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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 April 2025

Seeing red raises more consciousness questions

From Matthew Stevens, Sydney, Australia

You report on a study suggesting we all perceive colours the same way, subjectively speaking. While the study seeks to offer an answer to this long-standing philosophical question, I have long pondered a similar one that can't be answered, or even tested, prompting me to frame it as a conjecture: that our sense of self, …

2 April 2025

The power struggle over birth, parenting and more

From Sam Edge, Ringwood, Hampshire, UK

Penny Sarchet's review of the book Motherdom was refreshing. Having successfully medicalised pregnancy and childbirth, and so brought it under the control of mostly upper-middle-class, white, male, establishment authority figures, the same is being done with child rearing using spurious and misleading references to neuroscience. In the UK, at least, the education system has gone …

2 April 2025

Protest per se is pretty futile, so try this instead

From Carl Turney, Orbost, Victoria, Australia

Regarding the story "Thousands join 'Stand Up for Science' rallies across the US". Given the often small long-term impacts and benefits of protest marches and rallies per se, plus the many hours consumed in their preparation and attendance, the most effective and efficient activity is to collect the contact details of as many attendees as …

2 April 2025

Space/time breakthrough to save your old iPhone?

From Adam Whitehouse, Newcastle- under-Lyme, Staffordshire, UK

The recent discovery that memory requirements for computation can be drastically reduced raises an intriguing question: could this principle help extend the lifespan of smartphones and the like? Many older devices struggle to run newer operating systems due to fixed memory constraints. If we could rewrite OS processes using the newly discovered approach, could this …

2 April 2025

On studying first aid behaviour in mice (1)

From Ingrid Newkirk, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, US

Researchers rendered mice unconscious – not benign – and then presented them to other mice who tried to resuscitate them. Such "research" won't benefit anyone, let alone save anyone's life, yet the mice were significantly disturbed. It adds only to the knowledge that despite "discovering" time and again that mice and other species have feelings, …

2 April 2025

On studying first aid behaviour in mice (2)

From Calliope Irving, Seaford, East Sussex, UK

You quote a researcher saying "the recuperative behaviour isn't an analogue of CPR... but more like performing basic first aid to ensure an unconscious person can breathe". As a retired emergency medical technician, I can confirm CPR is, at its core, basic first aid to ensure a person can breathe and therefore the mouse behaviour …

2 April 2025

Not all is lost when code-busting computers emerge

From Eric Kvaalen, Les Essarts-le-Roi, France

Simon Goodman worries that quantum computers will leave our online bank accounts open to invasion. Actually, other types of cryptography have been developed to get around this vulnerability. Banks and e-commerce will start to use them instead of existing methods if and when necessary. The problem is that today's encrypted messages can be stored, and …

2 April 2025

Civilisation's true start: let's go with public loos

From Paul Whiteley, Bittaford, Devon, UK

I agree with Trevor Prew's sentiments on drains as an indicator of the first true civilisations. I would go slightly further and say that public conveniences are a key indicator. In my part of the country, funding of many public toilets was stopped and they closed. It seems we are less civilised than before ( …

2 April 2025

For the record

Lisa Feldman Barrett is at Northeastern University in Massachusetts ( 15 March, p 30 ). Accretion disc light from a black hole in galaxy 3C 186 was blueshifted relative to its galaxy as a whole ( 15 March, p 19 ). Pufferfish acquire the toxin tetrodotoxin from their diet, rather than producing it themselves ( …

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 ).

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