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
23 December 2024
From Jon Arch, Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, UK
When it comes to calorie counts on menus as a nudge to eat more healthily, it is clear to me that a large proportion of calories in some meals are in the sauce. Restaurants don't mind showing the inflated calorie count because it doesn't deter the average customer. Having studied energy balance in obesity, for …
23 December 2024
From Florence Leroy, Swindon, Wiltshire, UK
The idea of using vegetation on buildings to cool them in hot climates is interesting. However, an architect friend fears certain problems. The last thing you want around buildings and walls is something that can catch and propagate fire easily. Dried plants (in very hot climates) potentially could. Installing vegetation on balconies or roofs presupposes …
23 December 2024
From Bonita Ely, Sydney, Australia
Having given birth to a daughter whose size and weight increased over the years, necessitating the use of a pram, stroller, trolley, cart and motor vehicle, I have always suspected that women invented the wheel. This was reinforced by my daughter's instinctive preference for any toy with wheels, and her invention of a skateboard carriage …
23 December 2024
From Sam Edge, Ringwood, Hampshire, UK
Frankenstein is one of my favourite novels. However, I, like many others, contest the notion that it is the first science fiction ( Leader, 30 November ). There are many prior examples of what we would today consider sci-fi, if we define that as proposing a novel technology for the time and exploring the consequences. …
23 December 2024
From Len Mann, Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, UK
I have digested the explanations for why trying to live on Mars is a bad idea. Very good points are made, but one important thing is missed. One day, a disaster will befall Earth that will most likely wipe out the human race. It might be an extinction type asteroid impact, a nuclear war, a …
23 December 2024
From Eric Kvaalen, Les Essarts-le-Roi, France
If chimpanzee communities are becoming more technologically advanced over time, why is it that after millions of years of existence all they can manage is to use sticks to fish for termites? Their tools may be biodegradable, but they don't make baskets, ropes or other things our ancestors probably did ( 30 November, p 13 …
23 December 2024
From Jorge Pardo, Reston, Virginia, US
Throwing more technology at football's video assistant referee system is the wrong approach to its perceived problems ( 23 November, p 40 ). Alongside football's fundamental character, which places human deceit above brute force (as Maradona described it), one of the arguably beneficial features of the game is the reliance on the judgement of its …
23 December 2024
From Andrew Benton, Flourtown, Pennsylvania, US
"Recipe for disaster" certainly got my attention. It made it clear just how serious a matter climate change is likely to be for farming and food production. It then talks about solutions, stating: one big answer is eating less meat ( 16 November, p 44 ). The article later advised against buying organic food because …
23 December 2024
From Andrew Summers, East Coker, Somerset, UK
My only surprise was that the researchers looking down their microscope at asteroid rock samples only saw terrestrial bacterial contamination and not golden retriever dog hair, which permeates the entire universe ( 30 November, p 15 ).