Alfred I. Tauber retired from Boston University in 2010 as Zoltan Kohn Professor emeritus of Medicine, Professor emeritus of Philosophy, and Director emeritus of the Center for Philosophy and History of Science. Having received his B.S. and M.D. degrees from Tufts University, he completed his clinical and research training at the University of Washington, New England Medical Center and the Harvard Medical School affiliate, Brigham and Women’s Hospital. He became Chief of the Hematology and Oncology Services at the Boston City Hospital in 1982 and practiced clinical medicine until 2003. At Boston University, he actively directed a research laboratory focused on the biochemistry of the acute inflammatory response, with studies ranging from free radical chemistry to activation mechanisms of immune cells. He continues collaborative research on complex systems at Tel Aviv University. As a Visiting Professor, Dr. Tauber continues to teach graduate students at The Cohn Institute of Tel Aviv University and publish actively in philosophy of science and intellectual history. With his sister, Ingrid Tauber, Prof. Tauber directs the Tauber Family Foundation, which funds diverse programs in Israel and the United States for the care and rehabilitation of the mentally ill. The Israeli Health Ministry has recognized and co-sponsored active partnerships with the Tauber Foundation in educational and research programs at the University of Haifa. In addition Prof. Tauber established the Tauber Bioinformatics Center at the University for the development of new methods in genomics and proteomics. Prof. Tauber and his wife, the historian Paula Fredriksen, made aliyah in 2011. They equally divide the year between Jerusalem and their farm in central New Hampshire, where they grow hay, apples, blueberries and promote classical music by sponsoring young professional chamber musicians at The Avaloch Farm Music Institute. Of their blended family of seven children, three live in Israel, three in the United States, and one in Uruguay