Federico García Moliner was awarded the prize “Príncipe de Asturias” for Technical and Scientific Investigation, due to his excellent work in the field of Physics. He is one of the great Spanish scientists of our time; however, when listening to him, nothing would make you think he’s such an illustrious personality.Dressed up in a quite colourful bow tie and a broad smile, Moliner showed up not only to give his lecture, but also to listen to the rest of them, in which he participated with great interest, asking questions in the round of questions and not hesitating to hand over the students his turn of speaking, although the organizers had given him primacy over the rest. Telling this is not trivial, since it’s a sign of his humane character, and that was the central topic of the conference.
Just the beginning of his lecture drew strong applause: “You may wonder how science is made…Well, I’ll read Ana Maria Matute for you to understand it” And, he read for us Ana Maria Matute’s description of the writing process. For those who haven’t come close to sciences except in high school, listening to such an exquisite comparison between science and writing was an absolute joy. ”There´s a lot of beauty in science”, he told us and, no doubt, he could transmit the idea well.
His defence of culture is based on its importance, since it determines the way in which we use the brain”. Our limited concept of it, impairs a greater intellectual and personal development, since we insist on “radically differentiate culture and material world, even though they are the same thing or, in other words, they are co-existent and inter-related realities”.
“The artist and the scientist are so similar…” he told us, “both seek to find an explanation of the world and transmit it”. It’s a lovely way of understanding science and art, beauty and ideas. Perhaps Moliner was thinking about the Gernika or the structure of fractals when he declared: “Not only is there beauty in art, but also profound ideas; not only are there profound ideas in science, but there’s room for beauty too”.
Sara Domínguez Martín
Translated by Diana Irene Arancibia
Nicolás Sartorius is a lawyer as well as a professional journalist. Yet, something he is very well-known for is his fight for freedom during Franco’s dictatorship. He founded the Workers Commissions Union (affiliated with the Communist Party), but he is no longer dedicated to Politics, although he continues participating, but from a different position, in the defense of social reforms.
Emilio Lledó Iñigo was born in Sevilla 81 years ago, but he stays young. This philosopher is, above all, a fan of language. He weighs and tastes every word and manages to deliver a discourse that feels like savoring the best of meals. And not because he uses complex or poetic words, but because of the opposite: the precision and naturalness with which he conveys the most abstract ideas. He is one of those cases that exemplify well that one’s wisdom is not necessarily reflected in the use of elaborate words.
If the world were divided in “lambs and fighters”,
In the middle of a shower of applause, a good-looking, neat and little elderly woman goes up onto the stage. She is

The ECTS (European Credit Transfer System) was adopted in 1989, within the framework of Erasmus programme, and its approval in our country is set in the