Tag: metaphors

  • Peptides, wellness and woo: A linguistic analysis

    Peptides, wellness and woo: A linguistic analysis

    My recent blog posts have mainly dealt with topics focusing on AI and metaphors; but for a while now I wanted to get back to writing something about biology, a field which has fascinated me for a long time. Then I saw an article in The Guardian on an injectable ‘peptide craze’ sweeping the US,…

  • Making and unmaking AI metaphors and magic

    Making and unmaking AI metaphors and magic

    Twenty years ago, Noel and Amanda Sharkey, seminal contributors to early AI debates, wrote an article on artificial intelligence and natural magic which deserves to be read again today. They focus on robots and could probably not have foreseen the advances made in the last three years in generative AI, but what they say holds…

  • Moltbook: Snapshots of a metaphorical firework

    Moltbook: Snapshots of a metaphorical firework

    (Now also available as podcast!!) In late January 2026, a social network appeared where only AIs could post and within days, the internet had responded with an explosion of parodies, panic, and metaphors that revealed as much about us as about the bots. In this post I have taken a few snapshots of this mimetic…

  • Metaphors for AI: Networks, holes and loops

    Metaphors for AI: Networks, holes and loops

    I have been observing metaphors for generative AI for some time. This does not mean that I understand what’s going on in AI, but they provide me with an illusion of knowledge. They throw a net or mesh of metaphors over the topic that provides something of an epistemological safety net. But sometimes that net…

  • Metaphorical genres in science communication: From gothic discovery to domestic intervention

    Metaphorical genres in science communication: From gothic discovery to domestic intervention

    I was idly scrolling Bluesky for some news that was not depressing when I chanced upon an article by Roger Highfield dealing with a recent advance in gene editing. It reminded me of two previous posts I had written, one back in 2016 on “Precision metaphors in a messy biological world” and another in which…

  • Situational metaphors, satire and sense-making

    Situational metaphors, satire and sense-making

    I was idly perusing Bluesky on 13 August when I read this exchange: “This evening, a fire truck was coming from the opposite direction, sirens blaring, lights blazing. There was an obstinate car that refused to make way. I later realized it was a Waymo driverless car. It didn’t know better. I hope that clueless…

  • The Making Science Public blog: An introduction

    The Making Science Public blog: An introduction

    I have now said farewell several times to my old university blogging platform, but I haven’t really started building up a new readership here. Newbies to the blog might wonder what the old Making Science Public blog was all about; what topics it covered before venturing to press the subscribe button….. As a gentle introduction…

  • Geoengineering and metaphors, 2009 to 2025: Continuity and change

    Geoengineering and metaphors, 2009 to 2025: Continuity and change

    Since around 2006, I have been interested in speculations about geoengineering, that is, attempts to deal with climate change by directly intervening in the planet’s atmosphere, oceans, or land. Such interventions include pulling carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or dampening solar radiation. In the UK there have been three inflection points in reflections about such…

  • Wildfires in the UK: How do we talk about them?

    Wildfires in the UK: How do we talk about them?

    On 1 May 2025, a member of the UK Meteorological Office noted on Bluesky that: “With the temperature at Kew Gardens reaching 28.0°C and still climbing, it is now officially the warmest start to May on record for the UK.” At the same time, the Metro newspaper reported that “UK records hottest start to May…

  • Compound weather: Some linguistic musings

    Compound weather: Some linguistic musings

    You might have heard of a ‘compound fracture’ or of ‘compound interest’ or even, if you are a linguist, of a ‘compound noun’ (nouns consisting of more than one noun). But have you come across ‘compound weather’? I recently came across this expression when looking at some extreme weather disasters which were compounded by compound…