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Letters archive

Join the conversation in New Scientist's Letters section, where readers can share their thoughts and opinions on articles and see responses from experts and enthusiasts across a range of science topics. To submit a letter, please see our terms and email letters@newscientist.com


30 October 2024

Your views on how to reboot democracy (1)

From Roger Morgan, Presteigne, Powys, UK

Laura Spinney's article proposes the use of randomly selected citizens' assemblies to harness the creativity of the crowd to generate good solutions to public problems. The idea is a return to Athenian democratic principles, using new decision-making processes and new technology to shift governing decision-making closer to the general public than it is in current, …

30 October 2024

Your views on how to reboot democracy (2)

From Ian McKinley, Ennetbaden, Switzerland

There is no doubt that implementing the ideal of citizen participation is very challenging, but it is a shame that the country with probably the most effective system of direct democracy wasn't examined: Switzerland. The requirements for such democracy to work as mentioned in the article can all be seen in Swiss culture and its …

30 October 2024

Your views on how to reboot democracy (3)

From William Hughes-Games, Waipara, New Zealand

There is no need for digital technology to create true democracy for the people, by the people. Money corrupts politics. Make it illegal for vested interests to give money or anything that costs money to politicians before, during or after a term in office and watch those whose only interest is to enrich themselves run …

30 October 2024

Your views on how to reboot democracy (4)

From Terry Klumpp, Melbourne, Australia

I favour the idea of a lottocracy because it would, in effect, eliminate those career-politicians who have rarely or never had a real job outside politics and so haven't experienced what it is like to actually have to work for a living. Some may also be subservient to their rich donors. Because of this, we …

30 October 2024

Do we make reality? Maybe, maybe not (1)

From Adrian Smith, Addingham, West Yorkshire, UK

I don't buy the idea that "we make reality". I believe subatomic entities exist independently of us and that these entities oscillate and interact with wave-like properties. However, the equations we use to describe these interactions are human-made, so it is at this point that we create our own reality. ( 12 October, p 40 …

30 October 2024

Do we make reality? Maybe, maybe not (2)

From Larry Stoter, The Narth, Monmouthshire, UK

The idea that there is no objective reality puts the "observer" centre stage. But what constitutes an observer? Much of quantum physics avoids this issue, implying that only humans qualify. Surely it is arrogant to think that only we can be observers? If the history of science teaches us anything, it is that making humanity …

30 October 2024

Do we make reality? Maybe, maybe not (3)

From Patrick Butterly, Buckfastleigh, Devon, UK

Oriti, a theoretical physicist, says that "we have to embrace the fact that we make reality". That might come as a shock to scientists, but not to poets and novelists: they have always thought it obvious that reality inheres not in the common phenomenal world, but in the perceptions of that world in individual minds.

30 October 2024

Do we make reality? Maybe, maybe not (4)

From Faith Anstey, Dalguise, Perth and Kinross, UK

If we make reality, are we part of reality or not? If we are, do we make ourselves – and all our thoughts, theories and so on? And if not, why not?

30 October 2024

My frenemies seem to be following me

From Maggie Cobbett, Ripon, North Yorkshire, UK

David Robson's piece on "frenemies" set up an intriguing question in my mind. Why is it that people I would really like to see again rarely cross my path, whereas those I would prefer to avoid appear everywhere I go? Some kind of negative attraction at play, perhaps? ( 19 October, p 40 )

30 October 2024

Here's to revelling in the mystery of the cosmos

From James Hardy, Belfast, UK

Leah Crane's article about seeing Saturn through a telescope as a child and being inspired to love space was fascinating. It called to mind philosopher Bertrand Russell, who, although an atheist, freely admitted to the immense mystery of the cosmos: "We know very little, and yet it is astonishing that we know so much, and …

30 October 2024

No shock that pyramids were an ancient favourite

From Robert Masta, Ann Arbor, Michigan, US

Many thanks for the Flint Dibble interview. It is no great surprise that multiple cultures would independently develop pyramids. We humans have a natural affinity for high places, probably dating back to spotting predators or enemies as well as a desire to be closer to the sky. ( 19 October, p 37 ) A pyramid …

30 October 2024

Water from air: the Incas got there first

From Alex McDowell, London, UK

The idea of extracting drinking water from the air, as deployed in a Florida children's hospital after recent hurricane disruption, isn't new. The Incas, living in mountainous regions too high to get rain, channelled dew into cisterns and may have used fog fences to collect moisture that was hanging in the atmosphere. ( 19 October, …

Issue no. 3515 published 2 November 2024

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