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Marcelo Gleiser
Theoretical Physicist
Marcelo Gleiser is a professor of natural philosophy, physics, and astronomy at Dartmouth College. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, a recipient of the Presidential Faculty Fellows Award from the White House and NSF, and was awarded the 2019 Templeton Prize. Gleiser has authored five books and is the co-founder of 13.8, where he writes about science and culture with physicist Adam Frank.
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The beauty of this magical medicine called silence is that it is available to all of us, even in cities, if only we care to listen.
The mediocrity principle is often used to make claims about the abundance of life across the universe, but these claims are likely unfounded.
Ultrarunning is a celebration of living and a rehearsal of dying all rolled up in a single intense experience.
The Copernican principle states that Earth is an ordinary planet, but that does not mean that life is ordinary in the universe.
This short story is a fictional account of two very real people — Anaximander and Anaximenes, two ancient Greeks who tried to make sense of the universe.