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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


11 February 2026

Thinking differently about the passage of time (1)

From Daniel Dresner, Manchester, UK

"Time is an illusion; lunchtime doubly so," observed Douglas Adams in 1978 and similarly proposed by Zack Savitsky in his article, "The illusion of time". I wonder if – as we often do – we may learn lessons from how we perceive risk ( 31 January, p 28 ). About halfway through my academic career …

11 February 2026

Thinking differently about the passage of time (2)

From Lyn Williams, Cilffriw, Neath, UK

Why do we have to complicate everything? Time isn't an illusion. It is a fact. Without time, cells would not form or multiply and every living thing on Earth would die. Perhaps we should be looking to biologists and not physicists.

11 February 2026

Are these two of the best ideas of the 21st century?

From Peter Hajek, London, UK

I enjoyed looking at your choice of the best ideas of the 21st century. I would like to add two major breakthroughs that were missing from the list. The 21st century has seen the first steps to replace, on the population level, the deadly vehicle of nicotine delivery – cigarettes – with those that pose …

11 February 2026

How to make time go faster – by ignoring it

From Robert Checchio, St Dunellen, New Jersey, US

Regarding our perception of "busy-ness": while our emotions may play a role in our perception of how busy we are, the effect may be indirect. The more proximate cause of our perception of time as going by quickly or slowly might simply be the attention we pay it. When we are involved in a pleasurable …

11 February 2026

Trying to measure the influence of the individual (1)

From John Spiers, Burnside, South Australia

I'm very disappointed in the conclusions drawn by Nick Chater and George Loewenstein in their article "Changing direction". Granted there are many areas where individual actions are inadequate to solve major problems and government actions, such as laws and taxes, are required to force corporations to make the necessary changes ( 24 January, p 19 …

11 February 2026

Trying to measure the influence of the individual (2)

From Nick Lott, Kingsbridge, Devon, UK

While the mea culpa from Chater and Loewenstein is admirable, it seems likely they are going to be disappointed once again if they cleave to an adversarial view of society as people vs corporations. Businesses respond to customers' needs and desires in the same way that organisms respond to changes in their environment: by evolving. …

11 February 2026

For the record

The first term in the geometric sequence is 46,656/ 16,807 (24 January, p 45). Before the epoch of reionisation, the early universe was opaque to ultraviolet radiation (24 January, p 14).

18 February 2026

Why we're in a universe of the third kind

From Derek Bolton, Sydney, Australia

Ernest Ager remarks that a "one in a billion" chance of life arising isn't as much of a hurdle as Bryn Glover considers it to be, given the vast numbers of star systems in the universe. Since the article that this one-in-a-billion figure comes from provided no scope of space or time, it is meaningless. …

18 February 2026

The mystery of how time flows, made simple

From Tony Watkins, Oldbury, West Midlands, UK

Time isn't an illusion or mystery, and we don't need an arcane physics theory to explain why it flows in only one direction. At sub-atomic to intergalactic scales, all matter is in motion relative to most other matter, as described by Isaac Newton's laws of motion, making future motion and events predictable ( 31 January, …

18 February 2026

The mystery of how time flows, made simple (2)

From Andrew Hawkins, Peaslake, Surrey, UK

I have my own simple theory of time as an amateur theoretical physicist. Time is the result of the movement of matter, and the movement of matter creates the effect of time for us to measure. Any traditional clock or timepiece has a mechanism that is called its movement; even atomic clocks measure the vibration …

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