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  1. Thomas North Whitehead (31 December 1891, Cambridge, England – 22 November 1969, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an early human relations theorist and researcher, best known for The Industrial Worker, a two-volume statistical analysis of the Hawthorne experiments.

  2. Quick Reference. (1891–1969) Thomas North Whitehead was born in Cambridge, UK on 31 December 1891 and died in Cambridge, Massachusetts on 22 November 1969. He was the son of the distinguished philosopher ...

  3. In theoretical physics, Whitehead's theory of gravitation was introduced by the mathematician and philosopher Alfred North Whitehead in 1922. While never broadly accepted, at one time it was a scientifically plausible alternative to general relativity.

  4. Senior Fellow Alfred North Whitehead was one of its originating founders. Skinner had also been accepted that year as one of the five original Junior Fellows. T. N. Whitehead (1933) had just completed the first preliminary report on his part of the soon-to-be-famous Hawthorne study. He did this as a member of the Harvard Business School faculty.

    • Calvin K. Claus
    • 10.1007/BF03392147
    • 2007
    • Behav Anal. 2007 Spring; 30(1): 79-86.
  5. Thomas North Whitead (1891-1969) was an early human relations theorist and researcher. Whitehead joined the Harvard Business School in 1931. He stayed at Harvard for the rest of his career except for a leave of absence during World War II. After the war, Whitehead ran the Harvard-Radcliffe Program in Business Administration, a business program ...

  6. Alfred North Whitehead OM FRS FBA (15 February 1861 – 30 December 1947) was an English mathematician and philosopher. He created the philosophical school known as process philosophy , [2] which has been applied in a wide variety of disciplines, including ecology , theology , education , physics , biology , economics , and psychology .

  7. Thomas North Whitehead was an early human relations theorist and researcher, best known for The Industrial Worker, a two-volume statistical analysis of the Hawthorne experiments. He worked as a professor at Harvard University and Radcliffe College, and in the British Foreign Office during World War II.