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Michael Drew

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Fearless Origins: Spider-Man And The Higgs Boson

Posted: 07/10/2012 8:35 am

We all love origin tales. And this summer has given us a few big ones. The July 4th festivities kicked off with The Amazing Spider-Man, the second of the season's superhero origins stories. (Back in May, The Avengers soared; it was a sort of origins story that gave us the beginnings of that motley superhero crew.)

The new Spider-Man looks to be a hit of Avengers proportions (that movie raked in some $600 million domestically), and it's remarkable coming only a few years after the last Spider-Man franchise wound down. This one goes back to Spider-Man's origins (all over again).

But the Spider-Man story plays to the nerd, the loner, the disenfranchised in all of us who, if we're cursed or blessed with an extraordinary gift, must decide whether to use it to serve others or profit from it for ourselves. Mix that with the self-doubt that nags at everyone but the megalomaniac, and you've created a modern heroic myth that, like the myths of old, can be retold many times and retain their power.

What Stan Lee did when he first imagined Spider-Man was to make him a product of our atomic age: A radioactive spider transformed a loser into a leaper. Like most heroes of Greek legend, Peter Parker became endowed with superhuman gifts. He was turned into a demigod, rather like a Hercules with inferiority issues who accepts his lot and even rises above inner dread, finding courage out of confusion. Stan Lee deified the nerd and found how those who are considered fearful of life learn -- and even embrace -- fearlessness.

The anxious nerd in me, despite my longtime love for most iterations of Spider-Man, was thrilled beyond any 3D spectacular by the announcement the very day that the Spider-Man movie opened that scientists have found a particle that could unlock the key to the universe. The origin story to end all (or the one that began everything)!

Although I couldn't possibly comprehend anything that describes in mathematical terms the work that scientists conducted at the Large Hadron Collider, I know that this particle is one whose discovery helps physicists prove the existence of a force that seems to hold everything together. They've been working for years on this, tirelessly, even fearlessly -- in the face of almost impossible odds -- to discover something almost indiscoverable.

The particle is, of course, the Higgs boson (or the "elusive" Higgs boson, since journalists everywhere have attached that adjective to this particle, it being so difficult to find and assess).

And why should I care? I'm not a scientist, I'm just a guy who tries to sell books. Well, like anyone else going back to the dawn of civilization, I'm interested in where we come from. And while I may not understand the concept of the quantum universe or the actions of subatomic particles, I understand that this knowledge will have a profound effect on how we look at ourselves, and these actions will give us a sense of ourselves despite our worries about everyday things. (I may not understand Einstein's theory of relativity either, but I rely on the scientists and engineers who've used it to guarantee the accuracy of the GPS I rely on.)

The more we learn about the strange complexities of our universe and the philosophical implications of ever really knowing anything without inferring its existence through mathematical and scientific means, the more I'm convinced that those who have dedicated their careers to opening up unseen worlds so that we might try to comprehend who we are, where we are and what we're made of, are probably the closest any of us will ever have to real, live superheroes. Researchers who live with rejection, frustration, the limitability of human technology in the face of the infinitude of nature, are truly fearless.

And when the science gets too complicated to understand at even the most basic level, there's always Spider-Man.

Related on HuffPost: Higgs-Boson VIDEO: A Metaphor To Explain The Particle, Or Further Confuse You
Stephen Hawking And Higgs-Boson Bet In Spotlight As Physicists Hail CERN Particle Discovery

For more by Michael Drew, click here.

For more on becoming fearless, click here.

 
 
 
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11:36 PM on 07/11/2012
So our friendly neighbourhood web spinning demigod is somehow entwined with "The God Particle" where he inherits his powers perhaps? Do we mere nerdy mortals secretly hope to tap into this source as well while our fearless scientists look for Mr. Higgs' shadow travelling beyond the speed of light? Or will this newfound "key" just unlock a room with a thousand doors? You've made me very curious. Great article.
11:22 PM on 07/11/2012
Very cool connection between Spider-Man and Higgs Boson. Quite interesting, actually! Thanks!
04:17 PM on 07/11/2012
Awesome! Spider-Man, Higgs Boson and unlocking the key to the universe all in the same article? My inner nerd is totally eating this up. Thanks for sharing!
02:33 PM on 07/11/2012
It's funny that long before this article I heard a metaphor for the Higgs Field - to get an idea of what it does to motion, compare it to walking through a tunnel full of spiderwebs. :)
11:23 PM on 07/11/2012
Cool metaphor!
11:09 AM on 07/11/2012
I was just watching a show on the Higgs boson the other day!!! Cool way to link these together. Awesome article, as usual!!!
09:53 AM on 07/11/2012
Spidery and particle physics!
09:19 AM on 07/11/2012
Um, SpiderMan and the Large Hadron Collider ... only chocolate could have made this article better! Thanks for the interesting and amusing story:)