After the Velvet Revolution, he returned to Charles University, joining the Department of Philosophy and History of Science at the Faculty of Science. Key Intellectual Contributions
Between 1967 and 1970, he worked at the Laboratorio Internazionale di Genetica e Biofisica in Naples, where he made notable contributions to the field of genetics.
He often critiqued purely mechanistic or information-based approaches to biology, seeking instead to understand the specificity of biological knowledge through analogies and alternative frameworks.
He graduated from Charles University in Prague with degrees in microbiology, biology, and chemistry (1965) and later in philosophy (1971).
He was awarded the by the Dagmar and Václav Havel Foundation and the Tom Stoppard Prize for his influential essays.
Neubauer was a close friend of the playwright and president Václav Havel . Havel famously requested Neubauer to write a discourse as a companion to his Letters to Olga . Major Works
Neubauer developed a concept known as "eidetic biology" (from the Greek eidos , meaning form). This theory views biological forms not as mere mechanical outcomes, but as "archetypes" or "fields of possibilities". He argued that biology should celebrate the morphological transformations and individual singularity of life forms.
(1942–2016) was a prominent Czech philosopher and biologist renowned for his interdisciplinary work bridging the natural sciences and the humanities. His career was defined by a unique synthesis of microbiology, genetics, and epistemology, often challenging the dominant mechanistic paradigms of modern science. Academic and Professional Background