Adam Bly

Adam Bly

Founder & Editor-in-Chief, Seed Magazine

Adam Bly is the founder and editor-in-chief of Seed Magazine and the Chairman/CEO of Seed Media Group. Seed is a bi-monthly science magazine based out of New York and is distributed internationally. The magazine looks at issues located at the intersection of science and society. In 2007, Seed was nominated for two National Magazine Awards.

At 16, Bly was the youngest researcher at the National Research Council of Cancer, where he spent three years studying cell adhesion and cancer. Bly has received many international prizes, including being selected as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2007, and has also received the Jubilee Medal. Bly lives in New York City.

4mins
Today’s generation of scientists need to think laterally, not just vertically.
2mins
Adam Bly would like ask President Bush how he made decisions.
How do you deal with the unknown?
5mins
Bly looks forward to more mapping, more cross-fertilization among the scientific disciplines.
4mins
Bly discusses how science shapes even our ideas and images of the world.
6mins
Fighting a new kind of war and watching China’s rise are prominent issues to Adam Bly.
5mins
Adam Bly talks about his life experience with faith.
4mins
It doesn’t explain everything, but it’s a pretty good start, Bly says.
An absolute truth does not resonate with Adam Bly.
5mins
There’s a war on science in America, Bly says.
3mins
Adam Bly mentions Clinton and Gingrich among others.
10mins
“Being able to understand science is to create metaphors,” says Bly, founder of SEED magazine. “Our metaphors become profoundly more rich when scientists interact with artists and engage the arts […]
6mins
Bly connects Sputnik mania to today’s renaissance in scientific literacy.
4mins
You don’t need to know all the facts, Bly says.
4mins
Our interest in science doesn’t match our understanding of it, Bly says.
3mins
Bly grew up in a city that stressed multi-culturalism.
3mins
Bly was a “total science fair nerd” growing up.
2mins
Adam Bly makes science relevant to everyday life.