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170. Finding the God Particle

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire · Nov 8, 2025

Physicist Brian Cox discusses his journey from pop star to particle physics, demystifying the Higgs boson, black holes, and the nature of science.

The Large Hadron Collider's Discovery of a New Particle Was Guaranteed

The Standard Model of particle physics was known to be incomplete. Without the Higgs boson, calculations for certain particle interactions yielded nonsensical probabilities greater than one. This mathematical certainty of a flaw meant that exploring that energy range would inevitably reveal new physics, whether it was the Higgs or something else entirely.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

Physicist Richard Feynman Defined Science as a 'Satisfactory Philosophy of Ignorance'

True scientific progress comes from being proven wrong. When an experiment falsifies a prediction, it definitively rules out a potential model of reality, thereby advancing knowledge. This mindset encourages researchers to embrace incorrect hypotheses as learning opportunities rather than failures, getting them closer to understanding the world.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

Inside a Black Hole's Event Horizon, Space and Time Effectively Swap Roles

The singularity at a black hole's center is not a place in space but an inevitable moment in time for anything that crosses the event horizon. This conceptual flip means that trying to escape the singularity is as futile as trying to avoid next Tuesday. The flow of spacetime itself pulls everything inward toward a future point of infinite density.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

Brian Cox Joined Rock Band 'Dare' for Tech Skills, Not Musical Virtuosity

Brian Cox secured his keyboardist spot in a band formed by a Thin Lizzy member not because he was a phenomenal player, but because he was adept at managing the complex technology of 1980s synthesizers. This highlights how adjacent technical skills can be a crucial, and sometimes primary, value proposition even in highly creative roles.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

Mandatory Gun Insurance for Legal Owners Would Likely Have Very Low Premiums

Economist Steve Levitt argues that requiring liability insurance for legal gun owners would be counterintuitively cheap. Data shows the vast majority of gun deaths are suicides or homicides with illegal weapons. The actual risk posed by legal gun owners to third-party strangers is so statistically small that insurance premiums to cover that specific liability would be minimal.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

Black Holes Were First Conceived in the 18th Century Using Newtonian Physics

Long before Einstein's relativity, scholars like Pierre-Simon Laplace and John Michell theorized about "dark stars." They reasoned that if a star were massive enough, its escape velocity could exceed the speed of light, trapping light and rendering it invisible. This early concept was based entirely on Newton's laws of gravity, demonstrating remarkable scientific foresight.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

Earth's Natural Cosmic Ray Collisions Disprove LHC Apocalypse Fears

Fears that the Large Hadron Collider could create a world-ending black hole were mitigated by a simple astronomical observation: Earth is constantly bombarded by cosmic rays creating collisions with far greater energy than the LHC can produce. Since the planet has survived billions of years of these natural, high-energy events, the risk from the collider was deemed negligible.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago

A Physicist's Most-Cited Paper Can Be One Proven Wrong by Discovery

Physicist Brian Cox's most-cited paper explored what physics would look like without the Higgs boson. The subsequent discovery of the Higgs proved the paper's premise wrong, yet it remains highly cited for the novel detection techniques it developed. This illustrates that the value of scientific work often lies in its methodology and exploratory rigor, not just its ultimate conclusion.

170. Finding the God Particle thumbnail

170. Finding the God Particle

People I (Mostly) Admire·3 months ago