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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


12 March 2025

My vote is for a future of humanoid robots

From Brian Horton, West Launceston, Tasmania, Australia

The idea that robots can be any shape, so there is no need for them to take a humanoid form, is fine for single-task robots. But to expand on the argument you mention, a driverless car won't be able to vacuum my floors, and my robovac can't wash the dishes. In fact, my robovac can't …

12 March 2025

Could AIs literally be rewriting history?

From Robert Jaggs-Fowler, Barton upon Humber, Lincolnshire, UK

The idea of using AI to read ancient texts raises an intriguing question: how will we know for sure that the AI is actually reading the original text and not simply engaged in its own imaginative version of creative writing( 15 February, p 16 )?

12 March 2025

I worry about quantum revolution's impact

From Simon Goodman, Griesheim, Germany

For many people, one of the biggest impacts of improved quantum computers will be the ability of these machines to factor multiples of large prime numbers, the basis of RSA cryptography. This and related cryptography approaches are the bedrock of internet banking and commerce. When a functional quantum computer emerges, this bedrock will turn to …

12 March 2025

Civilisation begins only with invention of drains

From Trevor Prew, Sheffield, UK

You ponder the question of when civilisation actually began. I have always viewed a key indicator of this as the advent of drainage. Disposal of human effluent and waste requires organised communities, surplus resources, management structures and a sense that sanitation is important. So, for Britain, civilisation started with the Romans, then departed, returning much …

12 March 2025

Don't linger over the list of side effects

From Geoff Harding, Sydney, Australia

Such is the power of the nocebo effect, it is arguably a mistake to read a list of possible negative side effects when you have to take a medication. When I had a covid-19 vaccine, I saw a wall poster listing possible side effects and advised the nurses it wasn't necessarily a good idea to …

12 March 2025

Has Samson the cat passed mirror test?

From Avril Arthur-Goettig, Munich, Germany

Inspired by a reader's claim his cat possibly possesses theory of mind, I decided to test my own pet ( Letters, 25 January ). The experiment: I stand in front of a (full-length) mirror with Samson, a highly demanding 5-year-old Siamese cat, comfortably tucked under my arm. To attract his attention in the mirror, I …

12 March 2025

Beware the possible rise of 'text lung'

From Alex Bowman, Glasgow, UK

"Text neck", the abnormal force on the cervical spine while tilting the head as we scroll on a smartphone, may not be the worst consequence. Normally, while breathing, we do so deeply from the diaphragm, but when holding a device with a bent neck, we tend to breathe shallowly. Over decades, this could damage lungs. …

12 March 2025

Look to the oceans for causes of climate chaos

From Bruce Denness, Niton, Isle of Wight, UK

What can explain atmospheric carbon dioxide at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii increasing by a record-breaking 3.58 parts per million in 2024? As well as forest fires and our failure to stop burning fossil fuels, I suggest the oceans, hitherto a big sink for taking up CO 2 from the atmosphere, have become saturated …

12 March 2025

Another explanation for the urinating dolphins

From Peter Borrows, Amersham Old Town, Buckinghamshire, UK

The male river dolphins urinating high into the air may simply be showing off, like children ( 8 February, p 13 ).

19 March 2025

Time is just a construct, so its advent is fairly recent

From Julian Higman, Wantage, Oxfordshire, UK

In a way, the question "When did time begin?" is a non-question. Time is our manufactured, mental measuring stick, expressed as a word, to gauge and so compare motion. In this sense, it will have begun sometime after we started to use speech, between two other questions you posed: "When did Homo sapiens originate?" and …

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