On the meaning of the word optimism

Matt Ridley

This is not the best of all possible worlds Here is my latest Wall Street Journal column. It led me into the etymology of the word `optimism’ and the realisation that at first it meant almost the opposite of what we now mean by it, namely that the world was at its `optimum’ and could not […]

PETM theory

Matt Ridley

Tropical forests became more diverse during the warm episode of 55m years ago. A new paper in Science casts further doubt on the usefulness of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) as a warning of what we face from man-made carbon emissions. Tropical rain forests became more diverse, not less, during the warm spell. The paleontologist […]

David MacKay’s letter

Matt Ridley

Here is the letter that David MacKay sent me following my article in The Times and to which I replied. (I have gone to weblinks for his charts and in one case come up with a slightly different version — the sea ice graph I could not find the exact one he included so I have […]

Tagged: 

Let a thousand flowers bloom

Matt Ridley

Only possible in a market economy Don Boudreaux has a lovely essay in the Christian Science Monitor (interest declaration: he mentions my book) in which he makes the point people often miss about markets, that they encourage diversity rather than one-size-fits-all solutions: Contrast the multitude of different market-generated and voluntarily adopted ideas with the ideas of […]

Victory on acidification!

Matt Ridley

Three fellows of the Royal Society concede my arguments There is a hilarious letter in today’s Times from three FRS professors about my recent artilce on ocean acidification. Despite conceding the factual truth of my article in detail, they tell me to brush up on chemistry then give no examples of me getting anything wrong. […]

Tagged: 

The best shot?

Matt Ridley

Are Arctic ice and the PETM really the best arguments for dangerous climate change? UPDATE: David MacKay’s letter is now up in a separate post here   Some weeks ago I wrote an article for The Times about why I no longer find persuasive the IPCC’s arguments that today’s climate change is unprecedented, fast and dangerous. […]

Tagged: 

Sinners that repent

Matt Ridley

Some greens have seen the light on nuclear power and GM food. It’s a start. Update: I’d like to add one thing to the story below. Stewart Brand, who I know and admire, played a prominent part in the Channel 4 film. He’s not a `convert’ to these views. He has always been strongly pro-GM […]

Acid oceans and acid rain

Matt Ridley

Learning lessons from the 1980s I have an article in The Times today (behind a paywall) on ocean acidification. Here’s the gist: Today in Beijing an alliance of scientists called Oceans United will present the United Nations with a request for $5 billion a year to be spent on monitoring the oceans. High among their concerns […]

Tagged: 

The tyranny of causation

Matt Ridley

Here (a bit late) is my latest Wall Street Journal column, on epigenetic inheritance In the debate over whether our fates as individuals are ruled by nature or nurture-that is, by innate qualities or personal experience-one of the most baffling features is the way the nurture advocates manage to cast themselves as the great foes of […]

Sauce for the goose

Matt Ridley

Greens who like to make unsubstantiated claims then demand the prosecution of others for the same offence I have just sent this letter to the Guardian: In response to Donald Brown’s call for climate scepticism to be classified as a crime against humanity (1st November), in which he said `We may not have a word for this […]

Tagged: 
1 75 76 77 78 79 89