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Sir '''Fred Hoyle''' (1915-2001) was an astronomer, cosmologist, and [[science fiction]] author.  
Sir '''Fred Hoyle''' (1915–2001) was an [[astronomer]], [[cosmologist]], and [[science fiction]] [[author]].  He was best known for championing the (now more or less defunct) [[Steady State]] theory of cosmology and, ironically, for coining the name of a rival theory, the "[[Big Bang]]", now the most widely accepted.


"Born in Yorkshire, England. He attended Emmanuel College at Cambridge and was then hired to teach mathematics at Cambridge University. Later he moved to the United States to take a job as a professor of astronomy and philosophy at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York." <ref>"Fred Hoyle." Astronomy & Space: From the Big Bang to the Big Crunch. 3 vols. U*X*L, 1997.  Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.</ref>
Hoyle was born on [[June 24]], [[1915]] in [[Bingley]], [[Yorkshire]], [[England]], and attended Bingley Grammar School. He was the son of Ben and Mabel (Pickard) Hoyle.  He read [[mathematics]] at [[Emmanuel College]], [[Cambridge University|Cambridge]], and then went on to teach the subject at the university. Later he moved to the [[United States of America]] to become a professor of [[astronomy]] and [[philosophy]] at [[Cornell University]] in [[Ithaca, New York]].


Hoyle championed the [[steady state]] of cosmology, and coined the phrase [[Big Bang | "big bang"]] as a way of ridiculing an alternative theory (which, however, is now widely accepted).
He coined the phrase [[Big Bang | "big bang"]] as a way of ridiculing the alternative theory (which, however, is now widely accepted).
 
==References==
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Sir Fred Hoyle (1915–2001) was an astronomer, cosmologist, and science fiction author. He was best known for championing the (now more or less defunct) Steady State theory of cosmology and, ironically, for coining the name of a rival theory, the "Big Bang", now the most widely accepted.

Hoyle was born on June 24, 1915 in Bingley, Yorkshire, England, and attended Bingley Grammar School. He was the son of Ben and Mabel (Pickard) Hoyle. He read mathematics at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and then went on to teach the subject at the university. Later he moved to the United States of America to become a professor of astronomy and philosophy at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

He coined the phrase "big bang" as a way of ridiculing the alternative theory (which, however, is now widely accepted).