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About Andrew J. Galambos
Andrew J. Galambos was an astrophysicist by education, the son of a Hungarian immigrant.
He was the creator of the Science of Volition, founder of the Free Enterprise Institute
and the Liberal Institute of Natual Science and Technology.
In 1952, Andrew J. Galambos changed his name to Joseph A. Galambos in order to honor
the memory of his late father, Joseph B. Galambos, whose influence, more than any
other, inspired the younger Galambos' achievements. He retained this name until 1964,
when, realizing that he actually might be obscuring his father's place in history,
he changed his name back to Andrew J. Galambos.
Professor Galambos earned degrees in physics from the College of the City of New
York and the University of Minnesota. Professor Galambos has taught physics at New
York University, Brooklyn College, Steven Institute of Technology, the university
of Minnesota, Carleton College, and Whittier College. He is founder of the Liberal
Institute of Technology in Los Angeles, California.
In 1961, Galambos founded the Free Enterprise Institute (FEI), the name of his school.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Galambos gave a series of courses, or lectures
in the Orange County/Los Angeles area. V-50 was the introductory course and was required
if you wanted to proceed further into other courses. "V" stands for volition--the
act of choosing. Once a person completed the V-50, he was able to sign up for further
studies.
His definitions and concepts of property
were the foundation of his science. Galambos would introduce several authors and
books for his followers to read. Among them were: Frederic Bastiat's The Law,
Henry Hazlitt's Economics in One Lesson, and Ludwig von Mises' Planned
Chaos. He was a great fan of Thomas Paine and promoted the idea, which several
scholars and historians also hold, that Paine was the actual author of the Declaration
of Independence.
It was Galambos' belief that while he saw mankind achieving huge technological advancement,
as a society, we were barely out of the cave. His belief was that if we could develop
a society based on natural laws such as we have in physics, we could then mature
culturally and as a social species.
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