Tuesday, February 7, 2017
Book Trailer for Storm in A Teacup
Monday, March 16, 2015
New Event-- Bill Nye the Science Guy!

Reading — 5:00 p.m., SEFCU Arena
For FREE tickets, see below
Bill Nye “The Science Guy,” celebrated public television personality, is a pioneer in the field of science education and a leading defender of science in the public arena. His television series, Bill Nye the Science Guy, ran on PBS stations nationwide from 1993 to 1998, and continues to be widely distributed in syndication. Exactly 100 episodes addressed topics as diverse as garbage and music, comets and caves, and chemistry and communication. The show received 18 Emmy Awards, with Nye himself taking seven for his various roles as writer, performer and producer. Nye is the author of the new book, Undeniable: Evolution and the Science of Creation (November, 2014), edited by Corey S. Powell. A wide-ranging presentation of the evidence that supports the theory of evolution, the new book grew out of a much-publicized debate between Nye and leading Creationist Ken Ham at the Creation Museum in Petersburg Kentucky in February 2014. Narrated with Nye’s trademark clarity, simplicity, enthusiasm and sense of fun, Undeniable demonstrates how organisms evolved and continue to evolve, with examples drawn from agriculture, dog breeding, human courtship, and the fossil record.
Thursday, March 20, 2014
David Sloan Wilson addresses Albany theologians
David Sloan Wilson, evolutionary biologist who participated in our "God vs. Science" debate in April 2007 with Pulitzer winning science journalist Natalie Angier, will speak at the Capital Region Theological Center, April 25 and 26, 2014.
More about the upcoming event: http://crtc.org/civicrm/event/info?id=478&reset=1
More about God vs. Science in 2007: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/angier_n_wilson.html
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Stories About Women in Science
Janet Maslin reviews Andrea Barrett's Archangel, a new collection of short pieces of historical fiction about the struggles of women scientists.
"This is a book full of strong women..... [Barrett's] stories work as both fiction and as philosophy of science. And she need do no grandstanding to advance her belief in unstoppable progress. But this book does offer a powerfully human sense of the struggle it takes for new ideas to dislodge old ones.
Barrett visited the Writers Institute in 2007: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/barrett.html
Friday, June 7, 2013
2 Nobel Prize-winners Discuss Origins of Life at UAlbany
Jack Szostak from Harvard University and Ada Yonath from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, will speak on June 12 at 8 p.m. in Lecture Center 18.
The lectures are open to the public!
Szostak is the co-editor of the book, The Origins of Life (2010).
The 18th Conversation is sponsored by the University’s departments of Chemistry and Biological Sciences and the U.S. National Institutes of Health, which has funded the Conversation since 1981.
For more information, email Dr.Ramaswamy Sarma at rhs07@albany.edu. Read More......
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Director of Sci Journalism Program at Columbia Visits Today

Marguerite Holloway has been teaching at the Journalism School since 1997. She won a Presidential Teaching Award in 2009 and the Distinguished Teacher of the Year award in 2001. Holloway has been a long-time contributor to Scientific American, where she has covered many topics, particularly environmental issues, public health, neuroscience and women in science.
Holloway has a B.A. in comparative literature from Brown University and an M.S. from the Journalism School (class of 1988). Before she joined Scientific American in 1990, she worked as a reporter for the Medical Tribune and freelanced for publications including The Village Voice and Mother Jones. Her work has appeared in many other magazines and newspapers, among them Discover, The New York Times, Natural History and Wired. Her book, The Measure of Manhattan, has just been published by W.W. Norton.
More on her visit: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/vws.html#holloway Read More......
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Disorderly Story of the Orderly NYC Street Grid
Marguerite Holloway, who will give a slide show presentation at the State Museum on Thursday, is the author of the new book, The Measure of Manhattan: The Tumultuous Career and Surprising Legacy of John Randel Jr.
Here's an excerpt from a review in Slate:
"Randel, who was born in Albany in 1787, grew up during “a surveying boom,” when a large portion of prominent American males—Washington, Jefferson, Adams, and later, Lincoln—served in the profession at some point. “His was the era of laying lines on the land,” Holloway declares. It was “a culture and a period in which reason and measured action were prized and dominion over the natural world—through exploration, experiment, science, cartography, and infrastructure—was celebrated.” Beginning in about 1804, Randel was hired to assist New York State surveyor-general Simeon Dewitt in his plan to grid upstate New York. Dewitt was influenced by the earlier plan to grid the entire United States, outlined in the 1785 “Ordinance for Ascertaining the Mode of Disposing of Lands in the Western Territory”—the reason why flyover country looks like a waffle iron."
Read more in Slate.
Read about Holloway's visit:
http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/holloway_marguerite13.html
Monday, April 8, 2013
Marguerite Holloway Interviewed in the TU
Marguerite Holloway, who visits us on Thursday, is interviewed in the Times Union about her new book on Albany native and mad genius of the 19th century, John Randel, Jr. The book's title is The Measure of Manhattan.
"Randel's a window into an incredible era in American history.... He's also a fascinating character. He has this precise and careful mathematic rigor, but he's also mercurial and passionate, even irrational — getting involved in all sorts of lawsuits and losing tons of money."
Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/living/article/Manhattan-matrix-4410267.php#ixzz2PtXy0OcF
More about her visit this coming Thursday: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/holloway_marguerite13.html
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Jorgen Randers in New Film
Jorgen Randers, who visits UAlbany tonight, stars in a new documentary about the impending collapse of the Earth's ability to sustain human life, The Last Call.
View a trailer of the film: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzUKVqD-xKs
Visit the film's website: http://www.lastcallthefilm.org/en/synopsis
Find out more about Randers' visit today to UAlbany: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/randers_jorgen13.html Read More......
Will Humanity Survive? Maybe Not.
The following is a summary of the report, which appears on The Club of Rome's website:
In the Report author Jorgen Randers raises essential questions: How many people will the planet be able to support? Will the belief in endless growth crumble? Will runaway climate change take hold? Where will quality of life improve, and where will it decline? Using painstaking research, and drawing on contributions from more than 30 thinkers in the field, he concludes that....
Read more: http://www.clubofrome.org/?p=4211
More about Rander's visit: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/randers_jorgen13.html
Friday, January 11, 2013
Writers Institute Announces Spring 2013 Series
Monday, August 6, 2012
On Garrison Keillor's Writers Almanac Today....
"Charles Fort was born [August 6, 1874] into a fairly prosperous family of Dutch immigrants who owned a wholesale grocery business in Albany, New York State. He was the eldest of three brothers - the others being Clarence, and the youngest, Raymond. Their mother died within a few years of Clarence's birth and Fort's father married again during Fort's teens."
"Beatings by his tyrannical father helped set him against authority and dogma, as he declares in the remaining fragments of his autobiography Many Parts. Escaping home at the age of 18, he worked as a reporter in New York City before hitch-hiking through Europe "to put some capital into the bank of experience." In 1896, aged 22, he contracted malaria in South Africa and returned to New York where he married Anna Filan (or Filing), an English servant girl in his father's house."
More: http://www.forteana.org/html/fortbiog.html#hermit
Garrison Keillor visited the Writers Institute (the largest crowd we have been privileged to host) in September 2003: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/keillor_garrison.html Read More......
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Your Brain on Fiction
The New York Times has an interesting op-ed piece by Annie Murphy Paul about the neurological experience of reading fiction:
"The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated. Keith Oatley, an emeritus professor of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto (and a published novelist), has proposed that reading produces a vivid simulation of reality, one that “runs on minds of readers just as computer simulations run on computers.” Fiction — with its redolent details, imaginative metaphors and attentive descriptions of people and their actions — offers an especially rich replica. Indeed, in one respect novels go beyond simulating reality to give readers an experience unavailable off the page: the opportunity to enter fully into other people’s thoughts and feelings." More.
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Eric Kandel on Erasing Memories
Nobel Prize-winning neurobiologist Eric Kandel, who visited the Writers Institute in 2006, is featured in a New York Times interview today.
He talks, among other things, about his childhood in Nazi-occupied Vienna and about the prospect for using new developments in neuroscience to erase unpleasant memories:
"I have no difficulty about enhancing memory. Removing memory is more complicated. If it’s to reduce the impact of a particular trauma, I have no difficulty with that, but there are other ways to deal with it — cognitive behavior therapy, exposure therapy, drugs. To go into your head and pluck out a memory of an unfortunate love experience, that’s a bad idea. You know, in the end, we are who we are. We’re all part of what we’ve experienced. Would I have liked to have had the Viennese experience removed from me? No! And it was horrible. But it shapes you."
More.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Seth Mnookin: The Importance of Wasting Time
Seth Mnookin, who visited in March of 2011, interviews Pulitzer-winning science journalist Amy Harmon about the challenges of writing long journalistic pieces.
The blog interview is titled, "Long-form narratives, crappy first drafts, and the importance of wasting time."
HARMON: There are different types of long-form narratives, so maybe it’s worth explaining first that I tend to do what are sometimes called “story narratives.’’ They have a plot and they are told through scenes and dialogue. They also have an argument, or at least a point, embedded in them, but it is often not explicitly stated, or perhaps only stated briefly in two or three “nut graphs” near the top. Like in a novel or a movie, the payoff comes at the end, so you need to make readers care about what happens to these characters, and if you can’t, you’re kind of screwed, because you then you have nothing.
These are different from explanatory narratives, which weave a story together with direct commentary by the reporter and/or experts the reporter has talked to; or essays, where you strive for a provocative argument; or profiles, where the point is to provide insight into an individual at a particular moment; or investigations. More.
Friday, February 17, 2012
The Mind of God
Physicist and bestselling author Michio Kaku, who visits the Writers Institute Tuesday 2/21, is at work on a "theory of everything" as proposed by Einstein.
Kaku approaches the issue via string theory, to which he is a major contributor:
"Chemistry is nothing but the melodies you can play on vibrating strings, and the mind of God, the mind of God that Einstein worked on for the last 30 years of his life, the mind of God would be cosmic music. Cosmic music resonating through 11 dimensional hyperspace. You see, our universe is a symphony. It's a symphony of vibrating strings and possibly membranes, but when it was born, it was born as a perfect entity in 11 dimensional hyperspace. That may eventually give us 'a theory of everything.'"
"So, people come up to me and say, 'Professor, if this is a theory of everything, what's in it for me? What's in it for numero uno? Why should I care?' Well, let me tell you why you should care about a theory of everything." More.
The War on Science
Physicist and media star Michio Kaku, who visits this coming Tuesday 2/21, talks about the new war on science by scientifically illiterate politicians and their constituencies, and the obligation of scientists to speak out persuasively in favor of their fields.
The new 3-minute Big Think video is entitled "How Physics Got Fat (And Why We Need to Sing For Our Supper)."
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Build Your Own Lightsaber!
Michio Kaku, who comes to Albany on 2/21, offers some practical advice on how to build a light saber in a video that appeared in 2010 on the Science Channel.
The video is based on Kaku's 2008 book, Physics of the Impossible.
Kaku will speak about the sequel to that book, Physics of the Future (2011), in the Campus Center Ballroom.
Monday, February 13, 2012
A Trillion Frames Per Second
MIT researchers have invented a camera that can take pictures at the rate of a trillion exposures per second.
In his latest video on Big Think, Michio Kaku, who visits on 2/21, explores the implications of this new technology.
See the video.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Science Writing Workshop Open to Applicants
Dear Readers, Writers, Teachers, Students and All Members of the General Public,
We encourage you to apply for the following FREE workshop. Writing samples need not be science writing (nonfiction in any category is acceptable).
Writing About Science and Technology
Nonfiction Workshop Offered by Writers Institute Fellow James Lasdun
New York State Writers Institute Fellow James Lasdun will conduct a nonfiction workshop during the spring 2012 semester that will focus on writing about science and technology. Advances in science and technology have enormous impacts on our lives. The need to understand them is more urgent than ever and yet how can these often highly esoteric matters be made comprehensible to the general public?
The workshop is scheduled for eight Monday nights (March 19, 26, April 9, 16, 23, 30, May 7, 14) from 6 to 9 p.m. The class will take place on the University at Albany’s uptown campus. This workshop is offered for non-credit, free of charge for non-University students.
Manuscripts delivered in person will be accepted up until 1:00 p.m. on Wednesday, February 22, 2012. Mailed manuscripts must be postmarked no later than Friday, February 17, 2012. No faxes or e-mails.
For more information, click here.