The New York Academy of Sciences

Shaping Science with Nick Dirks

Science EN ↓ 22 episodes

Welcome to Shaping Science with Nick Dirks where we talk with experts from science, academia, industry, and beyond to explore the latest in research, education and innovation for the public good. Episodes are released on a bi-monthly basis.

Author

The New York Academy of Sciences

Category

Science

Podcast website

www.nyas.org

Latest episode

Jun 29, 2026

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Episodes

#21Andrea Wulf on the History of Science, How the Past Shapes the Present, and Bringing a Novelistic Style to Nonfiction 29.06.2026

Andrea Wulf is an internationally bestselling historian and author whose work has reshaped how we understand the relationship between science, nature, and culture. Across her work, Wulf brings to life the intellectual networks and ideas that have shaped modern understandings of the natural world, from Enlightenment science to Romantic philosophy. Her latest book, ‘The Traveler,’ is a sweeping biog...

#20 David Spergel on Cosmology, Scientific Discovery, and the Role of Philanthropy 15.06.2026

David Spergel is a theoretical astrophysicist and professor emeritus of astrophysical sciences at Princeton University. A renowned cosmologist, he helped lead NASA's landmark Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) mission, which revolutionized our understanding of the universe, and later chaired NASA's independent study team on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena. As president of the Simons Foun...

#19 Webb Keane on Fieldwork in Indonesia, Anthropology’s Role in the Development of AI, and Exploring Meaning in Everyday Life 01.06.2026

Webb Keane is the George Herbert Mead Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology at the University of Michigan and a leading thinker on ethics, religion, and meaning in everyday life. His work explores how belief, morality, and material objects shape who we are and howmodern ideas of sincerity, freedom, and responsibility came to be. Through fieldwork in Indonesia and wide‑ranging theoreti...

#18 Azra Raza on the Unique Challenges in Treating Blood Cancers, Becoming Her Late Husband’s Oncologist, and the Need for a More Humane, Patient-Centered Approach 18.05.2026

Azra Raza, MD, is a world leading cancer physician scientist and Professor of Medicine at Columbia University, where she directs the Myelodysplastic Syndrome Center. For more than four decades, she has been at the forefront of research into blood cancers, with a particular focus on detecting cancer at its very earliest stages. She is also the author of the acclaimed book The First Cell, which chal...

#17 Jonathan Metzl on Firearm Control, Vaccine Mandates, and the Rural Pushback Against Government  12.05.2026

 Jonathan Metlz, MD, PhD, joins Nick Dirks to discuss his educational journey that combined the sciences with the humanities, firearm culture in the American Heartland, and the growing skepticism of institutional expertise. Prof. Metzl is a physician, psychiatrist, sociologist and public intellectual whose scholarship and commentary explore the intersections of health, race, identity and violence...

#16 Sebastian Mallaby on the Role of Video Games in AI Development, the Magic of Human Cognition, and Demis Hassabis’ Insatiable Scientific Curiosity 20.04.2026

 Sebastian Mallaby,  author, journalist, and the Paul A. Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations, joins Nick Dirks to discuss his latest book, The Infinity Machine , a fascinating chronicle of Demis Hassabis and the rise of DeepMind.  Also read from Sebastian Mallaby:  https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/13/opinion/china-ai-america-chipmakers.html 00:00 In...

#15 Steven Johnson on 19th Century Literature, the Future of Academic Research, and the Role of the Humanities in AI Development  06.04.2026

Steven Johnson joins Nick Dirks to discuss his journey from majoring in semiotics to becoming a bestselling author widely known for his perspectives on the intersection of science, technology, and society. The author of 13 acclaimed books including  Everything Bad Is Good for You , and  Where Good Ideas Come From   – and the host of the Emmy-winning PBS/BBC series  How We Got to Now , Steven Johns...

#14 Britney Schmidt on Robotic Submersibles, Rising Sea Levels, and the Potential of Extraterrestrial Life 23.03.2026

Britney Schmidt, PhD, joins Nick Dirks to discuss what we can learn from earth’s harshest environments, what the Thwaites Glacier tells us about rising sea levels, and why she believes Europa deserves more attention than Mars. Dr. Britney Schmidt is a planetary scientist, glaciologist, and astrobiologist whose groundbreaking work explores the hidden oceans beneath ice worlds – both on Earth and be...

#13 Ron Gonen on Reducing Landfill Waste, Effective Messaging Around Sustainability, and the Case for Extended Producer Responsibility  09.03.2026

Ron Gonen, MBA, joins Nick Dirks to discuss the environmental benefits of the circular economy, how the military industrial complex fueled the rise of our consumer economy, and why focusing on taxes can be effective when convincing skeptics to be more environmentally conscious. Ron Gonen is an environmental entrepreneur, investor, and author who is the Founder and CEO of Closed Loop Partners, a Ne...

#12 Neurobiologist Stuart Firestein and Playwright Jake Brasch on a Moving New Off-Broadway Play and on the Ties that Bind Us - Aging, Family, Recovery and Memory 23.02.2026

Neurobiologist Stuart Firestein and playwright Jake Brasch join Nick Dirks on Shaping Science to discuss “The Reservoir,” a new Off-Broadway play that touches on universal themes, including aging, family, recovery and memory.   Stuart Firestein, PhD, a neurobiologist at Columbia University, also advises the Ensemble Studio Theatre/Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Science & Technology Project, who ar...

#11 Chandrika Tandon on Growing up in India, Navigating War-torn Lebanon, Transforming Higher Education and Music as Emotional Empowerment  09.02.2026

Chandrika Tandon joins Nick Dirks on Shaping Science to discuss how perseverance and determination have fueled every aspect of her life, from her childhood in India, to working her way up to the top of the corporate world as a partner at McKinsey, to becoming a visionary philanthropist with a passion for music and education. The Chair the Board of the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, which bears...

#10 Ian Bogost on Being an Interdisciplinarian, Lessons from the Dot-Com Era, and New Approaches to AI  26.01.2026

Ian Bogost, PhD, joins Nick Dirks in the tenth episode of Shaping Science to discuss the intersection of philosophy and technology, how gaming compares to previous moral panics, and new approaches to integrating AI in higher education. Prof. Bogost is a philosopher, author, game designer, and professor whose work explores the intersection of technology, media, and culture. He is currently Barbara...

#09 Nicolas Langlitz on Medical Anthropology, Neuropsychedelia, and the Decade of the Brain 12.01.2026

Nicolas Langlitz, MD, PhD, joins Nick Dirks in the ninth episode of Shaping Science to discuss medical anthropology, the anti-psychiatric movement, and the therapeutic potential of LSD. Prof. Langlitz is a German-born anthropologist and historian of science, currently serving as a Professor of Anthropology at The New School for Social Research., where he also oversees the Psychedelic Humanities La...

#08 Laura Spinney on the 1918 Flu Pandemic, the Origins of Language, and the Complexity of Identity 15.12.2025

Laura Spinney joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss how the “Spanish” flu got its name, why societies change over time, and the role of genetics and DNA in understanding language origins in Eastern Europe. Laura Spinney is a science journalist and author whose work explores how science, society, and culture intersect. She is best known for her international bestselle...

#07 Agustín Fuentes on Biological Anthropology, Sex as a Spectrum, and What It Means to be Human 01.12.2025

Agustín Fuentes, PhD , joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss his boundary-crossing work in anthropology; humanist questions around the power of belief; and the biological character of gender and sex. Dr. Fuentes is a biological anthropologist whose research challenges entrenched ideas about what it means to be human. A professor at Princeton University, he is known f...

#06 Angus Fletcher on the Hoax of Artificial General Intelligence, Teaching Creativity, and the Future of the Humanities 17.11.2025

Angus Fletcher, PhD, joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss how the humanities inform the sciences, the role of neurons as action initiators, and why he thinks artificial general intelligence (AGI) is a hoax. With degrees from the University of Michigan and Yale University, he is currently a professor of story science at Ohio State University’s Project Narrative. Trai...

#05 D. Graham Burnett on the Philosophy of Science, the Crisis of Human Fracking, and the Need for Attention Sanctuaries 03.11.2025

D. Graham Burnett, PhD, joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss the role of democracy in science and the impact technology has on attention spans. Prof. Burnett is the Henry Charles Lea Professor of History at Princeton University. He co-authored the paper “Attention sanctuaries: Social practice guidelines and emergent strategies in attention activism” published in Ann...

#04 Stuart Firestein on the Science of Smells, Learning from Failure, and the Utility of Uncertainty 20.10.2025

Stuart Firestein, PhD, joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss the science of smells, learning from failure, and the utility of uncertainty. Formerly the Chair of the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University, Prof. Firestein is the author of “Ignorance: How it Drives Science” and “Failure: Why Science is So Successful,” which have been translated into 1...

#03 Peter Salovey on Emotional Intelligence, Public Trust in Science, and the Future of Higher Education 06.10.2025

Peter Salovey joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss his groundbreaking work on emotional intelligence and lessons he’s learned after more than two decades in higher education leadership. Prof. Salovey served as the twenty-third president of Yale University from 2013 to 2024 and currently is Sterling Professor of Psychology at Yale with secondary appointments in the S...

#02 Ariel Ekblaw on the Intersection of Physics, AI, Philosophy, and Ethics in Space Exploration  22.09.2025

Ariel Ekblaw, PhD, founder and CEO of Aurelia Institute, joins Nick Dirks in the latest episode of Shaping Science to discuss the complexity and promise of modern space exploration. Dr. Ekblaw talks about the work her nonprofit is doing in developing “space LEGOs” to create customizable space structures for humans, the utility of zero gravity for medical applications, and her thoughts on democrati...

#01 Mary Woolley on Threats to Science, the Role of Advocacy, and Funding Research 09.09.2025

Mary Woolley, President of Research! America, joins Nick Dirks in the premiere episode of Shaping Science, The New York Academy of Sciences' new podcast. Mary discusses her more than three-decade career at the helm of Research! America, the importance of federal support for research, and hope for the future of science, despite recent challenges. This episode of Shaping Science was made possibl...

Introducing the "Shaping Science" Podcast 05.08.2025

Welcome to the "Shaping Science" podcast where we talk with experts from science, academia, industry, and beyond to explore the latest in research, education and innovation for the public good.

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