The Rosetta Week
How four fields, in ten days, learned to read the unreadable Copyright: Sanjay Basu L ast week a knot stopped hiding from its mathematicians, a bacterium stopped hiding from its biophysicists, and a large language model stopped hiding from the people who built it. Three different sciences, three different decades of frustration, and one quiet ten-day stretch in April when each of them finally produced something they had been failing to produce for a very long time. A new kind of alphabet, in each case. Not a discovery so much as a way of writing what was already there. It looks, at first, like coincidence. Quanta ran a piece about a new knot invariant. MIT Technology Review ran one about mechanistic interpretability. Math, Inc. quietly announced that an AI agent had formalized a Fields Medal proof in five days. A 2026 paper on the bacterial flagellar motor was sitting in the same browser tab as all of them. If you only read one, you would shrug. If you read all four in a single s...