Black physicist rethinks the 'dark' in dark matter - Fuck this gay nigger world.

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(CNN) When many kids were running around playing tag or video games, Chanda Prescod-Weinstein was thinking about particle physics.

After her mother took her to see "A Brief History of Time," Errol Morris' 1991 documentary about theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking, she fell in love with the discipline. She was just 10 years old.

Nearly 30 years later, she is the first Black woman to hold a tenure-track faculty position in theoretical cosmology as an assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire. Prescod-Weinstein is one of the country's few core faculty members of both physics and women's and gender studies departments at a higher institution.

In her new book, "The Disordered Cosmos: A Journey into Dark Matter, Spacetime, and Dreams Deferred," Prescod-Weinstein invites readers into the universe as she sees it -- and as a self-described queer agender Black woman, she sees it differently than many people.

Her book chapters -- including "The Physics of Melanin," "Black People Are Luminous Matter" and "The Anti-Patriarchy Agender" -- show her focus "at the intersection of astrophysics and particle physics" and at the intersection of physics and Black feminist thought and anti-colonial theory.

Her book is a tour of particles like quarks and leptons, as well as the axions that Prescod-Weinstein specializes in, but it also explores the various structural oppressions that affect who gets to study and discover them -- and even who gets to name those discoveries.

She points to terms like WIMP -- weakly interacting massive particles -- and its relative MACHO, or massive astrophysical compact halo objects, as examples. "You can tell that physicists love an acronym," she wrote, "and that the physicists who came up with WIMP and MACHO were almost certainly men."

Women and people of color, she notes, are routinely left out of histories of science, despite their important role in the progress that White men are credited with making. Prescod-Weinstein asks us to consider how science would be different if scientists were from more diverse backgrounds, and if it incorporated Indigenous scientific knowledge and voices.

We spoke to Prescod-Weinstein about her ideas and her hopes for future scientists.

CNN: The subtitle of your book combines dark matter, space-time and dreams deferred. How do those three things intersect for you?

Chanda Prescod-Weinstein:
I'm a dark matter expert, and so of course, the dark matter -- an invisible form of matter that we believe comprises 80% of the universe -- is going to figure into it in some big way. And dark matter exists in this larger context of space-time, which is how Einstein's theory of relativity requires us to think of space and time, as existing in relationship with each other.

I also wanted to be honest that this was going to be part of the larger social context and not just the larger physical context. That larger social context is dreams deferred. That is both a comment on the social issues that I raise in the book, but also a comment on having to raise the social issues.

CNN: How so?

Prescod-Weinstein:
"Dreams deferred" refers to a suite of poems by Langston Hughes, about the Black experience under White supremacy in America and in all of its facets, and that there are still limits on how we live. One of the things that attracted me to particle physics and particle physics as a career path when I was 10 years old was that it seemed so far away from the problems that my parents were confronting.


When I was a young person dreaming of particles, it was never my dream to write a book about popular science that also problematizes how science happens. And yet here I am doing this work.

CNN: Tell us more about your parents and how their work influenced you.

Prescod-Weinstein:
I had a political vocabulary that was maybe a little bit unusual for a kid who was interested in physics. My parents were both political organizers. I was raised by a Black feminist thinker who was also doing Black feminist organizing. She was spending a lot of time dealing with the problem of the way poverty is criminalized in the United States. I was also at points going to picket lines with my father, who was a union organizer and, at one point, a union officer. I was seeing a lot of bad things, and I was hearing a lot of bad stories.

Particle physics just made it seem like there is a universe out there, and life isn't just about what's messed up on our little planet. And that was really exciting -- that maybe there was a way to get away from the bad stuff.

But it turned out that it wasn't just my job to do the things in physics that excite me, but to think about what I was doing in a larger social context and the impact of my work on the larger community.

The question that I'm interested in, ultimately, is how can we be in good relations with each other and what is the role that scientists play in what kinds of relationships we have with each other? But also: What is the role that particle physics and cosmology can play in promoting good relations?

CNN: You note that White people sometimes find the term "dark matter" scary and foreboding, and that for terms like that and others, "a Black feminist physicist working in the 1960s would never have used this language." How would such terms be different if scientists had been and were now a more diverse group?

Prescod-Weinstein:
My biggest pet peeve around the phrase "dark matter" is that it's not a good name for it, because it misrepresents the properties of the thing. It's not dark; it's actually invisible.

The thing about a question like yours is that it's speculative fiction. At the time that dark matter got its name, there were almost no Black men and literally zero Black women with a doctorate in physics. So, we have no idea. It would be another 40 years between when dark matter got its name around 1933, and when Willie Hobbs Moore got her doctorate in physics in 1972 at the University of Michigan; she was the first African American to earn a doctorate in physics.

But it's an interesting question to ask, and I think it's one that we have to ask, knowing that there never actually will be a clear, definitive answer. And at the same time, we have to grapple with these alternative futures that were foreclosed because of White supremacy, because of patriarchy.

CNN: Can you give an example of someone whose future in physics was curtailed because of White supremacy?

Prescod-Weinstein:
Elmer Imes was the second African American to earn a doctorate in physics, which he did at the University of Michigan in 1918. His work as an experimentalist actually played a really important role in providing evidence for quantum mechanics. When you're situating the history of how quantum mechanics came to be accepted as a correct model for physical reality, Elmer Imes should be part of that story.

The way that students of physics typically learn the history of the field is through anecdotes that their professors told them during class and through anecdotes that are littered throughout their textbooks. But Black people have our own community historians, like Dr. Jami Valentine Miller, the first African American woman to earn a doctorate in physics from Johns Hopkins University. She runs African American Women in Physics and has been keeping track of Black women who have a doctorate in physics and related areas. A lot of these stories get transferred through oral communication, even if no one has been given the opportunity to write it up for a publication.

I think publishers have a really big role to play here when writing their quantum mechanics textbooks. I think that we are long overdue for a history of Black people in American physics.

CNN: Would having more physicists who look similar to you have made a difference in your path?

Prescod-Weinstein:
I talk in the book about meeting Nadya Mason, an incredibly accomplished condensed matter experimentalist at University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, who is also a Black woman. She shares my heritage: one Black, non-Jewish parent and one White Jewish parent. Meeting Nadya was incredibly important for me, but we were both the kinds of students who got into Harvard. This kind of representation is particularly helpful for the chosen few. But if you have a situation where you're living in a bubble of a chosen few, effectively the power relations are unchanged. Yes, it is important to see examples. But if those examples are exceptions, then you have a problem.

I don't want to undercut the significance of my accomplishments, because I know that I have worked hard and that I have overcome barriers. I also know that as a light-skinned woman who has a Harvard degree, I experienced less racism because of my appearance.

I don't think that representation or diversity and inclusion necessarily bring us to material change that actually changes those power relations. What we need are a different set of power relations.

CNN: You talk about making the "night sky accessible" to all children. What does that mean to you?

Prescod-Weinstein:
It starts with a very simple question: How do we create the conditions so that every child has access to a dark night sky and the opportunity to sit and wonder underneath it? It has very deep implications, because that requires thinking about public transportation and how people get access to dark night skies. It requires thinking about pollution and whether dark night skies continue to be possible. And it has to do with thinking about patriarchy: making it safe to be out under a darkening sky.

It has to do with making sure that parents aren't working 80-hour weeks because their jobs don't pay a living wage. It's about making sure that everyone has access to good health care, to clean water, to food, because it is hard to just enjoy and wonder when you are either being poisoned or when you are hungry.

At the end of the day, even though I have pretty extensive critiques of the scientific community, at heart I'm still a scientist who is really passionate and excited about the fact that we can use math to describe the universe. It's such an incredible thing that it starts with learning to count when you're a toddler and ends with being able to describe to my students how gold is made in stellar explosions.

Each generation is tasked with doing the work of trying to push the boundaries further into freedom. I find myself hoping that someone from the next generation will actually get to live my dream, which is enjoying learning about the universe and telling its stories, without being distracted by racism, transphobia and other forms of oppression.
 
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She couldn't deny her father's heritage even if she wanted to. Not with a face like that
This article is insane:

I was really struck by this passage in your book: “We cannot talk about the wonders of the night sky without talking about the fact that people are running for their lives beneath the same celestial structures that I get paid to think about every day. I do not want to wait to find out how this story ends if we don’t get in the way because I know, and as a Black Jew feel in every fiber of my being, what happened when Germans did the same.” I was just hoping you could talk more about why it was important for you to emphasize this?

There were conversations about people being kept in the camps on the borders. And I know referring to them as concentration camps is an extremely sensitive subject. I have certainly been one of those people who’s been like, let’s be really careful about what language we are using here. But at some point, you’re having semantic debates while people are being tortured. And what I needed that audience to know is that while it was great to think about cosmology, we could not just sit in East LA and be like, “Isn’t this all beautiful?” while people were being tortured, and while people were literally walking hundreds of miles to the border only to be put in these camps. Or worse, deported back to places where maybe they were going to be killed, or raped, or raped then killed. And also DREAMers who are being sent to countries where they don’t necessarily speak the language, where they don’t have community. Just this incredible human suffering. So I felt I could not go home and talk about science, and what’s beautiful, without talking about what’s ugly.

Imagine paying a good deal of money to have an astrophysicist come speak and she spends a significant portion of time lecturing about a crisis that has nothing to do with her actual accomplishments in astrophysics. Also, the muh holocaust bit done by someone who had 0 family in the holocaust and only uses the genocide for political points

I love how you open and close the book with a Hebrew prayer. Can you talk about why you wanted to include that in your memoir?

I should say I don’t think of the book as a memoir. I even have a discussion in the introduction about why I think people are going to frame it as a memoir, and why that doesn’t happen to white people who write books about science. I even ended up having a public back and forth about how the Library of Congress was originally going to categorize the book as “African American biography” and I was like, but who is it a biography of?
Finally gets to answering the question in another question:

So that said, as a Jewish person, the tradition is we open everything with a prayer, and we close everything with a prayer — whatever kind of book it is, we open and we close with that.

Not really a tradition but whatever:

[My rabbi,] Rabbi Toba [Spitzer], said to me, “Since your book is about the night sky, why not the Maariv? Why not the evening prayer, where we welcome in the evening?” And then she looked at the book and said, “I think that the Traveler’s Prayer is the right one for the ending.”

One of the things that I really appreciated — and I guess this is a super Reconstructionist thing — is she sent me a couple of different English interpretations, but then really said to me, “You have freedom to interpret this as you will.” And you can see, if you look at the Maariv, the English translation that I put there is really kind of a creative interpretation by me; I take out Adonai, I take out God, for the most part, and I insert the universe. I use the phrase “living universe.”

I was thinking through, how do I want Judaism to speak to my book? And how does my book speak to who I am as a Jew? I just thought it was very important to do things in the book that were Jewish, as a way of saying, I can write a book about science, I can signal my Jewish identity, and also, I don’t need to talk about God.

>important that she includes prayers for her book bc "muh tradition"
>explicitly takes out god out of the prayers and replaces it with the "living universe"
>god in judaism is literally maintaining the universe by actively giving it Divine energy

Look at that fucking schnoz! That's the Heebiest damn Jewnose that can probably smell gold and a rolling dime within a 4 mile radius I've ever seen! Ha chaa chaa chaa!

I'm sorry to get spicy but frankly I've had a bad fucking day/night and this Jew's bullshit really pisses me off, these people really do seem to love to ruin whatever they touch, they can't seem to help themselves, put something in front of them and they'll find some way to subvert and corrupt it and then they act surprised when they piss people, it's a real mystery as to why that happens.

The irony is this woman's not even technically a real Jew if her mother wasn't Jewish, but she looks and sounds like a stereotypical reality hating Jew with the cherry on top being she's half black, so we get a double dose of civilization destroying bullshit, oh goody.

How anyone can say this bullshit with a straight face and how anyone can listen to this bullshit with a straight face is beyond this white boy's ability to comprehend.

Welcome to Reconstructionist/Reform/"conservative" Judaism, where just saying you're jewish is good enough. These people subvert everything and they started with their own religion which they don't even understand. As she says herself:
Yeah, absolutely. I’m a Reconstructionist Jew, so that means always thinking about what is the life of Judaism, what is the relationship between Judaism and the wider world, because I feel like that is [founder of Reconstructionist Judaism] Mordecai Kaplan’s legacy. My Judaism roots me in my values, and that’s a really important thing.
Notice that she says that Judaism roots her in her values. Her religion exists to serve her, not the other way around, and she is fine modifying it to fit her agenda. She's actually very ignorant about Judaism when it comes to actual fundamental facts about the religion. When she talks about the seder, she says
A big piece of Passover is welcoming the stranger, right? That’s part of our story. We actually set a place at the table for Elijah, we open the door for Elijah, who isn’t a stranger, but in some sense, he is. There is the narrative of — one of my middle names is the Sojourner — of being a sojourner in a strange land. The tradition of giving people who don’t have a place to go during Passover, like their family doesn’t celebrate, or they can’t go home, is a strong Jewish American tradition.
The traditional call for strangers to come in during the seder comes from around the times of the Second Temple and the language of the ritual changes from Biblical Hebrew to Aramaic so that strangers would be able to understand the invitation in the commonly spoken tongue of the time but apparently American Jews came up with the tradition.

"Jews" like her make me wish, as a Jewish person myself, that the holocaust was a tiny bit more effective against the right people. A person like her who claims oppression like this should experience actual oppression to the point where she has to sit in the back of the oven that burns her to death.
 
It seems nearly inevitable to me that as a result of this sort of thing, many people in professional and scientific fields will redevelop a reflexive racist suspicion that any black person in their field is under qualified, not very bright, and got their job for ideological reasons. It also seems inevitable that people will redevelop secret underground old boy clubs where “race realism” is openly discussed.

It pretry fucking grim that we were fairly close to an integrated, race-blind, sex-blind society and we valued it so little that we threw it in the garbage. These people develop an entire identity based on discrimination that currently isn’t actually happening to them. Do you want unironic racism? Here it comes.

Maybe I’m crazy and none of that will happen. I guess we’ll roll the dice and see what happens.
 
I could swear I've seen her face before, in one of those collages of "fellow white people" tweets. I think it was her tweet doing the typical "fwp" thing and smeone responded by simply posting her profile pic, and she got angry

e: I remembered wrong the details, she was still in the colalge of anti-white shit on twitter

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Reminder that white people tolerate this shit and defend it. "I don't agree with what you say, but I'll die for your right to say it"
There's no other group of people who would put up with this kind of shit.
 
Dark matter is estimated to constitute 25% of the total mass-energy of the Universe, and what's more Dark Energy makes up 70% of the total mass-energy.

And still niggers (and fakeggers) think that doesn't do them enough honor.

Her book chapters -- including "The Physics of Melanin,"
If that means what I think it means, that'd be extremely interesting. The substance melanin is very heterogenous and extremely insoluble; we know it is a catechol-based polymer, but its detailed chemical structure still elude clarification. We know virtually nothing about its physical characteristics, but it seems it defends animals and fungus against ionizing radiation or perhaps even other mutagens.

But we know that fakeboon is not talking about science.
 
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I could swear I've seen her face before, in one of those collages of "fellow white people" tweets. I think it was her tweet doing the typical "fwp" thing and smeone responded by simply posting her profile pic, and she got angry

e: I remembered wrong the details, she was still in the colalge of anti-white shit on twitter

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Lol, well I now have a "fellow black people" redpill to add to my "fellow white people" collection I guess.
 
Bitch the only person thinking about these terms in weird-ass ways is you. Holy fucking shit.

Who the fuck let this social sciences major into the physics field? Why is anyone giving her the time of fucking day?
 
Bitch the only person thinking about these terms in weird-ass ways is you. Holy fucking shit.

Who the fuck let this social sciences major into the physics field? Why is anyone giving her the time of fucking day?

Because she's a diversity triple whammy: A woman, black and Jewish. You're SUPER diverse, so it doesn't matter if you're a dumb cunt who doesn't know the difference between the color black and when people talk about 'black people'.

You don't own the fucking word black, you dumb whore. Nobody is thinking of black people with 'Dark Matter' and 'Black Hole'. Only your fucking retarded ass is thinking of these things. Its not fucking 'Darkie Matter' and 'Nigger Hole'. What the fuck is wrong with you when you can't even look at the word or color black and have a fucking conniption fit?

Does this cunt walk around screaming at white people wearing black clothing? I wouldn't be shocked.

It seems nearly inevitable to me that as a result of this sort of thing, many people in professional and scientific fields will redevelop a reflexive racist suspicion that any black person in their field is under qualified, not very bright, and got their job for ideological reasons. It also seems inevitable that people will redevelop secret underground old boy clubs where “race realism” is openly discussed.

It pretry fucking grim that we were fairly close to an integrated, race-blind, sex-blind society and we valued it so little that we threw it in the garbage. These people develop an entire identity based on discrimination that currently isn’t actually happening to them. Do you want unironic racism? Here it comes.

Maybe I’m crazy and none of that will happen. I guess we’ll roll the dice and see what happens.

What do you think a lot of the foreign students do? The Chinese and Indian students look at these faggots and mock the shit out of them. ID Pol is completely destructive and destabilizing to societies, which is why the rich adopted it. Fucking idiots like this only serve to promote it. They're useful tools of the wealthy, billionaire classes.
 
she is the first Black woman to hold a tenure-track faculty position in theoretical cosmology as an assistant professor at the University of New Hampshire.
I always make jokes about the increasingly esoteric "first x to do y" shit they come up with to make nobodies seem important, but this is by far the worst I've ever seen.

She's the first:
  • Black
  • Woman
  • To hold a position
  • With potential tenure
  • In theoretical cosmology
  • As an assistant professor
  • At the University of New Hampshire
That's unironically only a couple steps away from "first person to be the 17,543,682,992nd person ever born". Maybe she'd like to be the first black woman to perform kabuki while wearing a space suit in my backyard. I'd charge a fee of $100,000, of course, but can she really afford not to? She'd be the first one ever to do it! It's a historical moment! I think that's a very reasonable charge for making history.
 
Look at that fucking schnoz! That's the Heebiest damn Jewnose that can probably smell gold and a rolling dime within a 4 mile radius I've ever seen! Ha chaa chaa chaa!

I'm sorry to get spicy but frankly I've had a bad fucking day/night and this Jew's bullshit really pisses me off, these people really do seem to love to ruin whatever they touch, they can't seem to help themselves, put something in front of them and they'll find some way to subvert and corrupt it and then they act surprised when they piss people, it's a real mystery as to why that happens.

The irony is this woman's not even technically a real Jew if her mother wasn't Jewish, but she looks and sounds like a stereotypical reality hating Jew with the cherry on top being she's half black, so we get a double dose of civilization destroying bullshit, oh goody.

How anyone can say this bullshit with a straight face and how anyone can listen to this bullshit with a straight face is beyond this white boy's ability to comprehend.
Don't pretend you're not looking to clap those cheeks.
 
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