Category Archives: AI

October Blog: Antimicrobial Resistance, the Passing of Two Greats, a New Science Show on the Radio, and a World of Maths

In this post I preview October’s PubSci (Wednesday 15th!), celebrate maths and poetry, promote a science radio show close to my heart and mark the passing of two very different legends.

Apologies for the extreme tardiness of this blog post. If you rely on my blog for event updates you’ll be biting your nails by now. Head to the Next Event page and grab you ticket ASAP. As I explain later, I’ve had my head in a rather wonderful project, that I hope you’ll enjoy. Remember, if you subscribe to PubSci’s calendar, events in your calendar will update automatically.

But first…

Dr Jane Goodall 1934 - 2025
Dr Jane Goodall 1934 – 2025 (© Jane Goodall Institute)

It would be absurd to begin this blog with anything other than the death of conservation and primatology legend, Dr Jane Goodall — and it would be almost impossible to overstate her impact.

To quote the BBC: “Goodall discovered that chimps used tools, created complex societies and could be so aggressive they could even kill one another. This suggested that chimps and humans are likely to have common ancestors – and was ground-breaking information. Her work made waves amongst her fellow researchers, and the public enthusiastically responded to her revelations.

The idea that chimps and humans were related spurred debates about what it means to be human, inspiring a rethink on animal rights. Her books were so widely read that when one of Jane’s subjects Flo died in 1972, The Sunday Times ran an obituary.

A Young woman with a camera looks ta a chimpanzee which looks back at her
Photo: ​​© the Jane Goodall Institute/By Derek Bryceson

Not only was Jane Goodall a pioneering primatologist and powerful advocate for conservation and habitat protection, she was also an inspirational humanitarian and a role model for young women — so much so that she was immortalised as a Barbie in their Inspiring Women series and as a Lego Minifigure, in both cases accompanied by chimps.

Tireless Goodall died at the age of 91 in the middle of a US speaking tour and left behind a final message for the world, a message of personal and environmental hope for these times:

I want you to understand that we are part of the natural world. And even today, when the planet is dark, there still is hope...”

You can read the full text here and watch the video of Dr Goodall delivering her final message to the world here.

October’s PubSci is upon us – book now on Eventbrite!

October’s PubSci is on Wednesday 15th October, which means it’s today if you’re reading this the same day it appears in you mailbox, so I’ll keep this brief.

Have you ever wondered what the world would be like without antibiotics…? 100 years ago, infections we consider almost trivial today frequently led to lasting illness or death until penicillin was commercialised. The shocking reality, however, is that bacteria and other microbes are developing resistance to antimicrobial drugs faster than we are developing new antimicrobials.

Strips of antibiotic pills
What will we do when the drugs don’t work?

With drug resistant infections costing the NHS £180 million a year, it’s more important than ever to understand how microbes become resistant, what we can do about it, and what options are out there if antibiotics fail us altogether. This month at PubSci, Professor Jenny Rohn from UCL explores what happens when the antibiotics stop working, why antimicrobial resistance matters, and what scientists are doing to stop us returning to the days when even a scratch could be fatal.

You can get full details, as ever on PubSci’s Our Next Event page until it’s updated for November, but why not head straight to Eventbrite and grab one of the few remaining tickets.

Much To Do About Numbers?

Last month’s PubSci was all about the clever ways William Shakespeare used maths in his plays, and the speaker, Rob Eastaway, is involved with the launch of Maths World, only a stone’s throw from Shakespeare’s Globe. Maths World is new discovery centre for London which aims to do for mathematics what the Science Museum and Natural History Museums do for their fields; think immersive and interactive exhibits, puzzles, AI, code-breaking etc. Wonderfully it’s located in Bankside, part of the historic Liberty of Southwark, as it was known in Shakespeare’s day.

Lots of colourful activities for children
Get hands-on with maths in London’s Bankside

Maths World is located at 6 Burrell St, SE1 0UN, near the Tate Modern. Expect much ado about numberphiles when it officially opens on 13th November.

Rob’s talk on Shakespeare’s Maths was such a great hit that he ran out of books to sell. Apologies to those who didn’t manage to get a signed copy of Much Ado About Numbers. You can always grab a copy in the shops or via the link on Rob’s website and bring it to one of his events to be signed at a later date. I once took a copy of Connections [the book of the 1978 BBC TV series] to a talk by James Burke to get it signed by him some 30 years after it was published — which he most graciously did!

Talking of Connections…

Looking further back to Augusts’ PubSci, I was delighted to discover that August’s speaker, Ruth Stalker-Firth had written a super blog post about PubSci ahead of her talk. You can read it (and find the rest of Ruth’s website) here where there’s also a follow up post with event photos. She’s even kindly linked back to last month’s PubSci blog. If you’re a blogger, vlogger, influencer, broadcaster, or whatever, please let us know if you happen to mention PubSci so I can add it to our archive.

A young woman at an old fashioned wireless
Tune in to science radio

And on the Subject of Broadcasting…

What kept me rather busy of late was recording, producing and editing my first ever radio show! The Science Show is co-presented by myself and Mike Lucibella on Resonance FM, the Arts Council funded community radio station for London. Yes it broadcasts live on FM in London, and you can livestream it anywhere in the world or get it on Radioplayer across the UK.

The show is a monthly one hour magazine programme (ie with several different segments) that you can listen to in one go, or break up into three easy chunks. So far we’ve made a pilot show (with some technical limitations) but the station was so excited by the early test recordings that they’ve given us a regular slot: 5pm on the fourth Tuesday of the month, beginning 28th October, with a repeat at 10am the following Sunday.

The pilot episode went out live on Thursday 9th October and you can listen to it here:

A radio player for 9 October 2025 (The Science Show) non Resonance
Listen to The Science Show pilot episode on Mixcloud

Please let us know what you think by sending us a message at our dedicated email address.

Return of the IgNobels

With the 2025 Nobel Awards announced over the past week or so, it’s easy to forget their lighthearted counterparts. The Ig Nobels recognise research that makes you laugh and then makes you think – much as good comedy does. Last year I was dressed as a banana as part of the Royal Institution‘s Ig Nobels Live night. This year I’m event managing the evening so I might get away without skinning up as a banana — but then again, I might not!

A Greek philosopher on his back with his feet in the air

This year’s special event on Friday 31st October is called IgNobels Face-To-Face at which prize winners and some of the leading minds in science will explore how research on the unlikeliest of subjects can have real world implications. Expect a night of hilarious and enlightening stories from some of the strangest and most intriguing scientific research in recent years! And if you enjoy a Halloween party, you’ll still have time to go out and do something spooktacular afterwards. Book with the Ri at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ig-nobels-face-to-face-tickets-1489016060119

Shall I Compare Thee to a Synaptic Junction?

No, I’m not trying to wax poetical about neurones (although the neuroscience of dementia is the topic of our November talk by Dr Emma Clayton)*, nor am I alluding to Rob’s Shakespeare talk. Science is traditionally communicated in precise language but there are times when evocative imagery is the most powerful medium for scientific ideas. Prof Sam Illingworth’s CPD course on Science Communication through Poetry sets out to do exactly that, and it’s back for the third year.

Four interactive sessions explore how poetry can bring science to life and connect with audiences in fresh, creative ways. It doesn’t matter whether you’re a scientist, a poet, or an enthusiastic amateur. I participated a couple of years ago and enjoyed it greatly. Sessions take place online over consecutive Tuesday lunchtimes, beginning 21st October and there are a few paces left.

Find out more and book here.

Farewell to John Searle

Another great mind left us last week: American Philosopher John Searle died at the age of 93.

Searle contributed to the philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, and social philosophy, and he is best known for philosophy concerning Artificial Intelligence. Searle’s most celebrated contribution is the 1980 thought experiment known as The Chinese Room which holds that a computer executing a program cannot have a mind, understanding, or consciousness, regardless of how intelligently or human-like the program may make the computer behave. ChatGPT users take note! In 2015 Searle was invited to address Google in a talk titled “Consciousness in Artificial Intelligence”.

A greay haired man
John Searle speaking at Google in 2015 (Photo: FranksValli)

Searle called his philosophical position “biological naturalism” which insists that consciousness and understanding require a specific biological machinery found in brains: “Brains cause minds”. I won’t go into it here, but the Wikipedia page (linked above) gives a good account of the Chinese Room and what Searle inferred from it.

The next few decades may show Searle to be right in insisting consciousness and understanding are biological phenomena, or they may show his opponents in the Strong AI camp to be right (which is what the loud tech bros tell investors) — but a third possibility is that John Searle’s famous thought experiment presents an opportunity to reassess how we understand ourselves first and foremost, just as profoundly as meeting a “conscious AI” would do. Or indeed looking into the eyes of a great ape and recognising an ancient shared lineage which tells us we are more connected than we dare admit in this fragile world.

A chimpanzee looks into the camera
Jamie © Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest

~

Don’t forget to grab your last minute ticket to October’s PubSci, and remember to follow us on all the socials including LinkedIn to keep up to date with what we’re doing. You can find those on our Linktree.

* Please note that our November 2025 talk is on Wednesday 26th November, which is the fourth Wednesday. We had to move it from the previous week because Mike and I will both be at the IoP Communicators and Outreach conference on 19th and will be giving a short talk about PubSci.

Thanks for reading. Please feel free to email or comment in response. Hope to see you at The Old King’s Head on Wednesday 15th October.

15/10/2025 Posted by Richard, PubSci programmer and host

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

The Summer / Autumn Programme

PubSci’s latest programme runs from July to November (there’s no event in December) and is perfect for printing out and pinning to your work noticeboard or sticking to the fridge, It’s always available on the Current Programme page, along with past event programmes, and you can link to the image below on your own website.

Click the image to open the programme in a new tab.

• • •

Keeping Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

Three pictures of a woman at different ages
Jane Goodall 1934 – 2025
The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

September Blog: AI, Shakespeare’s Maths (going fast), Hamlet’s Astronomer, and Microorganisms

In this post, I preview September’s PubSci, consider topics raised in August’s talk, and ask whether the Bard knew about Tycho Brahe as well as looking forward to International Microorganism Day.

Was Shakespeare obsessed with maths and science?

September’s PubSci is booking on Eventbrite

September’s talk on Shakespeare’s Maths with Rob Eastaway is just a few days away and 70% of tickets been snapped up at the time of writing. I’ll say a bit more about it towards the end of this blog piece but head to the booking page now if you don’t want to miss out.

Is AI About To Conquer The World?

Since time immemorial, societies dreamt of non-human servants to carry out their chores.

Golems, Genies and shoemaking elves inhabit folklore but things nearly always go wrong as the creators lose control and the helpers go rogue. Remember Walt Disney’s Fantasia when Mickey Mouse learnt — as the Sorcerer’s Apprentice — how to make a broom carry water but didn’t learn how to stop it? Will it be the same story with AI? Are we just falling into an ancient fear?

A woman lecturing in front of a screen and a portrait of Henry the eighth

Many of us have questions about AI and want to understand it better. On Wednesday 20th August Ruth Stalker-Firth came to the Old King’s Head to share insights from her three decades of involvement in AI. Perhaps the most significant point to come across in Ruth’s informative and entertaining talk was the number of times great claims have been made for AI in the past, only for them to fall embarrassingly flat, often leading to an “AI Winter” of reduced interest and research funding.

There have been two major AI Winters so far, one in the ’70s and one in the ’80s. In 1984 (of all years!), leading AI researchers Roger Schank and Marvin Minsky warned the business community that enthusiasm for AI had spiralled out of control in the 1980s and that disappointment would certainly follow.

One of the most famous cases of overstated claims for artificial intelligence was a chess playing automaton first displayed in 1770, known as the Mechanical Turk. This wonder of ingenuity and mechanics was constructed by Wolfgang von Kempelen to impress Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. The “Turk” not only played chess against human opponents to a high level, it could perform the knight’s tour, a puzzle that requires the player to move a knight to visit every square of a chessboard exactly once. It was so convincing that some onlookers believed the automaton to have supernatural powers, even that is was possessed by evil spirits — a ghost in the machine, if you like.

A line drwaing illustration of the famous Mechanical Turk that shows a hidden human inside

The fraudulent “Mechanical Turk” chess robot

This belief that objects which behave in human-like ways must have human-like reasoning arises from what philosophers call Theory of Mind. When I interact with you as another human, I have ‘theory of mind’ concerning you. I essentially project this onto your behaviour based on our interactions, and so I see you as conscious. It’s the basis for many superstitious beliefs and it also causes us to infer a personality in objects and systems that don’t actually possess them.

When Shakey, a 1966 wheeled robot dubbed “The first electronic person” was observed doing a twizzle at the end of its day exploring its environment, some observers thought it had evolved playfulness or even joy. The mundane reality was that it had been programmed to run with a tether but was now running without it. The twizzle dance that Shakey performed at the end of every day was programatically coded to ensure the (non existent) tether didn’t get progressively tangled, but to onlookers it looked like Shakey was playing and therefore conscious.

Animated objects from a Disney cartoon
Lumière, Cogsworth, Chip, Mrs Potts and Featherduster, from Disney’s Beauty and the Beast (1991)

The fact that we anthropomorphise objects with surprising ease is something cartoonists and animators make use of all the time. Disney cartoons are famous for making a broom, a clock or a candlestick seem like human-like in their behaviour, and we willingly go along with it. Are we simply making the same mistake with the sophisticated outputs of ChatGPT and other Large Language Models? Have we conflated passing the Turing Test with actually possessing conscious agency, which is an entirely different matter?

The Mechanical Turk was a sophisticated device, with a complex set of levers and pulleys but it wasn’t an automaton and it couldn’t play chess. Hidden inside the base, behind fake gears and rotors, sat a human chess player. The device was incredibly ingenious, allowing the human inside to see the moves played on the board above and transferring his own moves back to the board through the mechanical arm. It was a work of engineering genius, but it wasn’t a robot and it wasn’t intelligent.

In a 1970 interview with Time Magazine, the founder of MIT’s AI lab Marvin Minsky, made the extraordinary claim that artificial general intelligence rivalling that of humans would arrive within the decade.


“In from three to eight years we will have a machine with the general intelligence of an average human being. I mean a machine that will be able to read Shakespeare, grease a car, play office politics, tell a joke, have a fight. At that point the machine will begin to educate itself with fantastic speed. In few months it will be at genius level and a few months after that its powers will be incalculable.”

Marvin Minsky, 1970

Clearly artificial general intelligence (AGI) still hasn’t arrived, but are we now, finally, on the brink of it? And should we be concerned this time? Well, just like von Kempelen’s chess playing illusion — and the Wizard of Oz for that matter — a lot of what we take for human-like AI is actually performed by humans, often poorly paid workers in developing countries. Is this the real ghost in the machine?

A cyberman from Doctor Who having a cigarette break

AI is pretty good, but Amazon Fresh doesn’t trust it to perfectly track your purchases. It employs 1000 people in India to manually check 70% of transactions. Amazon points out that human reviewers are common where high accuracy is demanded of AI. Open AI employed Kenyan workers on a tiny salary to make ChatGPT less toxic, and several AI-powered drive-thru fast food joints were using humans in the Philippines to act as AI.

Famously, AI-powered drive-throughs by Taco Bell and McDonald’s had to be pulled due to serious glitches such as putting bacon on ice cream, adding £222 dollars worth of nuggets and refusing to accept that a drink order was a drink order.

Whilst some analysts are warning that this time Generative AI will change everything (for better or for worse), others are cautioning it’s already as good as it will get and that the AI bubble is about to burst. Meanwhile, headlines are pouring in that 95% of companies have seen no return on their Generative AI investment, or that another AI winter is coming. So where does that leave us ordinary users?

Aside from the well-known, and poorly managed, risks of biased training data leading to biases in AI — a reflection, of course of the human world — we simply need to beware of mistaking AI for a little elf that does our bidding.

ChatGPT misses the joke

AI is limited. Its data is finite. Its understanding is zero. Here, ChatGPT shows that it never understood the famous “I can’t operate, it’s my daughter” lateral thinking puzzle. It doesn’t just have biases, it has weird ones.

AI is a tool that can be useful but is limited. It isn’t sentient, but it also only has the morals and safeguards we build into it. Mickey Mouse’s enchanted water-carrying broom is really the model for a famous AI thought experiment called the Paperclip Maximiser which highlights the danger of giving carelessly formed instructions to a powerful but unthinking AI-controlled system.

Agentic AI is the new trend of letting AI do things for you rather than simply asking it a question. It can book flights for you but it will need access to your credit card details for example.
In the words of Donnchadh Casey, CEO of CalypsoAI, a US-based AI security company, “If not given the right guidance, agentic AI will achieve a goal in whatever way it can. That creates a lot of risk.” If agentic AI is the Paperclip Maximiser made real, we must establish rules and standards for how it behaves and how it is limited because, unlike the sorcerer’s apprentice, there is nobody to step in if it goes rogue.

September PubSci is nearly upon us – BOOK NOW!

That was a longer digression into AI than I planned so lets’s focus on this month’s PubSci.

On Wednesday 17th September, PubSci is delighted to welcome author and broadcaster Rob Eastaway as he draws back the stage curtain to reveal the extraordinary mathematics of William Shakespeare’s day and its role in his plays in Much Ado About Numbers? – Shakespearean Maths.

Rob uses humour and insight to explore why the Tudors multiplied so quickly, and how dice-rolling was a hazard as we discover the surprisingly funny ways in which Shakespeare used numbers in his writing.

Rob Eastaway is the award-winning author of ‘Why do Buses come in Threes?’ and will be signing copies of his latest book, Much Ado About Numbers, after the talk. To be there or not to be there..? That’s not even a question!

You can read all about it on the current Next Event page or go straight to booking on Eventbrite. Remember, only a handful of tickets are left, so don’t delay.

~

Methinks I have astronomy

Talking of Shakespeare, it seems he wasn’t only interested in the maths of his day. He may also have kept somewhat up to date with the science of his day, especially astronomy. Here’s a line from Sonnet 14 in which it seems he’s distinguishing astronomy from astrology:

Not from the stars do I my judgment pluck; And yet methinks I have astronomy, But not to tell of good or evil luck.

A friend recently sent me a delightful podcast from Scientific American in 2014 in which Author Steve Mirsky discusses the possibility that Shakespeare knew about the eccentric (but hugely important) Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe and referenced him in Hamlet. I won’t duplicate it here — this blog is already longer and later than I intended — I’ll just say that if a drunken Elk, a golden nose, a private observatory-castle on its own island, and a bizarre death don’t grip you (in a sort of comedy Bond villain kind of way), at least read up on Brahe for his huge contribution to astronomy such as highly accurate observations in the pre-telescope era. You can read a transcript of the podcast here.

An elk with a man's head
Advert for Taiberg lemonade featuring Tycho Brahe

“Doubt thou the stars are fire; Doubt that the sun doth move; Doubt truth to be a liar; But never doubt I love.” Hamlet Act 2 Scene 2

~

International Microorganism Day

On 17 September 1683, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek – a Dutch merchant with no fortune or university degree – sent a letter to the Royal Society of London with the first description of a single-celled organism after he made the first simple microscope. He originally wanted to check the quality of cloth in his drapers shop, and small folding magnifiers are still known as “linen checkers” to this day, even when used for entirely different purposes. After being given a basic microscope for a birthday while at primary school, Van Leeuwenhoek became one of my childhood heroes.

Whilst I didn’t follow him into a career in microscopy (as I thought I would at the age of 9), I’m very happy that 17th September is now recognised as International Microorganism Day.

Obviously you’ll be at PubSci in the evening, but if you have time during the day, why not brew beer, ferment kimchi, watch tardigrade videos, admire Petri dish art, or simply raise a toast to the invisible life forms keeping our planet running!

Indeed, where better to raise a glass of something microbiologically-made than the upstairs room of the Old King’s Head at Much Ado About Numbers? – Shakespearean Maths!

In a curious scheduling coincidence, October’s PubSci is on problematic microorganisms, as Prof Jenny Rohn talks about the never-ending battle against Antimicrobial Resistance on Wednesday 15th October. Don’t forget you can keep up with forthcoming events by subscribing to our Google calendar or downloading the programme (see below). You can also follow us on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets become available for new events.

Lastly, apologies for sending this blog out so late. I do all this in my free time, and my free time has lately been taken up with other projects, not least of which involves some rather exciting news. I’ll be presenting a science radio show on Resonance FM, London’s Arts Council-funded community radio station, and I’m delighted to say that Mike Lucibella will co-present. We’ve recorded the first monthly episode and are editing it before a broadcast date is announced. Despite the name, you can listen to Resonance on DAB, streaming and Soundcloud (for playback) as well as good-old FM radio.

I’ll be posting news of the broadcast dates and links to our Soundcloud as soon as they’re available.

Thanks for reading. Please feel free to email or comment in response. Hope to see you at The Old King’s Head on Wednesday 17th September.

14/9/2025 Posted by Richard, PubSci programmer and host

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

The Summer / Autumn Programme

PubSci’s latest programme runs from July to November (there’s no event in December) and is perfect for printing out and pinning to your work noticeboard or sticking to the fridge, It’s always available on the Current Programme page, along with past event programmes, and you can link to the image below on your own website.

Click the image to open the programme in a new tab.

• • •

Keeping Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

Demystifying AI with Ruth Stalker-Firth on 20th August is sold out!

Should we fear AI or embrace it? Perhaps we need to do both – or neither? PubSci examines the surprisingly long history of AI and lays to rest a few myths.

The news is full of scare stories about how AI might become self-aware, turn on humanity and take over the world… So, should we be afraid? Will we all be out of a job? Is The Terminator’s Skynet about to become a reality? PubSci is here to bring you the facts.

On Wednesday 20th August, PubSci is delighted to welcome Dr Ruth Stalker-Firth to share insights from three decades of involvement in AI and give us the solid grounding we need if we are to make informed decisions about this suddenly ubiquitous new – or maybe not-so-new – technology.

This event is completely sold out and there’s a huge waiting list. Thank you everybody for making PubSci an ongoing success. Please remember to book your tickets early as our events become ever-more popular.

Looking behind the headlines and cutting through ‘tech bro’ braggadocio, Ruth traces the recurring rise and fall of AI and examines what the ghost in the machine really means. From Ancient Greek robots to ChatGPT’s deep learning, we’ll look at how and why AI was created, explore what it can and cannot do, and with humour and insight, demystify AI.

Is there a ghost in the machine or is it all just just smoke, mirrors and clever algorithms?

Read on to read about August’s speaker. 

• • •

PubSci talks are pay-what-you-can – you can make a contribution when booking on Eventbrite or as a cash contribution on the night. Join us for another round of Sipping, Supping Science… in the pub.

• • •

About the speaker

Dr Ruth Stalker-Firth is a technology consultant whose involvement with the field of AI began in 1993. She says it started because that seemed the easiest way to spend a summer in Paris… and resulted in the accolade of representing the nation of Switzerland for technical innovation.

Following that, Ruth earned a PhD in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) for Artificial Intelligence and Big Data, began lecturing at university in 2001, has programmed and consulted on HCI, and has been teaching HCIAIcognitive science, biometricsIT security, and web technologies for BSc, MSc and online students.

Ruth firmly believes understanding how technology works is the key to making us all happier with our computers. She is an experienced public speaker, a celebrated tutor on the WI Learning Hub and was recognised earlier this year by National Women in Science and Engineering Day. Her website and blog get 1.2 million hits a year.

PubSci is delighted to welcome Ruth as the latest speaker in our 2025 talks programme of Sipping, Supping & Science.

• • •

Keep Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

Posted by Richard Marshall, PubSci organiser and host.

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

• • •

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

• • •

We generally hold events on the third Wednesday of the month, upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge Underground (Borough High Street east side exit). Join us every month apart from December for a regular dose of Sipping, Supping & Science.

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

August Update: Proofs, Pictures, Perseids, Probabilities, and PubSci’s Programme

In this post, we preview August’s PubSci, reflect on July’s talk, look to the skies and more. Read on!

STOP PRESS: Our August event is next week – only 20% of tickets remaining.

On 20th August, PubSci considers the Ghost in the Machine and attempts to demystify AI.

August’s PubSci is Nearly Fully Booked

80% of tickets for next week’s talk on Demystifying AI have already been snapped up at the time of writing. Head to the booking page now if you don’t want to miss out.

Many of us have questions about AI and want to understand it better. As ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot and Apple Intelligence get embedded into our devices and our lives, it’s increasingly important that we understand this tool and are comfortable with what AI really is (and what it really isn’t). On Wednesday 20th August Dr Ruth Stalker-Firth shares insights from three decades of involvement in AI to give us the solid grounding we need if we are to make informed choices.

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Art meets science in words and images – Wellcome Photography Prize Winners Announced

Traditionally dressed Peruvian women look at a small handheld device while a man looks on from behind a clump of grass
Urban Travel by Mithail Afrige Chowdhury (Wellcome Photography Prize 2025)

Since 1997 the Wellcome Photography Prize has been celebrating compelling imagery that captures stories of health, science and human experience. This year’s winners were announced on 16th July and the top 25 images are on show at The Francis Crick Institute close to London’s King’s Cross until 18th October. The Crick is worth a visit just for the fabulous modern architecture and a very nice cafe.

Cholesterol in the Liver by Steve Gschmeissner (Wellcome Photography Prize 2025)

There’s no need to book, just turn up during normal opening hours (open Wednesday to Saturday).

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Open your eyes, Look up to the skies

A few years ago I was camping in Sussex at this time of year, and we were treated to most spectacular display of ‘shooting stars’ I’ve ever seen. While many looked like static or short, bright scratches in the night sky, some seemed impossibly long and slow as they grazed the tree-line. We’d been fortunate to camp during a particularly good year for the Perseid meteor shower.

Francisco Seco/AP (via The Guardian)

The Perseids, as the shower is known, are one of the most dramatic things to see in the night sky between July and August, and a highlight of meteor hunters’ calendars due to their frequency and brightness. Dark skies are best, of course.

The Perseids are caused by the Earth slamming into the debris left behind by comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle and are so-called because they appear to be radiating from the Perseus constellation. Unfortunately this year’s peak is 12th August (tonight, as I write) when the moon is still quite bright in the sky and there’s hazy cloud above South London.

Greenwich Observatory has written a super guide for anybody wanting to see the Perseids this year.

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Easy come, Easy go…

If the thought of bright meteors streaking across the skies (albeit from comet debris) brings June’s PubSci to mind, when Dr Stuart Eve explored why large asteroids strike Earth at surprisingly regular intervals, you might be interested in a study published today in the Planetary Science Journal called Placing the Near-Earth Object Impact Probability in Context. This paper looks at the lifetime odds of an individual dying from an asteroid impact with global effect and compares them to other odds of dying from what it describes as “other preventable causes of death”.

How rabies, elephant trampling and lightning strikes count as entirely ‘preventable’ is a little beyond me, but I’m sure Stuart would be heartened to know that impact by a 140 m diameter asteroid is also considered preventable by the study’s authors in the light of our ability to catalogue increasingly small near-Earth objects (NEOs) – something Stuart discussed towards the end of his talk.

You can find a very readable discussion of the paper on phys.org but the original is definitely worth a look. You’ll need to click the graphic to enlarge it, which plots the probability of an event happening in an individual’s lifetime against the likelihood you’ll die if it does happen to you. It seems elephant attacks are nearly always fatal, though mercifully rare.

Surprisingly, Nugent et al  estimate you’re more likely to witness a 140m+ asteroid hit somewhere on Earth during your lifetime than you are personally to be struck by lightning, and the lightning is also more likely to be fatal. Which leads us nicely onto statistics.

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Looking back on July’s PubSci

On Wednesday 16th July, PubSci welcomed Professor Adam Kucharski (pictured centre with Mike and Richard from PubSci and King Henry VIII), epidemiologist, statistician, and bestselling author of The Rules of Contagion. Adam came to talk about the crucial ideas behind his new book, Proof: The Uncertain Science of Certainty. New Scientist described it as a “life raft in a sea of fake news and misinformation.”

You can order both of Adam’s books here. Many thanks to Adam for a brilliant talk that ranged from drinking habits of Cambridge colleges (and how they non-causally predict exam success) to fake news and self-driving cars.

In the pre-covid days, I taught a lecture on Ethics for Engineers, featuring the famous trolley problem which challenges us to make moral choices when neither delivers a “good” outcome. There’s no right or wrong answer — what matters is how you make the choice: what data, which biases, and which ethics you bring to bear in the decision. This is exactly the kind of decision that AI in self-driving cars will have to quickly make when faced with knocking down a pedestrian in the road or swerving into a family of ducklings. Adam talked about MIT’s Moral Machine project which invites the public to submit their choices for various scenarios and reveals some interesting cultural differences.

We were delighted to learn that somebody in the audience had actually worked on Moral Machine. Read all about the experiment and its fascinating findings here.

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Talking of AI, here’s one last reminder to book for August’s talk: Demystifying AI with Dr Ruth Stalker-Firth. With over 80% of tickets already snapped up at the time of writing, you’ll need to be quick.

• • •

The Summer / Autumn Programme is Out

PubSci’s latest programme runs from July to November (there’s no event in December) and is perfect for printing out and pinning to your work noticeboard or sticking to the fridge, It’s always available on the Current Programme page, along with past event programmes, and you can link to the image below on your own website.

Click the image to open the programme in a new tab.

Thanks for reading. Please feel free to email or comment in response. Hope to see you at The Old King’s Head on Wednesday 20th August.

12/8/2025 Posted by Richard, PubSci programmer and host

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

Keeping Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

The Uncertain Science of Certainty | 16th July 2025

How are scientific opinions formed? How do we converge on the truth? And once we get there, how should we try to convince others?

Microscope, books, magnifying glass: The search for proof
Proof?

On Wednesday 16th July, PubSci is delighted to welcome Professor Adam Kucharski – epidemiologist, statistician, and bestselling author of The Rules of Contagion – to talk about the crucial ideas behind his new book, Proof: The Uncertain Science of Certainty. Proof explores methods we can use to get closer to what’s really happening, and what happens when these methods fail.

With very few tickets remaining, book your place now, or read on to learn more.

A magnifying glass with inspecting some words

Throughout history, scientific progress has relied on establishing fact from fiction. For millennia, the reasoning went: achieve logical perfection and be rewarded with ultimate, universal truth.
But demonstrating that a new medical treatment works, persuading a jury of someone’s guilt, or deciding whether to trust a self-driving car requires us to weigh up noisy, uncertain evidence.

So, is there more to proof than axioms, theories and scientific laws? Now, more than ever, we need to understand what “Gold Standard Science” really means – and what it doesn’t. Come to PubSci on Wednesday 16th July to explore the art and science of certainty with Adam Kucharski, and discover what links wine and university exams, royalty and Guinness, cricket and robot racing.

Ranging across science, politics, philosophy and economics to explore how truth emerges and why it sometimes falters, Proof is described by New Scientist as “a life raft in a sea of fake news and misinformation.” Don’t miss this unique opportunity to hear bestselling author and award-winning science communicator, Prof Adam Kucharski at PubSci.

Copies of Proof will be on sale at the event.

Book cover for PROOF - The Uncertain science of Certainty

Book your place now, or read on to read about this month’s speaker. 

• • •

PubSci talks are pay-what-you-can – you can make a contribution when booking on Eventbrite or as a cash contribution on the night. Join us for another round of Sipping, Supping Science… in the pub.

• • •

About the speaker

A man with a short beard wearing a shirt with a buttoned collar
Prof Adam Kucharski

Adam Kucharski is Professor of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, focusing on making better use of data and analytics for epidemic preparedness and response. This includes large-scale studies of social behaviour and immunity.

A mathematician by training, his work on global outbreaks includes Ebola, Zika and COVID-19, and he has produced real-time analysis for governments and health agencies around the world.

Professor Kucharski has published over 130 scientific papers, including a 2016 piece for Nature on the epidemiology of fake news which has been cited almost 300 times in scientific literature. He is a TED senior fellow, and winner of the 2016 Rosalind Franklin Award Lecture and the 2012 Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize.

His popular science writing has appeared in Wired, Financial Times, New Scientist, Scientific American, The Times and The Observer. His 2020 book,The Rules of Contagion – written just before the global COVID pandemic hit – was a Times, Guardian and FT Science Book of the Year, and his 2016 Royal Institution talk on The Science of Luck has been viewed nearly 4 million times.

Proof: The Uncertain Science of Certainty was published by Profile Books in March 2025.

PubSci is delighted to welcome Adam as the latest speaker in our 2025 talks programme.

10 international book covers for The Rules of Contagion
International editions of ‘The Rules of Contagion

• • •

Keep Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

Posted by Richard Marshall, PubSci organiser and host.

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

• • •

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

• • •

Text reading "Proof, the art and science of uncertainty"
Is certainty as much Art as Science?

We generally hold events on the third Wednesday of the month, upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge Underground (Borough High Street east side exit). Join us every month apart from December for a regular dose of Sipping, Supping & Science.

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

July Blog Post: Asteroids, Astronomy, Science Photography and Poetry plus July’s PubSci and discount tickets to a talk on the Northern Lights

In this post, I preview July’s PubSci talk (now booking) and other great science events coming up, we reflect on June’s PubSci and share details of a ticket offer for the coming weekend. Read on!

Our next event is only 2 weeks away

Microscope, books, magnifying glass: The search for proof
On 16th July, PubSci explores how scientific truth emerges and why it sometimes falters.

July’s PubSci talk is booking up fast, with 25% of places already snapped up – head to the booking page now if you don’t want to miss out – but before looking in more detail, we’ll serve up some other science-based goodies. There’s lots of science poetry in this edition of the PubSci blog, some great events, some sad astronomy news and some good astronomy news, a look back at June’s topic and an exclusive discount code for a super astronomy talk at the Royal Institution on Saturday 5th July.

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Art meets science in words and images

Traditionally dressed Peruvian women look at a small handheld device while a man looks on from behind a clump of grass
Peruvian women test water pH from a melting glacier. © Ciril Jazbec / Wellcome Photography Prize 2025

Last month we previewed a botanical photography exhibition at Ken Artspace and I’ve found another super photo exhibition for you this month. Since 1997 Wellcome Photography Prize has been celebrating compelling imagery that captures stories of health, science and human experience. This year the winners will be announced on 16th July (the same day as PubSci) and the top 25 images will be on show at The Francis Crick Institute close to London’s King’s Cross from 17th July until 18th October. The Crick is worth a visit just for the fabulous modern architecture and a very nice cafe.

The Poetry of Science and the Science of Poetry

This is a bumper season for poetry and science. The Brilliant is an annual competition celebrating poetry which expresses scientific wonder through verse. Alas, entries closed at the end of June for this year’s competition but you can read last year’s shortlisted entries and the 2024 winners here.

If you’d like to try your hand at writing poetry with a science theme, perhaps with a view to entering next year’s competition, I strongly recommend signing up for the CPD short course on Science Communication Through Poetry run by Sam Illingworth. It’s delivered live via Zoom over four Wednesday lunchtimes and costs just £50. There’s even a bursary for those on low income. Sam, a professor at Edinburgh Napier University, is also one of the judges for The Brilliant competition and has written several books on science and poetry including The Poetry of Physics published earlier this year. I’m hoping to tempt Sam down south for a PubSci event before too long.

A banner for Consilience Journal

If you enjoy the crossover between science and poetry and/or science and art, I recommend looking into a beautiful online journal called Consilience (referring to the convergence of thought between different disciplines). Consilience is free to read but you can support it by subscribing to their Substack. If you’re already a science poet or artist, and looking for somewhere to publish, Issue 22 of Consilience is now open for submissions of poetry and art exploring the scientific topic of ‘Waves’ – but do hurry, submissions for the coming issue close at noon on Sunday 6th July.

EVENT TOMORROW: Live Poetry and Live Neuroscience!

An image with an open book and text saying Verse and Worse

What happens when a poet and a neuroscientist get together to see if they can make sense of their connections?

They create an event called Verse and Worse, with Professor Sophie Scott and Will Eaves, both from the Neuromantics podcast.

On Wednesday 2nd July, at the Bloomsbury Theatre, Will and Sophie will be conducting live neuroscience experiments related to poetry. It looks like being a brilliant event, and it’s only £8, but there are lots of unsold seats at the time of writing, so book a ticket now and I’ll see you there.

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An Astronomic look back at June

A bright meteor streaks across the nighttime sky over a river
Fireball over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2013 (The Planetary Society)

At June’s PubSci Stuart Eves delighted us with “How the Universe is Trying to Kill Us – and How We can Stop It” in which he considered possible mechanisms to explain the surprising periodicity of global mass extinctions, with a focus on the way our solar system moves through the warped plane of the Milky Way every 30 million years or so.

If you want to read more about the effect of distant stars on our own solar system (and by implication, what encountering more of them as the solar system passes through the galactic disk) might mean for the stability of orbits, check out this article called Passing Stars Altered Orbital Changes in Earth and Other Planets, with its lovely illustration of the uncertainty of Earth’s orbit 56 million years ago that arises from the passing of a sun-like star 2.6 million years ago (which is about when we last passed though the galactic disk).

The world’s most powerful camera captures its first images of space

The Vera C Rubin observatory in Chile, home to the world’s most powerful digital camera, has released its first images, and to quote the ‘Super Soaraway Sun‘* (sorry!: WHAT A STUNNER!

*Let’s hope it doesn’t soar away in the light of the previous topic.

Swirling clouds of interstellar gas
The Trifid and Lagoon nebulae 9,000 light years away, captured by the Vera Rubin Telescope

The observatory is tasked with detecting potentially deadly earthbound asteroids in time for us to take protective measures (if you came to June’s PubSci you’ll have some idea what these might be and what the pitfalls are). It will also be seeking concrete evidence for “dark matter” which is the standard cosmological explanation for the way galaxies spin. You can read more about that – and learn why the observatory is named after Vera Rubin – on this page.

A farewell to the world’s oldest radio astronomer

A giant dish at Jodrell Bank observatory

The former Astronomer Royal, Sir Francis Graham-Smith who died at the age of 102, was the world’s oldest active radio astronomer according to Jodrell Bank Observatory where he was director from 1982 to 1990. Graham, as he was known, was only the second director of Jodrell Bank after Lowell himself, and technically retired in 1988 but he continued working as emeritus professor of radio astronomy at The University of Manchester. Graham published his final astronomy article earlier this year. You can see Sir Francis Graham-Smith’s photo and read his obituary on the BBC New website.

HOT NEWS: Exclusive ticket discount for a talk on the aurorae of Earth and beyond

Last of the astronomy items in this edition of the PubSci blog is an exclusive discount code for a talk called Understanding the Northern Lights – From Earth to Jupiter on Saturday 5th July.

If the recent aurorae over central and southern Britain have piqued your interest, head to the Royal Institution this Saturday evening to discover what they are, how they happen, and why it’s so significant to the search for extraterrestrial life that Jupiter’s moon Ganymede experiences aurorae.

The speaker, Marina Galand, is Professor of Planetary Science at Imperial College London. I met Marina a few weeks ago and was bowled over by her knowledge, enthusiasm and energy for this subject. It’s going to be a brilliant talk and to make it even better the Ri has kindly offered PubSci a whopping 25% discount for this event with the code LIGHTS25 (feel free to share).

Book on Eventbrite via the Ri Website – your phone camera won’t even need to be in night mode!

~

At last… July’s PubSci

(To be read in the voice of Viv Stanshall on Tubular Bells, for those of a certain vintage)

Book cover for PROOF - The Uncertain science of Certainty

 The nest PubSci talk is just 2 weeks away, on Weds 16th July, and we’re delighted to welcome Professor Adam Kucharski to explore the ideas behind his latest book, Proof: The Uncertain Science of Certainty.

How can we weigh up noisy evidence to decide how safe is an autonomous vehicle or judge somebody’s guilt or innocence?

Adam will explores how scientific opinion is formed, how to convince others of the facts, and what links wine and university exams, royalty and Guinness, cricket and robot racing.

Full details and the booking link are on PubSci’s Next Event page or you can book straight away on Eventbrite.

With over 25% of tickets already snapped [now at 30%] up at the time of writing, the best way to be certain of a place is to book yours today. Copies of Proof will be on sale at the event.

1/7/25 Posted by Richard Marshall, PubSci organiser and host.

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

PS In case you haven’t checked it out yet, science communicator and PubSci member, Ushashi Basu, recently wrote about PubSci in her excellent blog and interviewed me to find out how I came to be booking and introducing speakers for a public science outreach event in a pub, what led me into science communication, and what motivates me to communicate science.

It was a pleasure to chat with Ushashi over a coffee and look back at seven years of programming, promoting and hosting PubSci. You can read that interview here and see Ushashi’s other blog posts at https://ushashibasu.com/.

Hope to see you all at the Old KIng’s Head on Wednesday 16th July.

• • •

Keeping Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

June Blog Post: Upcoming Talks, an Exhibition, and a Show About How We Engage With Technology

In this post, I preview June’s PubSci talk and other great science events coming up, plus we reflect on May’s PubSci and share details of a special offer for anybody free this Friday. Read on!

June’s PubSci talk is already booking up fast – if you don’t want to miss out, head over to the booking page now – but before we look at that, I need to tell you about something happening on Friday 6th June something… yes, this evening!

Have you ever thought about how we engage with technology? Do you worry that you spend too much time online… or that your kids do? The Tim Arnold Company is offering 2 for 1 tickets on tonight’s performance of Super Connected, Tim’s multimedia show/film/gig/theatre /show at the Marylebone’s Cockpit Theatre, featuring the voice of Stephen Fry. The show starts at 7.30, so you might make it!

Are You Super Connected…?

Super Connected, the album, received rave reviews from the likes of Mojo and The Times for the music alone – however, it was conceived from the start as a feature film and theatre piece as well. Beyond entertainment, it’s a life-affirming challenge to how we interact with smart technology and how easily we let it monitor and control us – highly pertinent to anybody with kids today – and Tim has been all over the news with his campaign to liberate kids from screen addiction. Check out the showreel/trailer.

I’m telling you all this because I saw it last year, and it really is powerful as theatre and as a gig (as well as important and life-affirming). Use the code “super241” to get two tickets for the price of one. Why? It’s a press night and they want to fill the place with lovely audience! Booking via The Cockpit website.

Looking back at last month’s PubSci, on Wednesday 21st May we welcomed welcome Michael Cutts from the Royal Institution of Great Britain‘s demo team, famous for televised Christmas Lectures and live shows in the Faraday Lecture Theatre.

Taking us through through the Ri’s 225-year history of demonstrating science to audiences, Michael treated us to some great live demos, assisted by Professor David Ricketts, including two demos carried out by Michael Faraday himself.

Three men and two candles
Demonstrating that a flame is hollow, to the evident surprise of Henry VIII (Photo: Nithin Anand)

Many thanks to Michael, David, and the Ri’s Head of Heritage, Charlotte, New for sharing their passion, flair, and deep knowledge with us. As you can see, King Henry was quite entertained too.

A man hold a green glowing ball with a white ring inside it, silhouetted against a window.
It lives! Michael demonstrates the plasma toroid built by David (Photo: Richard Marshall)

~

Looking forward to this month’s event, I’m delighted to say that Dr Stuart Eves returns to PubSci on Wednesday 18th June with “Doomed? How the Universe is Trying to Kill Us – and How We can Stop It!”

A bright meteor streaks across the nighttime sky over a river
Fireball over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2013 (The Planetary Society)

Stuart will be exploring whether there’s a cosmic pattern underlying global mass extinctions found in the geological record and consider what role astronomers can play in preventing the next Big One. Full details on our Next Event page. Booking via Eventbrite. Don’t delay, half the tickets are already gone.

Other sciencey things happening in the next few weeks

Birkbeck Science Week: From Monday 9th June, Birkbeck, University of London, hosts a serious of public talks followed by a drinks reception, starting with How The Brain Invents Your Reality with Dr Daniel Yon. Do try and get to one of these talks if you can.

Plant zees pods
Seed Pods by Rob Kessler (Credit: Rob Kessler)

I just found out about a wonderful exhibition in south London by renowned science artist Rob Kessler. Rob is a fellow of the Linnean Society and former president of the British Science Association’s Science and the Arts Section. The work includes ink drawings, videos and highly magnified micrographs of plant specimens. Rob will be studying and working in the space throughout the exhibition, surrounded by his botanical library and herbarium specimens. STUDY suns until 28th June and is open only Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Details and times here: https://www.kenart.space/

• • •

Finally, science communicator and PubSci member, Ushashi Basu, has written about PubSci in her excellent blog and interviewed me to find out how I came to be the bloke introducing the speakers and what led me to science communication. It was a pleasure to chat with Ushashi over a coffee and recall how it is that I’ve been programming, promoting and hosting PubSci events for the past seven years. You can read that interview here and see Ushashi’s other blog posts at https://ushashibasu.com/.

Have a great June, and don’t forget to book your place for Wednesday18th.

Posted by Richard Marshall, PubSci organiser and host.

PubSci: Sipping • Supping • Science

• • •

Keep Up With Future Events

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled, and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

• • •

About PubSci talks

PubSci is organised and hosted by science communicator, Richard Marshall, assisted by Mike LucibellaEvents are held upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. No specialist knowledge is required, just curiosity. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a cash whip-round to cover expenses on the night – consider it “Pay What You Can Afford”. As few of us carry cash these days, you can make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help us continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

The evolution of humans from sitting in a chair to talking about science in a pub (after Darwin)

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

Next Event: 19th February 2025 | A Brief History of Big Bangs with Mark Hardman

With our Winter – Spring programme in full swing (and available to view, download or print here) I thought it’s time I blog about this week’s talk. With only a handful of tickets remaining, I’d hate anybody to miss out, so do grab yours ASAP if you’d like to come.

I hope you already had a chance to read up on it after the brief preview in my previous post – you may even have looked up the details on our Next Event page (where full information about the next talk is generally posted first) – but in case you haven’t or you rely on emails, blogs, RSS etc here’s what you need to know about February’s PubSci:

Why is London’s River Lea important in the history of explosives, how was Britain’s first satellite launched, and what was Barnes Wallis up to in Waltham Abbey? From 17th century gunpowder to 20th century government secrets, Mark Hardman tells the explosive history of “energetic materials” in Britain through the lens of Waltham Abbey Royal Gunpowder Mills.

A large Explosion
Boom! (Image sourced from Vecteezy)

On Wednesday 19th February, PubSci is delighted to welcome Mark Hardman to take us through the discovery of explosive materials and how they developed from simple gunpowder to modern day chemical compounds with uses from mining to munitions and from sparklers to space rockets.

Book now, or read on to learn more. Full details and booking on Eventbrite.

Since the 17th Century, Waltham Abbey Royal Gunpowder Mills has been at the heart of that story, involving some of the UK’s notable chemists and engineers – including, memorably, Sir Barnes Wallis of Dambusters fame – and it later became a top secret government research facility. As a volunteer at the Mills, as well as a an explosives engineer, Mark is ideally placed to take us on this fascinating journey through chemistry, industry, heritage and spaceflight.

An old picture the Guy Fawkes and his fellow plotters
Guy Fawkes and his alleged accomplices (National Archive)

Join us at the Old King’s Head when Mark takes us through the development of “energetic materials” such as explosives and propellants, introduces us to some of the key scientists and engineers who drove that progress, and explains the role Waltham Abbey Mills played in this story, including improving worker safety in a notoriously dangerous industry.

• • •
Today the Mills are a National Heritage visitor attraction and a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) open to the public, and Mark will finish his talk by introducing us to the Mills as they are now.

A small rocket or missile on a luncher

300 years of explosive history (Image courtesy of Waltham Abbey Gunpowder Mills)

PubSci talks are pay-what-you-can, and you can make your contribution when booking on eventbrite or in cash on the night. We are delighted to welcome Mark as the second speaker in our 2025 programme for another round of Sipping, Supping Science… in the pub.

• • •

Join us upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

We use Eventbrite to manage event numbers. Follow us on Eventbrite to be notified when new tickets become available. Reserve your place for this talk now!  PubSci is a pay-what-you-can event – please consider making a donation with your reservation to help us cover our costs.

About the speaker

A smiling man with grey hair and glasses
Mark Hardman

Mark Hardman is a volunteer at Waltham Abbey Royal Gunpowder Mills (WARGM) – a 170-acre heritage site with over 300 years of making explosives, propellants, and space rocket technology.

In his professional life, he is Secretary General of the European Association for the Safety in production and use of Propellants (EASSP) and board member of the Institute of Explosives Engineers (IExpE).

Prior to early retirement in 2022, Mark spent 8 years with a rocket motor company as UK Managing Director at Roxel and Programmes Director at Roxel Group.

Mark has a BSc in Physics and an MSc in Systems Engineering.

Don’t miss your chance to hear Mark’s talk on Wednesday 19th February.

• • •

To make sure you don’t miss out on future events, subscribe to our Google Calendar to be the first to know when new talks are scheduled and follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. You can also sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a traditional whip-round to cover expenses – consider it a “Pay What You Can” event. Very few of us carry cash these days, so you can also make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help PubSci continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

Check out the Future Events page where you can also subscribe to our Google Calendar so PubSci events automatically appear in your own Calendar.  You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

• • •

We meet on the third Wednesday of the month, upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge Underground (Borough High Street east side exit). Join us every month apart from December for a regular dose of Sipping, Supping & Science.

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA

New Year, New Programme, New Blog: PubSci returns on Wednesday 15th January with “How AI Won a Nobel Prize in Chemistry” (Rivka Isaacson)

Welcome to the first PubSci blog post of 2025.

It seems like an age since we wrapped up 2024’s events with a peek beneath the turf in Archaeologists vs Detectorists back in November, but we come bounding into the new year with the earliest date a third Wednesday could be – so get your diaries out, mark off Wednesday 15th January and read on to find out why you should get along to The Old King’s Head for the first PubSci talk of the year.

How did gaming AI help win the Nobel Prize? Why is ‘protein folding’ important, and why is it so hard to do? PubSci has the answers as we look at one of the most surprising Nobel Prize awards of last year.

On Wednesday 15th January, we are delighted to welcome Professor Rivka Isaacson of Kings College, London, to help us make sense of proteins and understand why the creators of AlphaFold got to share the 2024 prize for Chemistry.

A tangle of lines and arrows showing the structure of a protein
Section of a potential plant disease resistance protein (Source: AlphaFold)

Much of our bodies’ tiny cellular machinery is made of proteins which only function because they take on complex 3-d shapes. Understanding those shapes is essential to developing new medicines.

Proteins are initially formed by connecting amino acids in a straight line as if threading different beads onto a string. That’s the easy bit, but those chains then fold into complex mechanical shapes capable of carrying out the chemical reactions which maintain health. Predicting a protein’s final shape from its linear sequence is an enormous challenge which has plagued scientists for generations.

Protein_folding (Wikipedia)
Protein folding: from a string of beads to a complex 3-d structure

But in 2018 Google DeepMind launched AlphaFold, a powerful AI tool which represents a breakthrough in predicting protein structures, and in 2020 AlphaFold 2’s results were described as ‘astounding’ and ‘transformational’.

The 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to David Baker for computational protein design and to the team behind AlphaFold for “protein structure prediction’. Our speaker, Rivka Isaacson, has years of experience working on understanding the structure of proteins and with AlphaFold.

On 15th January, Rivka will talk about the history of the protein-folding problem, the different ways experimentalists have solved protein shapes over the years, and her direct experience of being a beta tester for this prize-winning AI tool, AlphaFold.

PubSci is delighted to welcome Rivka as our first speaker of 2025. 

 

A male scientist looking at a computer display of protein structure.
Exploring protein structure with AlphaFold

• • •

Join us upstairs at the Old King’s Head, near London Bridge tube. Doors open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Talks run for ~45 minutes and are followed by a Q&A session. The Old King’s Head has a happy hour before 7pm, and the kitchen serves excellent pub grub.

We use Eventbrite to manage event numbers. Follow us on Eventbrite to be notified when new tickets become available. Reserve your place for this talk now!  PubSci is a pay-what-you-can event – please consider making a donation with your reservation to help us cover our costs.

About the speaker

A woman with pink hair
Professor Rivka Isaacson

Rivka Isaacson is Professor of Molecular Biophysics in the Department of Chemistry, King’s College London.

She has a B.Sc. in Biochemistry from the University of Manchester and a Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Cambridge. She carried out post-doctoral research at Harvard Medical School and at Imperial College, London, subsequently working at the Imperial College Drug Discovery Centre before starting her own research group in 2009.

Rivka serves on the UKRI Physics of Life steering group and the executive committee for the national Collaborative Computing Project, and was the 2021 recipient of the Judith Howard prize from the Biophysical Sciences Institute at Durham University.

Rivka is passionate about interdisciplinarity, conducting projects across the arts-sciences interface, including a multimedia collaboration with London Fine Art Studios. In 2023 Rivka featured in the Royal Institution’s world famous Christmas Lectures.

Don’t miss the chance to join this wonderfully engaging speaker on Wednesday 15h January.

Bonus Fact: One of the creators of AlphaFold also created the classic 1994 computer game, Theme Park.

Support PubSci

There is no charge for attending PubSci talks, but we have a traditional whip-round to cover expenses – consider it a “Pay What You Can” event. Very few of us carry cash these days, so you can also make a donation when registering for ticketed events with Eventbrite. Please help PubSci continue putting on events. PubSci has no other source of funding.

We aim to keep PubSci accessible for all, although it is unsuitable for under 18s as we meet in the function room of  a pub. Regrettably, there is no wheelchair access. 

Check out the Future Events page where you can also subscribe to our Google Calendar so PubSci events automatically appear in your own Calendar.  You can find all our links on our LinkTree.

• • •

We meet on the third Wednesday of the month, upstairs at the Old King’s Head near London Bridge Underground (Borough High Street east side exit). Join us every month apart from December for a regular dose of Sipping, Supping & Science.

image-third-wednesdays

Address:

The Old King’s Head (upstairs room)
King’s Head Yard
45-49 Borough High Street
London SE1 1NA