Malaria, origins and a potential new treatment
How malaria jumped species and why Antarctica may hold a new treatment. Does maths create its own reality? Or is it reality itself?
A variety of malarial parasites have existed amongst the great apes for millennia, we look at how one of them jumped species and why humans became its preferred host.
And from Antarctica we hear about a potential new treatment for malaria found in a deep sea sponge.
We also look at why improved monitoring is changing our perceptions of earthquakes and follow the story of an endangered Polynesian snail.
What exactly is the relationship between mathematics and reality? Thatβs the impossibly difficult question we have been set this week by our listener Sergio in Peru. Itβs one thatβs been pondered by humans for millennia: the Greek philosopher Pythagoras believed βAll is numberβ.
Is maths a human construct to help us make sense of reality - a tool, a model, a language? Does maths create its own reality? Or is it reality itself?
(Photo: A young gorilla. Credit: Hermes Images/AGF/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
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- Sun 20 Oct 2019 14:06GMTΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Americas and the Caribbean
- Sun 20 Oct 2019 15:06GMTΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ World Service News Internet
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Unexpected Elements
The news you know, the science you don't