Badassery Magazine October 2017 Issue 17 | Page 21

G reat Caesar’s salad we human-shaped humans are a comparative species aren’t we? We can’t seem to avoid measuring everything against something that came before. It’s like a... ahem. Right. Dear reader, this train of thought was sent careening out of the station by an article I read back in January of this year (which I can sadly no longer find online) about a remarkable young wom- an named Sabrina Pasterski. The article described how Pasterski, now a 22 year old first-generation Cuban-Ameri- can born and bred in the suburbs of Chicago, not to mention an MIT graduate and Harvard Ph.D. candidate in physics, caught the eye of the top professors at MIT when she built her own single engine plane. At fourteen. So far, she’s caught the attention of the best and brightest of the propeller heads at NASA and even Jeff Bezos, founder of Am- azon and aerospace company Blue Origin, promising her a job whenever she’s ready. that's not even remotely relevant. I point it out only because often articles written about remark- able women spend inordinate amounts of time focused on things that seem at best, frivo- lous, and at worst, a distraction from the achievements of the woman in question. woman could be the “next Albert Einstein.” That’s quite an hon- our to bestow on a 22 year old, and as far I can tell, it’s entirely warranted. It got me to thinking (a process that rarely ends well it must be said) about how, as humans, we use comparison to measure and grade our world. I could prattle on endlessly about such things, however the shad- ows grow long and I must return to the gravamen of my text, lest I lose you to the beguiling black hole of vacuous diversion and distraction that is the world wide inter-web-net. I admit that my immediate, knee-jerk reaction to the head- line was, “Well that’s all well and good, but instead of the next Einstein, why can’t she be the first Pasterski?” Upon reflection, I realized that the comparison is just our way of understanding the significance of this young woman’s brilliance. As much as we would love to be judged on our own merits alone, it can be difficult to fathom without some sort of comparison. Anyway, I began this essay by suggesting that humans are an incredibly comparative species: it seems like ages ago doesn’t it? We’ve been through so much together since then. But we can pick up from where we began. The headline of the article stat- ed that this amazingly talented and obviously brilliant young This is, of course, science at its best. Incredible discoveries by one person are often built upon the work of others, either by con- firming or refining previously Her physics work has revolved around semiclassical Virasoro symmetry of the quantum gravity S-matrix and Low’s subleading soft theorem as a symmetry of QED. Obviously. To the author’s credit, the arti- cle doesn’t delve deeply into the fact that Pasterski has never had a boyfriend, because honestly, 20