• Home
  • About
  • Writing
    • Articles
    • Blog
    • Download the Universe
    • Newsletter
  • Books
    • Airborne
    • The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2023
    • Life’s Edge: The Search for What It Means to Be Alive
    • She Has Her Mother’s Laugh
    • A Planet of Viruses
    • Evolution: Making Sense of Life
    • The Tangled Bank
    • Science Ink
    • Parasite Rex
    • Brain Cuttings
    • microcosm
    • The Descent of Man
    • Evolution: The Triumph of an Idea
    • Soul Made Flesh
    • At the Water’s Edge
    • Smithsonian Intimate Guide to Human Origins
  • Podcasts
    • The Future of Aging
    • What is Life?
  • Talks
    • Upcoming Talks
    • Past Talks
  • To Beginning Writers
  • To Teachers
  • Social Media
  • Contact

Carl Zimmer

Author: Matt Kristoffersen

The 2009 John Wesley Powell Memorial Lecture: “What Is Life?”

Posted on March 7, 2009June 27, 2021 by Matt Kristoffersen

I’m honored to report that I’ve been asked to deliver this year’s John Wesley Powell Memorial Lecture. Here is a description of the lecture series from its organizers, the Southwestern and Rocky Mountain Division of the American Association for the Advancement of Science:

Continue reading “The 2009 John Wesley Powell Memorial Lecture: “What Is Life?”” →

Posted in Blog

Fast-mutating viroids hold clues to early life

Posted on March 6, 2009June 27, 2021 by Matt Kristoffersen

Science Magazine, March 6, 2009

Link

If your chrysanthemums look stunted and ugly, take comfort. They’re infected with a parasite that may tell us a lot about how life began.

Continue reading “Fast-mutating viroids hold clues to early life” →

Posted in Articles

Sickly Flowers, Error Thresholds, And the Dawn of Life

Posted on March 6, 2009June 27, 2021 by Matt Kristoffersen

This chrysanthemum leaf is infected with naked bits of genetic material known as viroids. Over at Origins, Science‘s blog, I take a look at new research that suggests these extraordinary little pests may have a lot in common with the earliest life on Earth. Check it out.

Image: APSNet

Originally published March 6, 2009. Copyright 2009 Carl Zimmer.

Posted in Blog

Checking George Will: The Perils of Time Travel

Posted on March 4, 2009June 27, 2021 by Matt Kristoffersen

While I was blogging over the past few weeks about fact-checking George Will’s dismissal of global warming (collected here), I got comments. A lot of them. A fair number of commenters claimed George Will was right, and presented evidence that they claimed supported him. Some tried to back their claims with news that came out after Will’s column was published. For example, a few days after his column came out, there were reports that the a satellite that measure ice cover had some trouble and was fixed. But George Will could not jump forward in time, check out the satellites, and then leap back to write his column. There’s no way that it could have any bearing on fact-checking his piece. What’s more, even if Will did know about them, he’d still be wrong, as I explained here.

Continue reading “Checking George Will: The Perils of Time Travel” →

Posted in Blog

Talking About the Brain: Thursday March 12 in Santa Barbara

Posted on March 4, 2009June 27, 2021 by Matt Kristoffersen

If you live in or around Santa Barbara, California, I’d like to invite you to a talk I’ll be giving at the Sage Center for the Study of Mind. It’s called, “Soul Made Flesh: Neuroscience in 1659 and 2009.” I’ll be talking about how the whole science of the brain was launched by alchemists, mystics, and other rogue natural philosophers during the English Civil War, and draw a few lessons for understanding the brain and mind in an age of fMRI scans, brain-machine interfaces, and other remarkable developments. I’ll be drawing on my book, Soul Made Flesh, as well as on my recent columns, articles, and blog posts on the brain. The talk (which is free) will be on Thursday, March 12, from 4 to 6 pm at Mosher Alumni House Alumni Hall, (2nd floor) on the campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara. Here’s the Sage lecture page.

Originally published March 4, 2009. Copyright 2009 Carl Zimmer.

Posted in Blog

Posts navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →
Carl Zimmer has been writing about science since 1990. Here you can read articles he's written for The New York Times, National Geographic, and other publications. In 2004, Zimmer launched "The Loom," a blog about science that has been hosted over the years by Discover and National Geographic. You can read these posts here. Zimmer also writes an email newsletter called "Friday's Elk." You can read past issues here, and can subscribe to receive new ones here. If you are searching for a particular topic, you can use the search bar below.

Article Archive

Special Thanks