Dr. Michael te Vrugt’s work is a balancing act between the Humanities and the Natural Sciences: for him, it provides welcome variety.
Michael te Vrugt is a physicist and a philosopher - and he is currently writing his second PhD. Dr. Michael te Vrugt's work is a balancing act between the Humanities and the Natural Sciences: for him, it provides welcome variety. Münster University - Peter Leßmann It is a Tuesday evening in late April, and Room 102 at the Volkshochschule (Adult Education Institute) in Vagedesstraße in the small town of Ahaus, 50 km from Münster, is filling up. Shortly before 7:30 it becomes clear that there are not enough chairs. Volkshochschule staff quickly provide more seating until the 40 or so people present have all found somewhere to sit. The audience now waits for the start of the first in a series of three talks entitled "From Physics to Philosophy at the Origins of the Universe". The speaker comes from the University of Münster, and his name is Dr. Michael te Vrugt.
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