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Philip Ball

www.philipball.co.uk
22 Followers
community-curated profile

Author, writer and broadcaster, mostly about science. Books include The Music Instinct, Curiosity, Critical Mass, and the latest: The Modern Myths (2021).

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Philip Ball @philipcball · May 8, 2023
  • From Twitter

Two interesting books in the post. First, this fascinating study by @simon_schama, focusing on the little-known pioneer of vaccination Waldemar Haffkine and his work combating cholera and bubonic plague in late 19th C India.

Book Feb 19, 2023
Foreign Bodies: Pandemics, Vaccines, and the Health of Nations
by Simon Schama
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Philip Ball @philipcball · May 8, 2023
  • From Twitter

Second, this intriguing short volume from physics Nobel laureate Giorgio Parisi, which will hopefully go some way to explaining what he got his Nobel for - which was greeted with some head-scratching at the time.

Book Nov 16, 2021
In a Flight of Starlings: The Wonder of Complex Systems
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Apr 19, 2023
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Realising that we typically give a misleadingly confident (& wrong) "this is how it happens" about not only quantum speed-up but quantum computing generally was one of my motivations for writing Beyond Weird. Scott's article here from 2021 is one of the best explanations of why.

Article Jun 8, 2021
What Makes Quantum Computing So Hard to Explain?
by Scott Aaronson
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Apr 17, 2023
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I was prompted here by reading this excellent paper by @MelMitchell1 & David Krakauer - & now find this in it: "can [LLMs'] unimaginably large systems of statistical correlations produce abilities that are functionally equivalent to human understanding?"

Paper Feb 10, 2023
The Debate Over Understanding in AI's Large Language Models
by Melanie Mitchell
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Apr 5, 2023
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This is an important book, believe me.

Book Jan 3, 2023
Free Agents: How Evolution Gave Us Free Will
by Kevin Mitchell
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Apr 3, 2023
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Interesting article on path integrals and their use in quantum field theory and general relativity. Worth perhaps remembering Feynman's own injunction not to confuse the mathematics for the physics.

Article Mar 3, 2023
How Our Reality May Be a Sum of All Possible Realities
by Charlie Wood
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Mar 31, 2023
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Very interesting story about the origins of eukaryotic introns. One issue that rarely gets attention is how alternative splicing is even possible: how can a protein with rearranged chunks still be functional at all? It seems at least part of the answer...

Article Mar 30, 2023
How a DNA ‘Parasite’ May Have Fragmented Our Genes
by Jake Buehler
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Mar 31, 2023
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This book is great - this is maths *everyone* needs to know.

Book 2023
How to Expect the Unexpected: The Science of Making Predictions―and the Art of Knowing When Not To
by Kit Yates
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Mar 30, 2023
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I really enjoyed this piece - lots to think about and argue with. I particularly like the suggestion that a review should not be a synopsis of the book plus a judgement, but uses the book as a launchpad for continuing the conversation.

Article Mar 14, 2023
Who is criticism for?
by Lola Seaton
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Philip Ball @philipcball · Mar 30, 2023
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Planck was indeed a tragic case - Heilbron's book is excellent on that. But one could reasonably question whether his oppositional stance amounted to much. He was an old-school conservative, confused and perplexed by how the state itself could become illegitimate and immoral.

Book Nov 6, 2014
Schuman's Warning of the Nazi Destruction of the Jews
by David Heilbron Price
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