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John D Barrow

John D. Barrow

Better Than a Thousand Words
Wednesday, February 8, 2012 at 6PM
Theater

Physicist John D. Barrow discussed the “observer effects” principle and the impact of images on the development of science throughout history. From the first graphs and illustrated books to MolScript; from the first pictures of spiral galaxies in Van Gogh’s The Starry Night to the Hubble Space Telescope; and from the atomic bomb’s mushroom cloud to the intricacy of fractals, he examined the past influence of pictures in science and the growing influence of visual expression today. 

Barrow is a cosmologist who studies the early history of the universe, the mathematical structure of cosmological models, and ways in which astronomy and cosmology can be used to test aspects of fundamental physics. He is a professor of mathematical sciences at Cambridge University. He is also the director of the Millennium Mathematics Project, an initiative to improve the understanding and appreciation of mathematics and its applications.

Observer Effects offered a dialogue between the fields of art and science. The title was derived from the principle in physics that the act of observation transforms the observed, an idea that has been influential in philosophy, aesthetics, psychology, and politics.

Main Image: John Barrow in the theater during his 2012 talk at EMPAC. Photo: EMPAC/Rensselaer.

Dates + Tickets

Talk
John D. Barrow
Better Than a Thousand Words
Wednesday 8
6:00 PM
February 2012
As part of
Event Type
Discipline
Science
Visual Art

Season

Curator