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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


9 April 2025

Our leaders should use AI, but carefully

From Larry Stoter, The Narth, Monmouthshire, UK

I have no problem with government ministers using artificial intelligence to inform themselves. It is positive that UK minister Peter Kyle has done so and explained some of the topics he has explored. It is vital to understand some of the limitations ( 22 March, p 10 ). I have used ChatGPT and learned two …

9 April 2025

Back to the idea of a yo-yo universe

From Nigel Tuersley, Tisbury, Wiltshire, UK

Applying the same logic that gave rise to the big bang theory to the apparent slowdown in the accelerating expansion of the cosmos argues for a cyclical universe, in which expansion gives way to progressive contraction, and ultimately to an inconceivably dense, atom-like singularity of the sort that led to the big bang ( 22 …

9 April 2025

Humans have long been abusing technology

From Dyane Silvester, Arnside, Cumbria, UK

Annalee Newitz's comments, saying we shouldn't blame communication technology for authoritarian regimes abusing social media or the nightmare of AI chatbots generating lies, apply to most inventions. Tempering steel and splitting the atom had the potential to hugely improve our lives, but it didn't take long for us to kill one another using both. Any …

9 April 2025

Getting sniffy about the future of nose jobs

From Wai Wong, Melbourne, Australia

The techniques involved in the futuristic "nose job" you imagined could have better uses than smell augmentation. Implanting programmed stem cells and reconnecting neurons could restore normal function to all sorts of organs, eliminating diabetes, paralysis, anosmia, blindness, hearing loss and more. Increased neuroplasticity could help with stroke, dementia and intellectual training. The nose job …

9 April 2025

Little wonder creatures are natural healers (1)

From Kate Phillipson, Prestbury, Gloucestershire, UK

The interview with Jaap de Roode made me wonder why people are surprised that animals do things to treat their ailments. Many have been around a lot longer than us and they have developed an understanding of the healing properties of plants, etc. Humans sought cures for the basic reason that they wanted to survive, …

9 April 2025

Little wonder creatures are natural healers (2)

From Richard Brown, Huntly, Aberdeenshire, UK

This rekindled memories of the start of my veterinary career in north-east Scotland in 1981. It was common then for a suckler beef farm to have an area of "rough ground": a field of wild bushes, rushes, weeds and, simply put, whatever grew in that region that wasn't a tree. It was commonly used as …

9 April 2025

How to fool even those savvy about illusions

From Brian Reffin Smith, Berlin, Germany

On the idea of learning to be less fooled by optical illusions, I do some lecture-performances to illusion-savvy audiences about pataphysics, art, zombie theory and so on. I tell them they just can't trust their brains, and build up to... the Müller-Lyer illusion, the one with two identical lines where one looks longer because of …

9 April 2025

Old code is probably in your home right now

From Mel Earp, Macclesfield, Cheshire, UK

I enjoyed your look at old code, having written a fair bit myself in the programming language C. Some of that may well still run in home gadgets, maybe even your TV. It isn't just business systems that are powered by old code ( 8 March, p 34 ).

9 April 2025

We didn't need Rome to make us civilised

From Shonagh Potter, Edinburgh, UK

On the suggestion that civilisation is tied to domestic drainage, may I recommend that Trevor Prew take a trip to Orkney in Scotland, to visit the village of Skara Brae, where there is an example of such a system that predates the arrival of the sewer-loving Romans ( Letters, 15 March ).

9 April 2025

With time on their side, the aliens drew their plans

From Paul Douglas, Wellington, New Zealand

The void aliens will be coming to get timescape inventor David Wiltshire soon, well before the aliens of the galaxy clusters, who would be disadvantaged by gravity and a passing of 4 billion years less time (according to Wiltshire's idea) in which to develop their technology ( 8 March, p 26 ).

Issue no. 3538 published 12 April 2025

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