemaking

(CBS)  Think of it as the original Big Bang Theory.

The man who invented dynamite and hoped its destructive force would make war unthinkable - then left all his money to a fund to award yearly prizes for work in the sciences, literature and, most of all, for peace.

The prizes named for Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor who died in 1896, are worth about $1.5 million each and have become the most coveted and prestigious in the world, CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips reports.

And sometimes the most controversial.

The list of recipients may be a who's who of history. And who could criticize the choice of a Mother Teresa, or Nelson Mandela, or Martin Luther King.

But Henry Kissinger's award for negotiating the end of the Vietnam War was questioned by those who blamed him for waging it.

And Le Duc Tho, his Vietnamese counterpart, refused to accept his joint award because of the destruction of his country the war had caused.

Sometimes the award was spectacularly premature. Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres and Yasser Arafat received the 1994 prize for agreeing to a peace that has yet to happen.

The science awards can be uneven as well. Albert Einstein may have won in 1921 for inventing modern nuclear physics.

But this year's award is to the people who perfected the little disk that runs an iPod ... a lesser scientific achievement perhaps.

How does that happen? It's a secret. The Swedish Academy, which invites nominations and bestows the awards, won't say how they do it or even who they're considering.

“Albert Fair and Peter Grunberg won the physics prize, but we don’t know who else was in the running,” said Adam Smith, the Web site manager of the Nobel Committee. “We just know that they won. And it will be 50 years before we are able to look back into the archive and find out who actually was nominated for this year’s prize.”

The Nobel archives are full of surprises. Six father-and-son teams have won. Four husband-and-wife teams, including Pierre and Marie Curie, who won twice for her work with the radiation that ultimately killed her.

Linus Pauling is the only person to have won the award on his own twice. Once for chemistry, once for peace - convincing the nuclear powers to sign a test-ban treaty.

The Nobel Prize workings may be a mystery, but the rules are clear. No campaigning. Al Gore is rumored to be a hot tip for this year’s peace prize for his environmental work.

The worst thing he could do is say he wants it.


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by rational_1 October 10, 2007 5:52 PM EDT
"The science awards can be uneven as well. Albert Einstein may have won in 1921 for inventing modern nuclear physics."

Einstein won it for his work on the photoelectric effect but he never won the Nobel Prize for his greatest accomplishment, which was his work on relativity. The guy was truly amazing - he published four papers in 1905 and all four revolutionized physics.
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by juwboy October 10, 2007 1:41 PM EDT
swdepp:

The article names Marie Curie (physics and chemistry) and Linus Pauling (chemistry and peace) as duplicate Nobel Prize winners and you''ve mentioned John Bardeen (physics, twice).

Fred Sanger also won two prizes in the same field (chemistry). The first was for developing a method of determining the amino-acid sequences of proteins, the second for related research in determining the base sequences in DNA.
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by moravagine3 October 10, 2007 12:49 PM EDT
The discovery of giant magnetoresistance is not a lesser scientific achievement. Half of the Nobels in the last 20 years would have been impossible without large disk drives to store their crystallography data!
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by moravagine3 October 10, 2007 12:47 PM EDT
The discovery of giant magnetoresistance is not a lesser scientific achievement. Half of the Nobels in the last 20 years would have been impossible without large disk drives to store their crystallography data!
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by ilovepig October 10, 2007 10:02 AM EDT
What if this year physics Nobel prize went to America!!! You would have thought of it in a complete different way!
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by one_american October 10, 2007 12:59 AM EDT
"Al Gore is rumored to be a hot tip for this year%u2019s peace prize for his environmental work."

"ENVIRONMENTAL WORK????"

Surely, you must mean for his carbon-credit taxation scam to fund the Democrat Party, while he burns more carbon-based fuels than 1000 average people do at the same time.

Of course, all the liberals love Gore for his dishonesty and hipocricy - so that''s why he''ll get the liberal agenda-pushing Nobel Prize - because he glibly advances the liberal agenda and pulls along the liberal media and the ignorant like cattle with a ring in their nose.

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by swdepp October 9, 2007 11:12 PM EDT
You should have mentioned John Bardeen who won the award twice in the same field - physics. He was one of the inventors of the transistor and he led the team which explained superconductivity.
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