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Derrida's lecture in fragmented words

Jacques Derrida: Meaning on the Move

Jacques Derrida was a French philosopher best known for developing deconstruction, a way of reading texts that exposes hidden assumptions, hierarchies, and instabilities in language. His work reshaped philosophy, literature, law, and cultural theory by showing that meaning is never fixed, but always in motion.
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Peter Higgs: The Quiet Physicist Behind One of the Loudest Discoveries in Science

Peter Higgs proposed the existence of the Higgs field and Higgs boson in the 1960s, explaining how particles acquire mass. Decades later, the discovery of the Higgs boson at CERN confirmed one of the most significant ideas in modern physics, reshaping our understanding of the universe.
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Michael Levin and the Shape of Mind

Michael Levin and the Shape of Mind

Michael Levin is a biologist exploring how bioelectric signalling shapes development, regeneration, and intelligence in living systems. His work challenges traditional views of the body–mind divide by showing how cells cooperate to build and repair complex organisms.
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Dewi Zephaniah Phillips Portrait

Dewi Zephaniah Phillips: When Meaning Is Found in the Way We Live, Not in What We Prove

Dewi Zephaniah Phillips was a Welsh philosopher whose work focused on religion, ethics, and the nature of meaning. Rejecting both dogmatic faith and militant scepticism, he argued that religious practices must be understood through the lived realities of human life rather than as claims that require scientific defence.
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Tim Berners-Lee: Inventor of the World Wide Web, Champion of an Open Internet

Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web while at CERN in 1989, fundamentally transforming how people share information globally. Beyond the original creation, he continues to advocate for an open, accessible, and humane internet facing challenges from centralisation, surveillance, and platform power.
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