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Letters archive

Join the conversation in Âé¶¹´«Ã½'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


26 February 2025

End of the multiverse? End of a whole branch of sci-fi!

From Malcolm Moore, Rotorua, New Zealand

Are you kidding? No multiverse, no parallel Earths? Do the physicists killing off the many-worlds idea have no conscience? A whole subgenre of sci-fi is damned to extinction. Gone, vanished down a literary black hole with just a few dog-eared remnants littering the non-event horizon. Me? I'm just finishing an Adrian Tchaikovsky book involving... oh, …

26 February 2025

The truth is out there on modern ufology

From Ian Simmons, news editor at

Fortean Times, UK Ufological culture has always been concerned about governments hiding "the truth" and distrustful of scientific authority. That isn't new. The situation is complicated, though, by the dominant narrative about aliens and UFOs changing, moving from benign space brothers to evil greys and now to "disclosure", the idea that citizens can get authorities …

26 February 2025

On the divisions afflicting society

From Virginia Lowe, Melbourne, Australia

The only eco-novel of the many I have read that doesn't demonise climate deniers is Flight Behaviour by Barbara Kingsolver. Here, you can see their good intentions, their misunderstandings and their humanity, as author Kurt Gray shows in his book Outraged , reviewed on your pages. This made me realise I had been demonising them …

26 February 2025

'Useless' ear muscle gives me a sixth sense

From Gerald Legg, Hurstpierpoint, West Sussex, UK

I can slightly move the "useless" muscle that lets some people wiggle their ears. Of more interest is that I feel the muscle slightly twitch when someone/something approaches outside of my visual field. It feels almost like a sixth sense, but obviously it is linked to my auditory system picking up a sound I don't …

26 February 2025

Another vote against fighting fire with fire

From Nina Burdett, Malmsbury, Victoria, Australia

In fire-prone southern Australia, intentional burning to combat wildfire risk is controversial. These burns run for weeks every autumn and the smoke is a health and environmental hazard ( 1 February, p 12 ). The effect on wildlife and plants seems to be rarely taken into account. Fire does reduce fine, easily burned plant matter, …

26 February 2025

Defossilised polyester needs hot and dirty gases

From Charlie Wartnaby, Cambridge, UK

LanzaTech's fermentation process to make "defossilised" polyester appears to need more reactive inputs, which is why it favours hot blast furnace exhaust that contains carbon monoxide and hydrogen, as well as carbon dioxide, rather than the cool, pure, waste CO 2 streams that reader Dave Covell suggested ( Letters, 1 February ).

26 February 2025

Sabre fangs perfect for making hominids a meal

From Richard Swifte, Darmstadt, Germany

Your article on sabre teeth reminds me of a visit I made to a fossil site in South Africa. Using a hominid skull and two curved fingers, a researcher graphically illustrated how a sabre-toothed tiger could leap on an unfortunate hominid from behind and grab its skull, with its two fangs nicely inserting into the …

26 February 2025

Surely it is all about degrees of consciousness

From Don Taylor, Cheadle, Staffordshire, UK

In his review of Jeff Sebo's book, Michael Marshall writes that we "can never be 100 per cent sure if another being is conscious". Perhaps we can if consciousness is a question of degree, a continuum of levels of awareness, not an either/or thing. Think back to your earliest childhood memory – it may be …

26 February 2025

Adventure and curiosity drive us to colonise Mars

From Steph Györy, Sydney, Australia

Paul Friedlander says past colonisation has been a hunt for opportunities to trade or get rich, hence the same will apply to Mars. This leaves out one of the strongest drivers: curiosity/adventure. It is often assumed that billionaires are motivated by money, but if you look at Martian colony proponent Elon Musk's track record, he …

26 February 2025

Taking the sparkle off the cosmic gem

From Jim McHardy, Clydebank, West Dunbartonshire, UK

The odd gem-like shape created to simulate the fundamental nature of our cosmos just "knows about" fundamental principles of physical theories like quantum mechanics and relativity? This seems a little frightening ( 25 January, p 10 ).

Issue no. 3532 published 1 March 2025

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