The long-legged ape

Matt Ridley

The new 1.9m year old hominin fossils from South Africa Carl Zimmer puts the new mother-and-son fossils in their place In other words, the fossils Berger discovered cannot be our direct ancestors. Instead, they may be very informative cousins. If Berger’s right, then the evolution of Homo happened in a surprisingly piecemeal way. Our legs […]

Not top down

Matt Ridley

You can have order in a flock of birds or a society without having a dictator The thing about tightly coordinated flocks of birds is that they can’t work by top-down planning and they can’t be anarchic free-for-alls either. Now comes news that they are in between: there is no single leader but some birds […]

The more we know, the more we don’t know

Matt Ridley

Science is the exploration of ignorance Science is not the cataloguing of facts or the accumulation of knowledge. It is the production of ignorance. Scientists are in the business of finding new seams of mystery. As Jennifer Doudna at U C Berkeley puts it in Erika Check Hayden’s Nature article about the tenth anniversary of the first draft of the human […]

Environmental heresy

Matt Ridley

Who’s Galileo and who’s the pope today? Unintentionally hilarious juxtaposition of remarks in an article by the climate scientist James Hansen: This is not the 17th century, when “beliefs” trumped science, forcing Galileo to recant his understanding of the solar system and Religions across the spectrum — Catholics, Jews, Mainline Protestants, Eastern Orthodox, and Evangelicals — […]

Moral materialism

Matt Ridley

Richer and nicer in the future? David Brooks on why America’s future is bright: In sum, the U.S. is on the verge of a demographic, economic and social revival, built on its historic strengths. The U.S. has always been good at disruptive change. It’s always excelled at decentralized community-building. It’s always had that moral materialism […]

Hyper Missing Link

Matt Ridley

Great new fossil, but the missing link it aint Big news? The Telegraph: Missing link between man and apes found. The Sunday Times: Fossil from cave is a ‘missing link’ The cliche is misleading. The new fossil is a very complete and therefore very interesting specimen from a poorly understood period. If it proves to have features of both Australopithecus […]

Being a customer of your customers

Matt Ridley

How fresh and wondrous electricity seemed to Americans in 1916 From Maggie Koerth Baker at boingboing.net, a fascinating glimpse of  how fresh and wondrous electricity seemed to Americans in 1916. Pity she spoils it by an attempt at finding the cloud in the silver lining at the end. Centralized electricity changed energy production from a […]

Greenland’s melting ice?

Matt Ridley

Exaggerations run rife while the reality is strangely absent from recent reporting on melting of the Greenland ice sheet. Breathless reporting last week of a new estimate of Greenland’s melting ice. It’s higher than it was before: “The changes on the Greenland ice sheet are happening fast, and we are definitely losing more ice mass […]

High Priests of Science

Matt Ridley

Politicising, propagandising and polarising the climate issue A fine analysis by Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger of the way that climate science has been distorted by environmentalism. They write: “The result has been an ever-escalating set of demands on climate science, with greens and their allies often attempting to represent climate science as apocalyptic, imminent, and certain, in […]

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