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
2 October 2024
From Brian Darvell, Neston, Wiltshire, UK
Fear of snakes really is hardwired, as your look at our fascination with monsters highlights. At a social meeting, I had an involuntary startle reaction, thinking I had seen a python out of the corner of my eye – a friend was wearing brown trainers with a pale buff "eye stripe" either side. The feeling …
2 October 2024
From Guy Cox, Sydney, Australia
I and many others have argued that goblins, elves, pixies etc. are folk memories of other Homo or hominin species, which we know coexisted with our species. Now, I am going to take this one stage further in relation to "monsters". The mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous apparently wiped out 100 per …
2 October 2024
From Dave Holtum, Bathampton, Somerset, UK
Thanks for the intriguing article, "Reality's comeback", which discussed Robert Spekkens's approach to reconciling the quantum and macroscopic worlds. His perspective seems to align closely with the principles of process physics, which posits a real world emerging from systems of interacting processes rather than the physical interactions of elementary particles ( 7 September, p 32 …
2 October 2024
From Christopher Jessop, Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, UK
Considering what a hotchpotch of substances are released from crude oil when it is "cooked" in a refinery, would it not be possible to use the vaporised plastic bottles and bags you describe as a refinery side-feed? Then, you could repurpose those molecules any way you wanted while using an existing process. Unless, that is, …
2 October 2024
From Milan Kralik Jr, Spinnerstown, Pennsylvania, US
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein's column made me think that if ever there were a project worth saving with a crowdfunding campaign, it would be the Chandra X-ray Observatory. There are millions of scientists, science students and astronomy aficionados around the world who would, I believe, contribute to this worthy cause to save it from the threat of …
2 October 2024
From Paul Whiteley, Bittaford, Devon, UK
John Hedger's letter on feeding coffee pulp to animals and the necessity of getting out in the field to find out why they weren't thriving made me chuckle ( Letters, 14 September ). In a similar vein, as a duty engineer many years ago, I was called into the control room of a large multinational …
2 October 2024
From Neil Wickens, Uraidla, South Australia
I have to agree that astrology can only be regarded as nonsense. How can the behaviour of any particular one-twelfth of the world's population be governed by the position of the stars at birth( 24 August, p 10 )? However, please consider the following: it is a fact that a mother's behaviour, living conditions, diet …
9 October 2024
From Joseph Nicholas, London, UK
Although I am a gardener and an allotment plot-holder, I agree with James Wong's calculation that the cost of growing one's own veg exceeds supermarket prices. But what his purely economic calculus omits is the mental satisfaction derived from a hands-on engagement with the natural world, never mind the incalculable benefit of knowing just where …
9 October 2024
From Jane Giffould, Halstead, Essex, UK
My tomatoes this year cost nothing. A friend's young granddaughter passed on some spare plants to me. I nurtured them indoors until the weather was good enough, then put them outside in an old bucket with soil and homegrown compost. Now, I enjoy popping out to pick part of my lunch. As for potatoes, end-of-year …