Lately I've aimed to commission scientists to write about the open questions & uncertainties in their field. This essay on 'little red dots' by astrophysicist Jenny Greene is an example. If you're a scientist who'd like to communicate your own work, get in touch #SciComm🧪 aeon.co/essays/why-l...
Posts by Richard Fisher
Female and Jewish in a country and era that did not allow such bodies to exist, the mathematical world offered Emmy Noether an escape from the physical. Her influential theorems on the timelessness of the laws of physics reflect her yearning for the unbound
On mathematical beauty - by @ritaahmadi.bsky.social aeon.co/essays/how-s...
‘A historical view of our relationship with orcas reveals that they have often served as a Rorschach test for humanity’s conflicted attitudes toward the sea.’ This Essay by environmental historian Jason Colby explores how our understanding of orcas has shifted over the last century
Thanks for sharing Caspar
In an early draft, Jason speculated that now would be a timely moment to (re)make a movie about a revenge-seeking orca. To our great surprise, we learnt somebody already has, and it's just come out
The long-term relationship between people and orcas, from killers to sea pandas to avengers - an excellent essay from historian Jason Colby that was a pleasure to work on aeon.co/essays/orcas...
Thank you, that's nice to hear - Elay put a LOT of hours into explaining it
I don't know if that was generally incredibly well-written, or if I just think so because it had exactly the level of technical detail I required to stick with the thread, but damn that was an interesting read.
Philosopher @elayshech.bsky.social explains the mind-bending reality of a third class of 2D particles called 'anyons' - using baseballs, holes, loops, and a coffee cup that's topologically equivalent to a doughnut
aeon.co/essays/anyon...
The life and work of Satyendra Nath Bose - who lent his name to bosons, collaborated with Einstein, and shaped quantum mechanics aeon.co/essays/why-s...
If you missed this before Christmas, this @aeon.co piece by
@karenlloyd.bsky.social is terrific. I really enjoyed working on it. (+ thanks to my colleague Sam Dresser for the inspired headline: 'Long live the aeonophiles!') aeon.co/essays/the-d...
This was the most read piece on Psyche in Nov/Dec and I can't get enough of the picture psyche.co/guides/how-t...
They're not "waiting to return to the surface," they're waiting for the planet to be blasted into pebbles to that they can reach another star-system #panspermia #intraterrestrials #aeonophiles
aeon.co/essays/the-discovery-of-...
The discovery of organisms that have been alive for many thousands of years requires a revolution in how we understand life. An Essay by @karenlloyd.bsky.social
When you need to complete a complex task, imagine daubing paint on a canvas rather than perfecting intricate brushwork. A Note to Self by @richardfisher.bsky.social
As an editor for @aeon.co, commissioning an essay about ultra-long-lived organisms called *aeonophiles* was a no-brainer. I loved working on this. Biologist @karenlloyd.bsky.social's research is deeply fascinating... + check out her brilliant book Intraterrestrials! aeon.co/essays/the-d...
Nice to see The Guardian Long Reads republished our @aeon.co essay about the missing knowledge/languages inside AI models www.theguardian.com/news/2025/no...
In the spirit of sharing good writing, here's a fab piece by @richardfisher.bsky.social about the glacier that inspired a key scene in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein - and the fact that it is now disappearing because of climate change.
share.google/oDSLK0gKOppk...
"Unlike many glacier retreats around the world... the Mer de Glace is unusual because its changes have been captured in painting, photography and literature. By comparing [these] across the years, it's possible to see how this once-stunning sea of ice has transformed."
I wrote this for the BBC about the glacier that inspired Mary Shelley - and many other writers and artists. It has retreated by a staggering amount since the 1800s www.bbc.co.uk/future/artic...
Thank you, it's a terrific image (I am the writer)! I really liked how you based it on the actual view from Montenvers. I initially thought it was a frontispiece-style image from the 1800s - timeless!
Many thanks to @richardfisher.bsky.social for this lovely article on my #urbangeology rambles! www.bbc.co.uk/future/artic...
This was a lot of fun to write for the BBC - the joys of 'urban geology': fossil-hunting and more in the buildings of central London with @pavementgeology.bsky.social. She even showed me a possible dinosaur bone! #urbangeology www.bbc.com/future/artic...
Highly recommend this whole article!