Context is all

Matt Ridley

A small increase in downpours would be vastly offset by a huge fall in winter deaths By Matt Ridley and Indur Goklany There is a lot of fuss about two new papers arguing, from mathematical models, that extreme downpours have become and will become more common in the northern hemisphere and specifically in Britain as […]

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Seeing a cloud in every silver lining

Matt Ridley

Ever since opening my own eyes by researching my book, I keep a watching brief for egregious examples of pessimistic bias in the media. Once your eyes adjust, the media’s tendency to spot a cloud in every silver lining is very striking. But just as striking is its ability to ignore anything that reaches optimistic […]

Dunbar’s number and individual differences

Matt Ridley

Certain brain lobes are bigger in those with more friends My latest Mind and Matter column from the Wall Street Journal is on Dunbar’s number.   As far as scientific accolades go, a Nobel Prize is rare, a law named after you is rarer, your own unit of measurement is more elusive still, but the most […]

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My Family and Other Animals

Matt Ridley

I was on BBC Radio 4’s programme A Good Read (the link allows you to listen again) this week, where I recommended the book that was my favourite as a child, and probably still is: My Family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell. The others chose A Game of Hide and Seek and Great Expectations.  

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radio 

How to unlearn pessimism

Matt Ridley

Latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal, on `unlearning’: For adults, one of the most important lessons to learn in life is the necessity of unlearning. We all think that we know certain things to be true beyond doubt, but these things often turn out to be false and, until we unlearn them, […]

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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