Tag Archives: Science

THE LAST LIGHT OF ALEXANDRIA

How Hypatia of Alexandria’s murder marked the moment reason fell to zeal—and why her lesson still echoes in an age ruled by algorithms.

By Michael Cummins, Editor, October 5, 2025

In the waning light of Alexandria’s golden age, a woman stood at the threshold of the cosmos. Draped in the robes of a philosopher, Hypatia of Alexandria taught mathematics as if it were music, astronomy as if it were prayer, and philosophy as if it were the architecture of the soul. She wrote no manifestos and led no armies. She taught. She reasoned. And for this—for the audacity of clarity in a world turning toward dogma—she was torn from the world. Her death was not merely a murder; it was a cultural wound, a severing of the classical from the medieval, of inquiry from ideology. The light she guarded—the flickering flame of secular, public reason—was extinguished in the very place conceived to protect it.

To speak of Hypatia is to speak of a city that believed knowledge could civilize the human spirit. Alexandria, founded by Alexander and tended by the Ptolemies, was the ancient world’s neural network, an experiment in global curiosity. Within its Library and Museum—the first great research institute—scholars mapped the heavens, dissected geometry, and debated the soul’s immortality under vaulted ceilings that smelled of parchment and sea salt. It was in this monumental, decaying marble world that Hypatia was born, around 370 CE, to Theon, the Library’s last known scholar. Her father taught her what Euclid and Eratosthenes had discovered, but she learned what they had meant: that geometry was not sterile abstraction but a form of devotion, a way of approaching perfection through reason.

She inherited the lineage of the ancients—the serene logic of Euclid, the restless measurement of Eratosthenes, the astronomical audacity of Ptolemy—and fused them into something both rigorous and spiritual. In late antiquity, knowledge still shimmered with moral purpose. Neoplatonism, the philosophy she championed, held that all things emanated from a single divine source, and that the human mind could ascend toward it through contemplation and mathematics. Numbers were not quantities but metaphors of being; to trace a circle was to imitate eternity. For Hypatia, geometry was not an escape from the world but its transfiguration—each theorem a small proof of cosmic coherence. It was not rebellion but refinement, a path to God that required no priest—and therefore could not be permitted.

Her genius lay in making the abstract visible. She wrote commentaries on Diophantus’s Arithmetica, clarified Ptolemy’s Almagest, and edited Apollonius’s Conics, ensuring future astronomers could still plot the curves of planets and light. Yet her intellect was not confined to parchment. She improved the astrolabe, designed hydroscopes to measure fluid density, and demonstrated that science was not the enemy of spirituality but its instrument. In Hypatia’s hands, philosophy became a navigation system—an attempt to chart truth in a universe governed by reason.

Imagine her in the lecture hall: morning light slanting through the colonnade, dust motes rising like miniature stars. A semicircle of students—Greeks, Egyptians, Romans, Jews, Christians—sit cross-legged at her feet. “You see,” she tells one, “a circle is not only a form—it is an argument for eternity.” Another asks, “And where is the soul in all this?” She pauses, chalk in hand. “In the harmony,” she says, smiling. The air hums with the audacity of free exchange. In an age dividing along creeds, her classroom was a sanctuary of synthesis.

At night, when the city’s noise dimmed and the harbor lanterns shimmered against the water, she would walk the colonnade alone. The scrolls in her study carried the scent of dust and oil. She read by lamplight until her fingers grew black with soot. To her students, she was certainty incarnate; alone, she seemed to understand that clarity provokes envy—that serenity itself is a kind of heresy. Even the stars she charted seemed to dim slightly under the weight of her foresight.

Her authority rested not on birth or ordination but on rational mastery—an unsettling legitimacy that bypassed both patriarchs and priests. She was an unmarried woman commanding reverence in a public space. Her followers were loyal not to a doctrine but to the discipline of thought itself. That was her heresy.

By the early fifth century, the harmony she embodied had begun to collapse. Alexandria had become a city of sharpened edges: pagan temples shuttered, Jewish enclaves under siege, imperial statues toppled and replaced by crosses. The Roman Empire was disintegrating; in its vacuum rose new centers of power, most formidable among them the Church. Bishop Cyril, brilliant and autocratic, sought to consolidate both spiritual and civic control. The imperial prefect Orestes—Hypatia’s friend and intellectual peer—defended the older ideal of the secular city. Between them stood the philosopher, calm and unarmed, the last civil defense against clerical supremacy.

The city had become a mirror of the empire’s exhaustion. Pagan artisans carved crosses beside the fading faces of their old gods; traders whispered prices under the sound of sermons. In the streets, theology replaced law. Orestes issued decrees that no one obeyed; Cyril’s sermons moved armies. The parabalani patrolled the harbor, their tunics stained from tending the sick and, at times, from beating the unbeliever. What began as civic unrest curdled into ritual violence—not just a fight for power, but for the right to define what counted as truth.

The conflict between Hypatia and Cyril was more than political. It was metaphysical. She represented individual, discovered truth; he, collective, inherited truth. Her worldview required no mediator between human reason and the divine. His authority depended on the indispensability of mediation. To Cyril, Neoplatonism’s notion that one could approach God through geometry and contemplation was blasphemy—it made the soul its own priest. The Church could not tolerate such independence.

One March afternoon, the mob found her carriage. They dragged her through the streets to a church—irony as architecture. Inside, beneath mosaics of saints, they stripped her, flayed her with oyster shells, and burned what remained. Socrates Scholasticus, a Christian historian, wrote simply: “Such a deed brought great disgrace upon Cyril and the Church of Alexandria.” It was not a killing; it was an exorcism. By tearing her apart, they sought to purge the city of its final pagan ghost—the living remnant of Athens’ rational soul.

Orestes, her ally, could not avenge her. The Empire, hollowed by decay, turned away. Cyril triumphed, later sanctified as a saint. The rule of law yielded to the rule of zeal. And so, with Hypatia’s death, an epoch ended. The library’s embers cooled, the lamps of the Museum darkened, and Europe entered its long medieval night.

For nearly a thousand years she survived only as rumor. Then the Enlightenment rediscovered her. Gibbon saw in her death the moment “barbarism and religion triumphed.” Voltaire invoked her as evidence that superstition kills what it cannot comprehend. Hypatia’s revival became part of a broader reckoning—a rebellion against inherited authority. To Enlightenment thinkers, she was the prototype of their own project: the reclamation of reason from revelation.

To later feminists, she became something more. Her murder revealed a longer pattern—the way intellectual women are punished not for ignorance but for illumination. Mary Wollstonecraft read her story as an ancestral warning; Simone de Beauvoir as a prelude to every modern silencing of the female intellect. To them, Hypatia was not just the first martyr of reason but its first woman martyr—the proof that wisdom in a woman’s voice has always been political.

Even now, her image flickers at the edge of cultural memory: the philosopher as secular saint, the teacher as threat. She has become the emblem of every rational mind undone by hysteria. Yet her deeper legacy lies not only in her martyrdom but in her method—the belief that the world is comprehensible, and that comprehension is a moral act.

And what, sixteen centuries later, does her story demand of us? We, too, live in an Alexandria of our own making, a world of infinite information and vanishing wisdom. Our libraries are digital, our mobs algorithmic. The algorithm has become the modern parabalani, shredding context and nuance for the sake of engagement. Knowledge no longer burns by fire; it corrodes by speed. We scroll instead of study, react instead of reflect. What once was a civic agora has become a coliseum of certitude.

Somewhere in a dim university office, a woman corrects her students’ proofs by the light of her laptop. She teaches them to think slowly in a world that rewards speed, to doubt the easy answer, to hold silence as rigor. Outside, the din of the feed hums like an approaching crowd. She doesn’t know it, but she’s teaching Hypatia’s lesson: that the mind’s true courage lies not in certainty but in patience.

Her challenge endures. The purpose of philosophy is not to win the argument but to chart the truth, even when the world insists on remaining lost. She reminds us that every age must relearn how to think freely, and that freedom of thought, once lost, returns only through vigilance.

To honor Hypatia is not merely to remember her death but to practice her discipline: to teach, to reason, to listen. The world will always be noisy, half-mad with conviction. Somewhere, in the imagined quiet of that vanished library, a woman still draws circles on marble, tracing the harmonies of a cosmos we have not yet earned. If she could look up now, she would find the same constellations unchanged—Orion still hunting, Cassiopeia still boasting, the curve of the moon unbroken. The geometry she once traced on marble persists in the heavens, indifferent to history’s convulsions. That, perhaps, was her final comfort: that reason, like starlight, travels slowly but never dies. It only waits for another mind, somewhere in the future, to lift its face and see.

THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

Science Essays: ‘The Stagnation Of Physics’

AEON MAGAZINE (April 1, 2025) by Adrien De Sutter:

Browse a shelf of popular science books in physics and you’ll often find a similar theme. Whether offering insights into The Hidden Reality (2011), Something Deeply Hidden (2019) or Our Mathematical Universe (2014), these books hint at an underlying, secret world waiting to be unravelled by physicists – a domain beyond our sensory perception that remains their special purview.

‘It’s akin to knowing everything about sand dunes … but not knowing what a grain of sand is made of’

Over its history, physics has delivered elegant and accurate descriptions of the physical Universe. Today, however, the reality physicists work to uncover appears increasingly removed from the one they inhabit. Despite its experimental successes, physics has repeatedly failed to live up to the expectation of delivering a deeper, ‘final’ physics – a reality to unify all others. As such, physicists appear forced to entertain increasingly speculative propositions.

Yet, with no obvious avenues to verify such speculations, physicists are left with little option but to repeat similar approaches and experiments – only bigger and at greater cost – in the hope that something new may be found. Seemingly beset with a sense of anxiety that nothing new will be found or that future experiments will reveal only further ignorance, the field of fundamental physics is incentivized to pursue ever more fanciful ideas.

———————————

It may even require that we abandon doing physics altogether, in the attainment of an expanded reality that not only accepts but encourages the possibility of difference and more. Or, as the speculative fiction writer Ursula Le Guin once put it, what we require are ‘the realists of a larger reality’.

READ MORE

Adrien De Sutter completed his PhD in sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London, and is a visiting fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Germany. An interdisciplinary researcher specialising in science and technology studies and the history and philosophy of science, he focuses on the philosophical, sociological and political implications of fundamental physics research.

Mathematics Essay: ‘Beyond Causality’

AEON (February 14, 2025): In 1959, the English writer and physicist C P Snow delivered the esteemed Rede Lecture at the University of Cambridge. Regaled with champagne and Marmite sandwiches, the audience had no idea that they were about to be read the riot act. Snow diagnosed a rift of mutual ignorance in the intellectual world of the West. On the one hand were the ‘literary intellectuals’ (of the humanities) and on the other the (natural) ‘scientists’: the much-discussed ‘two cultures’.

Mind and world are no separate spheres that must first be connected. Rather, both depend on each other

Snow substantiated his diagnosis with anecdotes of respected literary intellectuals who complained about the illiteracy of the scientists but who themselves had never heard of such a fundamental statement as the second law of thermodynamics. And he told of brilliant scientific minds who might know a lot about the second law but were barely up to the task of reading Charles Dickens, let alone an ‘esoteric, tangled and dubiously rewarding writer … like Rainer Maria Rilke.’

Mathematics mediates a conciliatory view that avoids the mistake of the naive realist and the naive idealist…

Ludwig Wittgenstein once said: ‘I want to show the colourfulness of mathematics.’ In that spirit, I placed mathematics at the centre of my project because, in my view, mathematics searches along more of these many paths than any other intellectual discipline. It is connected on a deep level both with the natural sciences and the humanities. It bridges the gulf between them, and it does so by putting certain metaphysical and epistemological dogmas into question, as will become clear in the following.

READ MORE

Gordon Gillespie is an actuary, quantitative risk manager and data scientist. He has a doctorate in philosophy and is the author of the German-language book The Oracle of Numbers: A Short Philosophy of Mathematics (2023). He lives in Rüdesheim, Germany.