Jonathan Shaw
Jonathan Shaw is Managing Editor of Harvard Magazine. A graduate of Harvard College, he has worked at the magazine since 1990, following an earlier role at MIT. Over the decades, he has written widely on science, technology, health, and the humanities.
After covering the 2002 SARS epidemic in depth, Jon became the first journalist writing for a general audience to report that both SARS-CoV and the closely related SARS-CoV-2—the virus behind COVID-19—use the same receptor to enter human cells. He later shared the behind-the-scenes story of how that article came together. His 2004 feature on the benefits of exercise, “The True Magic Pill,” remains one of the most-read pieces on harvardmagazine.com, although his playful answer to “Who Built the Pyramids” is also a perennial favorite.
For more than twenty years, Jon has explored a wide range of topics—from stem cell science and climate change to big data and legal issues such as the role of habeas corpus in the war on terror. His early feature on digital privacy helped introduce the concept of “surveillance capitalism” to general readers. Most recently, he audited a course on understanding and using generative AI to inform his reporting on that rapidly evolving field.
His work has been anthologized in collections of the best science writing and is frequently used in college and university classrooms.
Jon is known for his meticulous approach to journalism. He clearly identifies Harvard Magazine as an editorially independent publication during interviews and carefully fact-checks his work before publication. He refrains from political speech in public forums and strives to present opposing viewpoints fairly and accurately when covering controversial subjects.
Faculty |
Harvard Medical School’s Bruce Walker studies “elite controllers” of HIV
The immune systems of “elite controllers” point to HIV’s vulnerabilities.
Science |
Confronting pitfalls of machine learning, artificial intelligence
Ethics and the dawn of decision-making machines
Science |
Language as a litmus test for AI
And the problem of bias
Faculty |
AI and adversarial attacks
Vulnerabilities to manipulation
Faculty |
Climate Change Portends Diminishing Potential for Wind Power
Diminishing winds may be a harbinger of further climate-change damage to come.
Science |
Harvard Pushes to Advance Basic and Applied Quantum Physics
Harvard thinks bigger about the odd realm of matter at the very smallest scale.
Faculty |
Is there a language of behavior?
Sandeep Datta says the brain composes behavior from pre-existing “syllables.”
Faculty |
Vamsi Mootha studies mitochondria and oxygen
Probing the mysteries of mitochondria, Vamsi Mootha discovers new ways to understand metabolic disease.
Faculty |
Why systems biology?
Studies of the dynamic molecular interactions in metabolism point to a central role for mitochondria.
Science |
Ranking Extinctions by Ecological Impact
New research on extinctions shows that their ecological impact can’t be measured in numbers of species lost.
Harvard President Lawrence Bacow Delivers First Address at Morning Prayers
On the first day of classes, President Larry Bacow reminds students of the importance of reflection and contemplation.
Harvard Graduate School of Design |
Harvard’s HouseZero, the building that thinks
The Center for Green Buildings and Cities aims to reduce energy used to heat and cool buildings to nearly zero.