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Newsletter 01, September 3,
2001 'Simon's
Radio 4 series The Serendipity of Science starts this
week'
Having
had a website for over a year, I have at last decided to start
emailing the people on my www.simonsingh.com mailing list.
This will be the first of a regular newsletter covering my
latest projects, and I suspect that I will probably send out
about 8 emails per year.
The reason for this particular newsletter
is my new 3-part radio series, The
Serendipity of Science, which starts on Wednesday 5 September
at 9pm on Radio 4. The series reveals how sheer luck has influenced
the course of science, from the microwave oven to the Big
Bang, from mysterious sprites to gut bacteria.
The word 'serendipity', invented by
Horace Walpole, means the chance discovery of things that were
not being sought. Discoveries resulting from serendipity
clearly involve luck, but they also require sagacity. As Louis
Pasteur (a beneficiary of serendipity) once said, "chance
favours only the prepared mind."
If you do not live in the UK and
cannot pick up Radio 4 (arguably the finest facet of the BBC),
then you can still catch the series by visiting the BBC
website at 9pm British Summer Time, (e.g., 4pm New York
Time or 10pm Paris Time). The series has its own special BBC site, where there are some
clips, along with an article by me about
serendipity.
To give you a flavour of future
newsletters, announcements over the next six months should
include a teenage edition of The Code Book, a cryptography
CD-ROM, an interactive crypto section at www.simonsingh.com, a
radio series about numbers (which is more interesting than it
sounds) and a TV debate that I am hosting about artificial
intelligence.
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