Thinkers, not feelers

Matt Ridley

The psychology of libertarian views My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal finds that just as liberals and conservatives have predictable personalities, so do libertarians:   An individual’s personality shapes his or her political ideology at least as much as circumstances, background and influences. That is the gist of a recent […]

The retreat of Arctic sea ice

Matt Ridley

It’s happened before My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is about the retreat of Arctic Sea Ice and what it means: This week probably saw the Arctic Ocean’s sea ice reach its minimum extent for the year and begin to expand again, as it usually does in mid-September. Given that […]

Don’t Look for Inventions Before Their Time

Matt Ridley

Innovation as an evolutionary process My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal: Bill Moggridge, who invented the laptop computer in 1982, died last week. His idea of using a hinge to attach a screen to a keyboard certainly caught on big, even if the first model was heavy, pricey and equipped […]

An epidemic of absence

Matt Ridley

Modern disease is often caused by a lack of parasites My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is a review of a remarkable new science book:   Your great-grandparents faced infectious diseases that hardly threaten you today: tuberculosis, polio, cholera, malaria, yellow fever, measles, mumps, rubella, smallpox, typhoid, typhus, tapeworm, hookworm…. […]

Copernican demotion

Matt Ridley

Science keeps reminding us that we are not special My latest Mind and Matter column at the Wall Street Journal: The astronomer Martin Rees recently coined the neat phrase “Copernican demotion” for science’s habit of delivering humiliating disappointment to those who think that our planet is special. Copernicus told us the Earth was not at […]

When genes look out for themselves

Matt Ridley

The antics of selfish DNA in worms and plants My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is on selfish DNA:   The theory of selfish DNA was born as a throwaway remark in the book “The Selfish Gene” by Richard Dawkins, when he pondered why there is so much surplus DNA […]

Did your ancestor date a Neanderthal?

Matt Ridley

And if so where and when? My latest Mind and Matter column discusses the debate about how non-Africans got their 1-4% Neanderthal DNA: So did we or didn’t we? Last week saw the publication of two new papers with diametrically opposed conclusions about whether non-African people have Neanderthal-human hybrids among their ancestors-a result of at […]

Human uniqueness versus anthropomorphism

Matt Ridley

Rats rescuing rats looks like empathy, but what about ants? My latest Mind and Matter column for the Wall Street Journal: Identifying unique features of human beings is a cottage industry in psychology. In his book “Stumbling on Happiness,” the Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert jokes that every member of his profession lives under the obligation […]

The perils of confirmation bias – part 3

Matt Ridley

Climate science needs gadflies My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is the third in the series on confirmation bias. I argued last week that the way to combat confirmation bias-the tendency to behave like a defense attorney rather than a judge when assessing a theory in science-is to avoid monopoly. […]

The perils of confirmation bias – part 2

Matt Ridley

What keeps scientists accurate is rivals’ scepticism, not their own My latest Mind and Matter column for the Wall Street Journal: If, as I argued last week, scientists are just as prone as everybody else to confirmation bias ­ to looking for evidence to support rather than test their ideas ­ then how is it […]

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