In the sciences, we celebrate big ideas. We celebrate equations that stitch the invisible world of atoms to the world we touch. We celebrate the people who see patterns the rest of us miss. But we rarely celebrate something more fundamental: the whole human mind that carries those ideas, with its strengths, its limits, and its storms. Today, we are
In 1964, Peter Higgs took a break from equations and headed into the Scottish Highlands. That peaceful hike sparked a bold idea, one that was first rejected, but ultimately redefined modern physics and gave mass to the universe itself.