Ettore Majorana Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture
The Ettore Majorana Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture is an international scientific institution based in Erice, Sicily, dedicated to advanced scientific education, interdisciplinary research, and the promotion of international cooperation. Founded during the Cold War, the Centre has hosted thousands of scientists from around the world through its system of international schools and conferences, and has played a role in linking scientific activity with broader ethical and social concerns.
From its early years, the Centre became known for fostering dialogue across political and cultural boundaries, including bringing together scientists from both Western and Eastern bloc countries at a time when formal cooperation was often limited. Through its network of international schools, conferences, and interdisciplinary programmes, the Centre continues to serve as a forum for scientific exchange and global cooperation.
History
Founding and early development
The origins of the Ettore Majorana Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture date to 1962, during the Cold War, a period characterised by geopolitical division and heightened concern over nuclear conflict. That year, an initiative known as the "International School of Physics" was established in Geneva, with a branch planned in Erice, reflecting efforts within the scientific community to promote international cooperation beyond traditional academic institutions.The institution’s constitutive act was signed in Geneva on 8 May 1962 by leading physicists including John Stewart Bell, Patrick Blackett, Isidor Isaac Rabi, Victor Weisskopf, and Antonino Zichichi. These figures were prominent within the post-war European physics community, closely connected through institutions such as the European Organization for Nuclear Research. Erice was selected as the location for the Centre’s activities due to its suitability for residential scientific schools and extended seminars, with the first programmes held there in 1963 following the Geneva charter.
Following the establishment of the Centre, Antonino Zichichi, an experimental physicist from the University of Bologna who specialised in high-energy and subnuclear physics, assumed a central role in the Centre's development and long-term direction. Zichichi also held leadership positions in major international scientific organisations, contributing to the Centre’s emphasis on interdisciplinary education and international scientific exchange.
Intellectual heritage
The institution is named after the Italian theoretical physicist Ettore Majorana. Born in Sicily, Majorana joined the research group of Enrico Fermi in Rome in the early 1930s, where he made important contributions to nuclear and theoretical physics. His unexplained disappearance in 1938 became one of the enduring mysteries in the history of science.Some later commentators interpreted Majorana’s withdrawal from public life in the context of ethical concerns about the destructive potential of nuclear physics, a symbolic association that later resonated with the Centre’s emphasis on scientific responsibility, international dialogue, and the promotion of science in the service of peace.
Building on this scientific and ethical tradition, the Centre’s international schools have attracted many of the world’s leading researchers as lecturers and contributors. Nobel Prize–winning physicists including Richard Feynman, who was involved in the early International School of Physics programmes in Erice in the 1960s, Samuel C. C. Ting, who delivered lectures at the International School of Physics in Erice in 1967, and Steven Weinberg, whose recollections reference his Erice lectures as part of the Centre’s programmes, were among those associated with its early teaching activities.
Institutional summaries further report that dozens of participants later became Nobel laureates, and that many were already prize recipients at the time of their involvement, reflecting the Centre’s longstanding role as a high-profile forum for advanced scientific exchange.
Ethical engagement
In August 1982, the Centre hosted the drafting of the Erice Statement, a declaration on scientific responsibility in the nuclear age developed by physicists Paul Dirac, Pyotr Kapitsa, and Antonino Zichichi. The statement emphasised the ethical responsibilities of scientists in the development of powerful technologies and called for peaceful applications of science and greater international openness. It has been signed by over 90,000 scientists, as well as by political leaders including Mikhail Gorbachev, Ronald Reagan, and Deng Xiaoping.Building on this tradition, the Centre later expanded into public health and medicines safety. The “Erice Statement 2009” and the subsequent “Erice Call for Change” brought together pharmacologists, regulators, and healthcare experts from multiple countries, including participants linked to the World Health Organization’s global pharmacovigilance network. These initiatives aimed to improve the communication of medicine-related risks and incorporate patient experience into healthcare decision-making.
Science for peace initiatives and recognition
The Ettore Majorana – Science for Peace Prize was established by regional law of the Sicilian Regional Assembly in 1988, with its administration assigned to the EMFCSC. First awarded in 1990, the prize has recognised eminent figures including Lee Yuan-tseh, Pope John Paul II, Herbert Aaron Hauptman, David Hunter Hubel, Robert Huber, Edward Teller, and Linus Pauling.In December 2004, Pope John Paul II formally received the prize during an audience with representatives of the Centre and members of the international scientific community. In his address, he highlighted the Centre’s long-standing role as a forum for scientific culture and international dialogue and accepted the award on behalf of scholarship support for students from developing countries.
Independent scientific organisations have subsequently recognised the Centre’s more than six decades of activity in promoting international scientific dialogue and cooperation for peaceful purposes. The sustained presence of the Centre and its international scientific schools has also influenced the modern identity of Erice beyond its medieval heritage, with observers noting the town’s distinctive association with global scientific dialogue and the promotion of knowledge and peace in the contemporary era.
In March 2019, the Comune di Erice formally joined the Coordinamento Nazionale degli Enti Locali per la Pace e i Diritti Umani, signalling the municipality’s commitment to the promotion of peace and human rights within its civic identity, a stance strongly associated with the longstanding presence of the Ettore Majorana Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture in the town.
Programmes
The educational and scientific activities of the Ettore Majorana Foundation and Centre for Scientific Culture are organised primarily through a system of international scientific schools and specialised courses, collectively known as the Centre’s International Schools.These programmes operate as intensive residential sessions, typically bringing together researchers, lecturers, and students from multiple countries for extended periods of lectures, seminars, and collaborative discussion. Over time, the scope of the Centre’s activities has expanded beyond its original focus on physics to include a wide range of disciplines across the natural and human sciences, including mathematics, chemistry, biology, medicine, earth sciences, engineering, computer science, law, and interdisciplinary fields linking science with ethics and public policy.
Molecular gastronomy
Many of the Centre’s programmes have emphasised interdisciplinary approaches that bridge scientific research with broader cultural and practical applications. Among the most notable examples was the establishment in 1992 of the International School of Molecular and Physical Gastronomy, co-directed by physicist Nicholas Kurti and chemist Hervé This. The workshops brought together scientists and professional chefs to examine the physical and chemical processes underlying cooking practices.These Erice meetings are widely recognised as foundational in the development of the field later known as molecular gastronomy, with the term itself emerging from discussions held at the Centre. The scientific approach developed in Erice subsequently influenced modern cuisine, and was later adopted and popularised by chefs such as Ferran Adrià and Heston Blumenthal, who became widely associated in academic and media discussion with the “molecular gastronomy” label and related science-informed culinary techniques.
Through its network of schools and thematic courses, the Centre continues to host programmes addressing both fundamental scientific research and emerging interdisciplinary topics, reinforcing its role as a forum for international scientific exchange and advanced education.
Location and facilities
The Centre is housed within a group of restored medieval monasteries and convent complexes in the historic centre of Erice. Originally established in the former Monastery of the Poor Clares, the Centre expanded during the 1970s into several adjacent religious buildings, which were carefully adapted to accommodate lecture halls, research spaces, and residential facilities for visiting scholars. While preserving their architectural and historical character, the structures were transformed into modern scientific venues equipped for conferences, teaching, and interdisciplinary collaboration, forming a distinctive campus integrated into the town’s historic fabric.The Centre is organised into a cluster of institutes, each housed within a former religious complex and named after a prominent scientist:
- Isidor I. Rabi Institute — Administrative hub with the Directorate, main Secretariat and the "Richard P. Feynman" Lecture Hall; also hosts the Centre’s Polo Sismico.
- Eugene P. Wigner Institute — Includes the "Enrico Fermi" Lecture Hall; the cloister is also used for concerts and exhibitions.
- Patrick M. S. Blackett Institute — Houses the Aula Magna "P. A. M. Dirac" auditorium and several lecture rooms, including those named after "Robert Hofstadter" and "John von Neumann"; the complex also includes small museums and exhibition spaces.
- Victor F. Weisskopf Institute — Includes the "John S. Bell" and "Richard H. Dalitz" Lecture Halls and additional conference spaces.
Seismic monitoring system
The Centre’s Polo Sismico, formally known as the Alberto Gabriele Seismic Network, is a permanent seismic monitoring system established in 1981 and housed within the Isidor I. Rabi Institute. This network connects seismological detectors across Italy, receiving signals from a broad array of stations to enable the detection and localisation of seismic events in real time. While seismological networks are used worldwide to study earth movements and assess seismic hazards, the Polo Sismico has played a distinctive role both within the Centre’s scientific infrastructure and as an instrument for supporting broader seismic research and monitoring efforts. The network’s capacity to localise earthquakes rapidly is useful for scientific analysis and can contribute to hazard assessment and preparedness strategies, particularly in seismically active regions such as Italy.Museums and cultural activities
Several of the Centre’s historic institutes are open to visitors and function as cultural venues integrated into the life of Erice. In addition to hosting scientific schools and conferences, these restored convent complexes have been adapted for public use, allowing residents and visitors to engage with the Centre’s architectural heritage and scientific legacy.The Eugene P. Wigner Institute, whose principal space is the Enrico Fermi Lecture Hall, regularly hosts public concerts, opera performances, and art exhibitions within its cloister and halls. Cultural programmes held there have included modern performances of works by Alessandro Scarlatti as well as contemporary art exhibitions organised as part of town-wide cultural festivals.
The Patrick M. S. Blackett Institute also incorporates small on-site museums, including the Paul A. M. Dirac Museum and the Daniel Chalonge Museum. These spaces preserve scientific instruments, photographs, and archival materials connected to figures associated with the Centre’s international schools and research activities, reflecting its long-standing role in the history of modern physics and astrophysics.