How technological innovation happens

Matt Ridley

It’s incremental and evolutionary, and it’s often the mother of science The Wall Street Journal carried an extract from my new book The Evolution of Everything. The article caused a lot of interest, and was criticised by some as being anti-science. Nothing could be further from the truth and most of those making this case are not quoting […]

The House of Lords challenges the House of Commons

Matt Ridley

As I predicted after the election, the opposition is using the unelected Lords to block legislation My Times column on the constitutional confrontation between the Lords and the Commons:   ‘How can you have a constitutional crisis without a constitution?” asked a Dutch friend coming to a meeting in the House of Lords last week. […]

The benefits of carbon dioxide

Matt Ridley

Global greening may save more lives and forests than warming costs My Times Column on the surprisingly large benefits of carbon dioxide emissions:   France’s leading television weather forecaster, Philippe Verdier, was taken off air last week for writing that there are “positive consequences” of climate change. Freeman Dyson, professor emeritus of mathematical physics and […]

Perverse regulation will slow the death of smoking

Matt Ridley

The EU’s tobacco product directive hits vaping harder than smoking My Times column on the EU’s idiotic attack on vaping: When regulation goes wrong, people call for more regulation. Sometimes, though, regulation is the cause of the original problem. It is steadily becoming clear that the way the European Union does regulation is especially pernicious. […]

How to cure old age itself

Matt Ridley

Telomerase activation just might lead to cures for ageing itself My Times column on the possibility that old age might itself be cured now we understand telomeres:   Squeezed between falling birth rates and better healthcare, the world population is getting rapidly older. Learning how to deal with that is one of the great challenges […]

Voting to leave the EU looks like Britain’s best option

Matt Ridley

Both sides now agree that the renegotiation will make little difference My Times column on Britain’s renegotiation with the European Union:   So the battle lines are drawn. “Vote Leave, Take Control” (of which I am a vice-president) is the campaign to leave the European Union if the renegotiation is inadequate. It launched last week […]

Bumper harvests release land for nature

Matt Ridley

Wheat yields hit new records thanks to precision farming My Times column on farm yields and the prospects for feeding the world in future:   This week’s autumn equinox is traditionally the time for the harvest festival. I have just taken a ride on the combine harvester cutting wheat on my farm. It is such […]

Who deserves credit for the double helix?

Matt Ridley

A new play gets most things right, but not all My Times column on Nicole Kidman’s performance as Rosalind Franklin in Photograph 51: It’s not been a good fortnight for actresses and scientific accuracy. Last week Emma Thompson told the BBC that the world will warm by 4C by 2030 — about 3.5C too high, […]

Genetics is good for you

Matt Ridley

Genetic engineering, IVF and gene testing have proved safer than feared My Times column is on the risks of genetic research and therapy: Fifteen years after the first sequencing of the human genome, the genetic engineering of human beings is getting closer. Will that mean designer babies and the rich winning life’s lotteries from the […]

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