Mrs Polly Mer and I are pretty excited to hear that
Margaret Wertheim is presenting the 2013 Templeton Lecture at Sydney University
on Monday the 18th of March.
The title of Margaret’s talk, ‘We are all polyps now: a
meditation on art, science and collectivity in the age of global warming’,
gives you an idea of the breadth of her work as a science writer and exhibition
curator.
One piece of work Margaret is perhaps most well known for
is the Crochet Coral Reef project. This involves getting people involved in crocheting pieces that mimic coral as a way of addressing global warming – a hands-on
informal fashion of collective engagement. We love to practice this ourselves in our
underwater home.
As we amphibious water-loving ones well know, coral reefs are fragile
ecosystems. Small increases in sea temperature, murky run-off from the land,
violent storms or cyclones and the flippers of snorkeling humans reaching for a
foot-hold can cause irreparable damage to the coral polyps that make up the reefs.
Like a single nerve cell in the amphibian brain, each coral
polyp is insignificant on its own. Yet when networked these minute creatures collectively
produce structures like the Great Barrier Reef – like networked nerve cells creating consciousness in a brain.
Margaret, and her twin sister Christine, founded the
Institute For
Figuring, a 'Los Angeles-based organisation devoted to
public engagement with the aesthetic and poetic dimensions of science and
mathematics’ – check it out www.theiff.org
Yours collectively
Mrs Polly Ester