Consensus about what?

Matt Ridley

We keep hearing that there is a consensus about climate change, but it includes a wide range of possibilities Simon Singh and James Delingpole, both of whom I know, like and respect as fine writers, have been disagreeing about climate change. Beneath Simon’s latest blog on the subject there is a debate in which several very sensible […]

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The personalities of the elements

Matt Ridley

Prospect magazine has published my review of Hugh-Aldersey-Williams’s delightful chemistry book,  Periodic Tales. Here is an extract in which I was struck by the parallels between finding specialised jobs for the metals and finding specialised roles for individuals in society: The best science writing emulates fiction, creating plots, surprises and characters out of its esoteric material. […]

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Why nationalise trees?

Matt Ridley

Britain’s Forestry Commission is a walking conflict of interest I have an op-ed in today’s Times about nationalised forestry in the UK: Since its plans to sell off much of the Forestry Commission’s land were leaked the press last October, the government has found itself subject to a sustained lobbying campaign. The commission has wheeled […]

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Advocating violence

Matt Ridley

Monbiotic logic: call for peaceful debate and for people to die George Monbiot is advertising a speaking tour with a poster of himself as a boxer about to hit somebody. And yet he  says in the Guardian: Let’s debate the issues and argue over the facts. But let’s drop the vitriolic abuse, and stop suggesting […]

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Why aliens are silent

Matt Ridley

From the Wall Street Journal, my latest Mind and Matter on stability, the moon and aliens   This month saw the discovery of the first small and “rocky” planet like ours outside the solar system, Kepler 10b, orbiting a star more than 500 light years away. This month also saw terrible floods in part of Australia. […]

Shale gas changes everything

Matt Ridley

Some people think I am obsessed by the shale gas revolution and that I might be exaggerating its significance. Well, if anything I’m underplaying it. The International Energy Agency says so. Here’s what it says (from UPI): “Production of ‘unconventional’ gas in the U.S. has rocketed in the past few years, going beyond even the most […]

Collective intelligence on the edge

Matt Ridley

Clever people don’t like to think that individual cleverness is not what counts The Edge’s Annual Question is a great compilation of brief effusions from science groupies like me. This year the question was What scientific concept would improve everybody’s cognitive toolkit? My answer was this: Brilliant people, be they anthropologists, psychologists or economists, assume […]

Feeding of the nine billion

Matt Ridley

I had this article in the Times on 14 January: The person who tips the world population over seven billion may be born this year. The world food price index hit a record high last month, according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation. Bad harvests in Russia and Australia, combined with rising oil prices, have […]

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A fascination with parabolas

Matt Ridley

The trajectories of missiles must have interested our ancestors deeply My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is about parabolas, the evolution of throwing and angry birds: The spectacular trajectory of the Angry Birds computer game, from obscure Finnish iPhone app to global ubiquity-there are board games, maybe even movies in the […]

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