Two rival kinds of plants and their future

Matt Ridley

Can rice match maize’s yield? My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal: Two rival designs of plant biochemistry compete to dominate the globe. One, called C3 after the number of carbon atoms in the initial sugars it makes, is old, but still dominant. Rice is a C3 plant. The other, called […]

England’s wettest June — noise, not signal

Matt Ridley

The Met Office keeps getting 3-month forecasts wrong on the warm side I wrote the following op-ed in The Times (behind a paywall) on 2 July. As I cowered in my parked car in a street in Newcastle last Thursday, nearly deafened by hail on the roof of the car, thunder from the black sky […]

The zoo inside you

Matt Ridley

Microbes and worms that are necessary for the immune system to work My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal: One of the delights of science is its capacity for showing us that the world is not as it seems. A good example is the startling statistic that there are at least […]

Do Human Beings Carry Expiration Dates?

Matt Ridley

Few people get past 115, though many live to 100 Update: a couple of small corrections inserted in square brackets below. Thanks to Stephen Coles of UCLA.   My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal   After celebrating her 60th year on the throne in style this past week, Britain’s Queen […]

How Facebook captured capitalist “Kumbaya”

Matt Ridley

Free sharing on the net is not incompatible with markets My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal:   Human beings love sharing. We swap, collaborate, care, support, donate, volunteer and generally work for each other. We tend to admire sharing when it’s done for free but frown upon it-or consider it […]

Evolution ain’t what it used to be

Matt Ridley

Novel rare genes and shrinking brains My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal. If you write about genetics and evolution, one of the commonest questions you are likely to be asked at public events is whether human evolution has stopped. It is a surprisingly hard question to answer. I’m tempted to […]

Red tape hobbles a harvest of life-saving rice

Matt Ridley

Bio-engineered micronutrients may be the most cost-effective way to help the poor Latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal   This week saw the announcement of the latest conclusions of the Copenhagen Consensus, a project founded by Bjørn Lomborg in which expert economists write detailed papers every four years and then gather to […]

How Dickensian childhoods leave genetic scars

Matt Ridley

Epigenetics and childhood maltreatment Latest Mind and Matter column from the Wall Street Journal:   Being maltreated as a child can perhaps affect you for life. It now seems the harm might reach into your very DNA. Two recently published studies found evidence of changes to the genetic material in people with experience of maltreatment. […]

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