Enter Through The Gift Shop


Yessentuki The mystery was the art.

Kurduvādi Not the stencils. Not the rats or the girl with the balloon or the policemen kissing. Those were wonderful.

But they were only half the experience. The other half was the question: Who does this?

The answer, courtesy of a Reuters investigation published this week, is Robin Gunningham, 51, a Bristol man who changed his name to David Jones sometime around 2008. David Jones. One of the most common names in England.

That was the point.

His lawyers say the story is wrong. They say revealing his identity violates his privacy, interferes with his art, puts him in danger. They may be right on all counts. They are certainly right about the art.

Because now when a Banksy appears on a courthouse wall or a bombed-out building in Ukraine, I will think about Robin. A 51-year-old from Bristol with a handwritten confession from a 2000 arrest in New York and 15 burner phones his former manager auctioned off for $15,875. I will think about a man who changed his name to evading the one thing that would have made his work smaller.

His name.

Anonymity was the argument. It said: the art matters, the artist doesn’t. It said: anyone could do this. It said: the wall is the canvas, not the gallery.

Now I’ll see the bespectacled schoolboy from Bristol Cathedral School who drew comic strips in the student magazine at age 11. The kid who won art awards and made spectacular saves as a goalkeeper. Every time a Banksy appears on a wall somewhere, I’ll picture him — Robin, crouching with a spray can, brown bristly hair, silver earring, forearm tattoo.

Not a phantom. Not a ghost. A guy from your middle school.

That’s the loss. That, too, might be the point.

Evidentialism and The Cosmos


Three days ago, scientists announced that an asteroid contains all five building blocks of life.

Not some. All five.

Every nucleobase required to construct DNA and RNA: adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, uracil, all in a handful of dust from a rock called Ryugu, half a mile wide, hurtling through space 186 million miles from Earth.

The study ran this week in Nature Astronomy, and lead researcher Toshiki Koga was careful with his language. The finding, he said, “does not mean that life existed on Ryugu.” What it means is that primitive asteroids can produce and preserve the molecules that matter.

That is the understatement of the solar system.

What the Ryugu samples tell us is that the universe does not need life to make life’s ingredients. It makes them anyway. From nitrogen, carbon, ammonia, and time. No biology required. No divine intervention.

Just chemistry, running its course.

This is what Evidentialism has always argued. Life is not an accident. It is not a miracle. It is what matter does when given the right conditions. The universe is, by its nature, pointed toward life.

The researchers ran tests to confirm the molecules formed on Ryugu, not on Earth. They compared results against two other asteroids, Bennu and the Murchison meteorite. All yielded nucleobases.

But the ingredients were there. Everywhere they looked. The solar system, it turns out, has been assembling this kit for 4.5 billion years.

Consider what that means. The same carbon chemistry that writes your DNA was operating on airless rocks before the Earth existed.

There was no ocean, no atmosphere, no warmth. Just space, and matter doing what matter does. Building toward something.

For centuries, the argument for a creator rested on complexity. Life is so intricate, the reasoning went, it could not have arisen by chance.

But Ryugu answers that. The complexity did not begin on Earth. It arrived here. From space. On rocks. By the billion.

Einstein called the universe’s comprehensibility “the eternal mystery.” He was wrong about one thing. It is not a mystery. It is a process.

One we are learning.

The dust from Ryugu is older than our oceans, older than our moon, older than the first breath anything ever took on this planet. And it was already carrying the mail of life.


Commodus believed he was Hercules reborn. He dressed in lion skins. He carried a club everywhere.

He renamed Rome after himself. He renamed the months too.

The Senate had to address him by a list of invented titles.

He fought in the Colosseum as a gladiator, but only the infirmed and unarmed.

He imported exotic animals, from elephants to giraffes to hippos, and killed hundreds from platforms and barricades. He beheaded an ostrich and displayed it symbolically to front-row senators.

He forced amputees and little people to fight each other with meat cleavers.

He charged Rome one million sesterces every time he performed in the arena. The treasury collapsed.

His household, panicked and paranoid, finally had enough. They poisoned his food. He threw it up.

So they sent in a wrestler named Narcissus, who strangled him in his bath.

Commodus was 31.