St Edmund Hall Blog

The St Edmund Hall blog brings you the latest thought in academic research and interesting artefacts from our archive and library.

Please note that any opinions or views expressed by blog contributors are not shared or held by St Edmund Hall.

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Cells Diagram of biological and Sim cells

Microbes and the Biological World

2 Jun 2021

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Greenland icevap

No veil of uncertainty at COP26, please!

25 May 2021

The UK will be hosting the next UN Climate Change Conference this year, and we need to ensure the policymakers are fully onboard.

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Professor Paul Matthews

What starts Alzheimer’s disease?

19 May 2021

Alzheimer’s disease may start with a  “…. toxic interaction between microglial genetic susceptibility, aging and a long-term unhealthy balance of blood fats in the body”.

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The Future of Finance

12 May 2021

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Descartes

Descartes goes to Hollywood

5 May 2021

What possible connection could there be between the philosopher René Descartes, androids, zombies, and Hollywood? More than you might have originally thought.

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Reconstructing d’Holbach

28 Apr 2021

Begun in 2018, Digital d’Holbach will provide the scholarly community with the first critical edition of the complete works of one of the most important thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment.

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Vaccine Development by Dr Jack Tan

Developing a Next Generation SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine

23 Mar 2021

Discussion on the need for and research leading to a next generation vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 capable of targeting multiple variants.

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A fluorescently labeled image of endometrium

Understanding Endometriosis

15 Mar 2021

Endometriosis is one such condition, affecting an estimated 1.6 million women in the UK alone and 190 million worldwide.

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The Poet's Mistake Book Cover

Reading Gone Awry

9 Mar 2021

We’ve all done it—used a word incorrectly, believing it means one thing when it really means another: saying “disinterested” when we mean “lacking in interest,” or “prostrate…

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DNA strands double helix

What Will Genomics Mean for You?

3 Mar 2021

The first human genome was sequenced nearly 20 years ago, but what impact will this have for you? Understanding the information in our genes is already helping to decipher the molecular basis of rare diseases.  Now genomic…

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Are European Universities Building Alliances as Rhizomes?

24 Feb 2021

Using the concept of rhizome to examine the newly-established European University alliances and their influence on the formation of European students and re-formation of the idea of University.

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Late Roman building known as the Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom)

Modern Politics, Medieval Monuments in Turkey

15 Feb 2021

Over the course of its 1500-year history, the late Roman building known as the Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom) has served as the setting for many ceremonies, religious, political, and more often than not, a combination of the two.

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Harley Gospels

God, Gold, and the Gospel of the Poor in the Early Middle Ages

10 Feb 2021

Throughout history, the Church’s relationship to the poor and the powerful has been full of contradictions.

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Spanish Amber under a microscope

How to Link Palaeontology with… Cosmetics?!

3 Feb 2021

Find out more about the unexpected scientific connections in this research entailing minute enigmatic structures preserved in 100-million-year-old amber.

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A scribe demonstrating to his pupils.

A Medieval Ink Recipe

27 Jan 2021

Medieval ink recipes provide fascinating descriptions of the materials, techniques, and patience required before a scribe could put pen to page.

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Adapted from colour wheel by Sakurambo

The Magic of Colour

20 Jan 2021

Materials that change colour in response to their environment are fascinating and useful – but how can we find more without breaking the bank?

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The Distribution of the Gingerbread

The Hierarchy of Gingerbread: Gift-Giving at Christmas in Medieval Convents

9 Dec 2020

Edmund Wareham delves into the world of medieval baking to discover the importance of gingerbread for a group of medieval German nuns.

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Sir Richard Blackmore

Sir Richard Blackmore—The Worst English Poet?

2 Dec 2020

Tom MacFaul reconsiders the work of Sir Richard Blackmore (SEH, 1669); is he the worst English poet?

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Pluto

Should we go back to Pluto?

25 Nov 2020

In 2015 we saw Pluto for the first time through a single flyby, now we ponder should we return with an orbiter?

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Sidney John Smith Newspaper clipping about his death in action during WW2

Remembering Aularian Sidney John Heath Smith

11 Nov 2020

I would say at the majority of enquiries that I get relating to the Hall Archives are from family historians; one of the many that I found on my return from furlough related to an Oxford man, who had come to the Hall in 1938 bu…

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A photo of Ed Lamb

Who Gets the Ventilator?

11 Nov 2020

Suppose that you have a ventilator with which you can prevent either Ahmed or Barbara from dying. Whilst Ahmed would live for nine years were you to save him, Barbara would only live for five. There are no other relevant differ…

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The entrance of St Edmund Hall with the inscription of Saint Edmund, Light of this Hall

Whose Hall is it Anyway? Annotation, Mutilation and a Mystery in our copy of 'The History of the University of Oxford'

4 Nov 2020

Annotation, Mutilation and a Mystery in our copy of The History of the University of Oxford

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Tom Crawford in Russia

Tom Rocks Russia

28 Oct 2020

This is Dr Tom Crawford’s video diary of his visit to ITMO University in St Petersburg Russia

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Brain and lightbulb

How we make decisions: inferential reasoning in humans and mice

21 Oct 2020

Have you ever faced one of those situations where you are compelled to make an important decision, which you know is doable because it rings a bell from your own experience?

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Darwin Birds

On genes, genetics and epigenetics

12 Oct 2020

What is a gene? Although the discipline within biology that we call genetics is well over 100 years old, this question remains an enigmatic one with fascinating new twists.

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Brancaster Staithe from Barrow Common

Update: A Coastal Mystery No More

24 Jun 2020

When the blog on the Hall’s painting by Edward Seago was published last month, I received numerous suggestions for its location.

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Discovering the Earthworm’s Half a Billion Year Old Cousin

16 Jun 2020

The worms that gave rise to earthworms and leeches have half a billion years of history in the ocean. A new discovery of 514 million year old fossils from China unravels the early origins of annelids, the segmented worms.

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Gross Domestic Product could fall by huge amounts overnight

This Time is Different: Economic Policy Challenges in the Time of COVID-19

9 Jun 2020

COVID-19 has already generated challenges to the global economy and the policy responses permeate political-financial-economic stability.

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Print by H Goson of Oxford running from the plague in 1630

‘The same Sad Calamyties’: Oxford in a time of Plague

2 Jun 2020

One of the things about being a more than 700-year-old institution, as Teddy Hall is, is that we have faced many trials before. This is not the first time the Hall and the University have had to cope with the effects of a deadl…

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A graph showing estimated probability of infection against probability of being tested. It shows probability of being tested increases from 0 to 1 as the probability of infection increases from 0 to around 0.3, and shows the probability of being tested dropping from 1 to 0 as the probability of infection goes beyond 0.75

Testing in a Pandemic

25 May 2020

What is the best way to use our limited capacity for infectious disease testing? This blog discusses how lives can be saved by optimal adaptive targeting of tests.

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