The shocking truth about scientific utopias

Scientists hate science. Or so it seemed when we read the judges’ comments and the winning stories in the EU-LIFE/Nature essay competition, which had been intended to encourage scientists to write speculative fiction about their ideal future—a scientific utopia. When the submissions flooded in, the judges were alarmed by what they received: What we [had]…

Read More

“LGBTIQ+N” sci-fi short story published

Speculative fiction penned by scientists is rare, but perhaps it shouldn’t be. Recently we workshopped an unusual form of scientific commentary: a one-page sci-fi tale by microbiologist and NeuWrite Nordic advisory board member Howy Jacobs of Tampere University (pictured) that confronted the frightening ethical and political implications of human genetic engineering. This month, Jacobs’ story…

Read More

Using dramatic stories to teach

How to get readers interested in the nuances of complex debates over climate policy? Yawn. Unless, maybe, you start your story like this: A typhoon has hit Manila during a UN climate summit, and world leaders are stuck in the basement of a Manila hotel. The American president has a psychological meltdown after a tree…

Read More

Writing for kids makes us better science writers for adults

One of the senior scientists in our workshop group recently found himself in the impromptu situation of sitting down for a video interview about his complex research on mitochondrial diseases—but the interviewer was a child. The episode reminded us of the famous WIRED magazine video series “5 Levels”, in which “an expert scientist explains a…

Read More

Medically and genetically engineered dystopias

Science fiction is an especially creative kind of science writing, one that can show us the present in imaginative and emotionally charged ways while also anticipating possible futures. Amidst hopeful talk of scientific and technological progress, science fiction can also reveal injustices, risks, and dystopian futures to correct or avoid. On the other hand, some…

Read More

“Humour Me Some Math!” published

At our February meeting we warmed up the dark Nordic winter with a workshop on ways to tap into humor to communicate about science. For good measure we made it as difficult as possible, by choosing what you might think would be one of the intuitively least-funny fields of endeavor: mathematics. Yet lo and behold, …

Read More

Should scientists express opinions? If so, how?

Among the top 100 most-influential scientists on Twitter—according to an early and somewhat controversial survey by Science way back in 2014—was Trish Greenhalgh (pictured). Today Greenhalgh is at Oxford, where she directs interdisciplinary research at the crossroads of social sciences and medicine. Since those early days of social media, when “sci-comm”—science communication—was exploding across Twitter…

Read More

Fighter moms support vital research into mitochondrial diseases

Describing science through simple stories and metaphors helped Brendan Battersby, a University of Helsinki research director in mitochondrial biology, connect with the parents of a child with Leigh Syndrome, which led to a new collaboration on research funding. The family felt that Brendan was the first medical expert who’d explained their child’s disease to them…

Read More