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Robyn Arianrhod

Robyn Arianrhod

Robyn Arianrhod is an Affiliate in Monash’s School of Mathematics. Her forthcoming book in 2024 is Vector: A surprising story of space, time, and mathematical transformation.

Robyn Arianrhod reviews ‘Nexus: A brief history of information networks from the Stone Age to AI’ by Yuval Noah Harari

November 2024, no. 470 24 October 2024
A book connecting Artificial Intelligence with storytelling around a Stone Age campfire certainly piqued my interest, especially given the stratospheric success of its author’s earlier works. Indeed, historian Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens (2011) was so successful that in 2019 he and his husband, Itzik Yahav, cofounded ‘Sapienship’, an initiative advocating on global challenges through foc ... (read more)

‘Beyond the mundane: Popular science writing in our literary landscape’ by Robyn Arianrhod

August 2024, no. 467 23 July 2024
After Netflix’s intriguing sci-fi thriller 3 Body Problem streamed into Australia earlier this year, readers rushed out in droves to buy the book on which the series is based: Liu Cixin’s The Three-Body Problem (2008), which was first translated into English in 2014. Most reviews have focused on the philosophical, literary, and cultural aspects of the book – and they are, indeed, fascinating ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews ‘Quantum Drama: From the Bohr-Einstein debate to the riddle of entanglement’ by Jim Baggott and John L. Heilbron

May 2024, no. 464 22 April 2024
Let’s face it, quantum mechanics mystifies most of us. But as Quantum Drama shows, it baffled its creators, too – so much so that some of them turned to suicide, drink, or psychiatry (Carl Jung was a favourite). Who wouldn’t go crazy, trying to get their head around such bizarre happenings as subatomic particles sometimes being wave-like, and a theory that cannot tell you the particle’s de ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews ‘Our Moon: A human history’ by Rebecca Boyle

April 2024, no. 463 25 March 2024
During a recent lunar eclipse, I marvelled as Earth’s shadow nibbled away the Moon’s light. This creeping shadow testified to the awesome movement of the celestial spheres, Earth inching along its trajectory around the Sun while the Moon fell around Earth until, on this special night, all three bodies were closely aligned in the same plane: Sun, Earth, Moon. A related alignment occurs each mon ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod ‘The Best Australian Science Writing 2023’ edited by Donna Lu

January-February 2024, no. 461 18 December 2023
The Best Australian Science Writing (BASW) anthology is here again, and readers are in for a treat: a wide-ranging selection of easy-to-read articles describing some of the amazing science that is happening right now. Of course, it is an impossible task, choosing the ‘best’ writing, and in her introduction editor Donna Lu acknowledges her subjectivity. It is the same for a reviewer, and since ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews 'Here Be Monsters: Is technology reducing our humanity?' by Richard King

August 2023, no. 456 25 July 2023
Back in the day, I was wary about making a career in science. It wasn’t just the lack of women; it was also a sense of moving into alien territory. After all, I had absorbed feminist critiques suggesting that modern science had been shaped by (male) scientists’ urge to ‘penetrate’ nature by reducing it to its parts – an urge that had blinded them to the power of the whole. And I was all ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews 'What’s Eating the Universe? And other cosmic questions' by Paul Davies

March 2022, no. 440 22 February 2022
Paul Davies, the British physicist who brightened up the Australian science scene when he was a professor at the University of Adelaide in the 1990s, is currently director of the Beyond Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science at Arizona State University. Beyond describes itself as ‘a pioneering center devoted to confronting the really big questions of science and philosophy’. It also aims t ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews 'The Art of More: How mathematics created civilisation' by Michael Brooks

October 2021, no. 436 28 September 2021
Were you one of those reluctant mathematics students who complained, ‘What’s the point of all this?’ If so, rest assured: Michael Brooks has made a compelling case for the role mathematics has played in making ‘civilisation’ possible. If you still need convincing, he also discusses research suggesting that doing maths is good for your brain. ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews 'Helgoland' by Carlo Rovelli, translated by Erica Segre and Simon Carnell

September 2021, no. 435 23 August 2021
Theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli has a gift for writing short, conversational, popular physics books. His earlier works, notably Seven Brief Lessons in Physics (2015) and The Order of Time (2018), have been bestsellers, and Helgoland is continuing the trend. Helgoland is a barren island in the North Sea, where the twenty-three-year-old Werner Heisenberg found inspiration in his quest for the m ... (read more)

Robyn Arianrhod reviews 'The Knowledge Machine: How an unreasonable idea created modern science' by Michael Strevens

April 2021, no. 430 23 March 2021
If you have ever wondered about the imaginative, wondrous side of science – for instance, how Einstein used maths to predict the existence of gravitational waves, or how a metaphor led to the astonishing discovery that the spinning earth drags space-time around it like molasses around a spoon, this is not the book for you. But if you want to know why scientists had the patience to keep refining ... (read more)
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