Rare earths versus the Earth

Matt Ridley

Another environmental cost of wind turbines Tim Worstall has an enlightening essay on his specialist subject, rare earths. Rare-earth minerals are the 15 elements in that funny box at the bottom of the periodic table — known as lanthanides — plus two others. About 95 percent of global production takes place in China, largely at one […]

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Plankton not bothered so why are we?

Matt Ridley

Yet another study debunks the ocean acidification scare Further evidence that ocean acidification is a non-event, scientifically, even while being a big event for scientists financially: Thus, both of the investigated coastal plankton communities were unaffected by twenty-first century expected changes in pH and free CO2. This may be explained by the large seasonal, and […]

Quis custodiet?

Matt Ridley

How to regulate the psychology of regulators My latest column in the Wall Street Journal is about the psychology of bureaucracy. just as we need to understand the human proclivities that give rise to booms and busts in markets, so we need to understand the human proclivities that motivate officials. Here are five identified by Slavisa […]

The difference between reciprocity and exchange

Matt Ridley

Plus other matters aired on the radio Here’s an hour long conversation I did on Econtalk with economist and novelist Russ Roberts about trade, prosperity and Adam Smith. It includes a discussion of why animals can manage reciprocity but not, apparently, exchange.

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Refugee ideas

Matt Ridley

Political plurality allows innovations to flourish My latest Wall Street Journal column, Triumph of the Idea Smugglers, argues that from time to time in history good ideas need rescuing from bad regimes. If Thales of Miletus had not infected Greece with rationalism after travelling in Egypt, and if 1700 years later, Leonardo Fibonacci had not […]

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The three-dimensional photocopier

Matt Ridley

What characteristics would extraterrestrial life have? Here’s a video of a discussion I had with Richard Dawkins about `life’ back in June: extra-terrestrial life, artificial life and synthetic life.  

The cat of liberty is out of the hierarchical bag

Matt Ridley

Is modern growth a materialist or an ideological achievement? Continuing the debate about the industrial revolution with Deirdre McCloskey Here’s her reply to me …We agree at least that innovation is the key. That’s a very, very important agreement. Joel Mokyr, Jack Goldstone, and our own Greg Clark join Matt Ridley, Robert Allen, and me […]

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Technology 1 Therapy 0 in Chile

Matt Ridley

Market innovation helped the miners; counselling was counter-productive Today I read two contrasting articles about the wonderful rescue of the Chilean miners that I strongly recommend, even though both are a few days old. The first, by Brendan O’Neill, in Spiked (hat tip: Frank Stott), reveals the degree to which the miners helped themselves to cope […]

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Why did the industrial revolution happen?

Matt Ridley

Or rather, why did it not peter out? At Cato Unbound, there is a set of essays on the subject in response to Deirdre McCloskey, one of which is by me, others by Greg Clark and Jonathan Feinstein. I champion the theory that coal was crucial, because it showed increasing rather than diminshing returns (the more people […]

Where are the genes?

Matt Ridley

My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal On the failed promise of genomics. Is it because common ailments are caused by many different rare genetic variants?

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