New Scientist 2018 sep

(Jeff_L) #1
8 September 2018 | NewScientist | 53

“ Being wrong should be on the curriculum:
what holds people back is fear of it”

rate at which we are thrashing the
planet, Mathis Wackernagel is on
the money in describing typical
economic activity as the largest
“Ponzi scheme” (4 August, p 20).
The dominant global economic
paradigm in the developed world
is neoliberal capitalism. It ticks
four boxes recognised as defining
a Ponzi scheme: it is predicated
on infinite growth, which is an
impossibility in a finite world;
when growth stops it falls over;
there is no way to a soft landing;
and the precise point of collapse
can’t be predicted. The reason this
description hasn’t registered in
mass consciousness is the longish
time span to collapse.


From Fred White,
Nottingham, UK
Our society determines actions
based on cost-effectiveness and
profit potential at all scales, from
the household up to government


level. This should work, but these
actions are based on an economic
system that draws down capital
assets and counts them as profits.
It assumes that continual growth
is possible in a finite system and
takes no account for cleaning up
the consequences of actions.
Our descendants will be at a
loss to know how a society capable
of exploring other planets and
editing the genome could possibly
have done so with an accounting
system that encourages two plus
two to equal seven.

When glaciers have gone
it’s too late to use valleys

From Perry Bebbington,
Kimberley, Nottinghamshire, UK
Erik Foxcroft suggests using
vacant glacial valleys as water
reservoirs for pumped storage
hydropower (Letters, 18 August).
By the time the glaciers have

water (and it can get very hot).
Energy generation must be
accompanied by appliances that
enable the resulting heat to be
used in the most practical way.

What is the role of stress
in producing allergies?

From Piers Roberts, Hampton
in Arden, West Midlands, UK
Thank you for the interesting
article on allergies (11 August,
p 28). I was amazed, though, to
find no discussion of whether
stress levels can have a role,
either as a precursor of allergic
reactions or in exacerbating them.

From Tony Kelly,
Crook, County Durham, UK
Penny Sarchet doesn’t mention a
factor that, I am sure, contributes
to allergies: stress. I refer to
unrelenting mental stress to
which there is no conceivable

retreated enough to make this
viable I think it will be a bit too
late to think about such storage.

Renewable energy
thwarted by appliances

From Enid Smith,
Linton, Cambridgeshire, UK
Paul Whiteley suggests that
instead of funding large-scale
energy projects we should spend
the money putting solar hot water
panels on people’s roofs (Letters,
4 August). We have solar hot water
panels on our roof, and they have
saved us money for some years.
But our predominant use of
warm water is to wash clothes.
Needing a new washing machine,
we couldn’t find one that took
warm water from the system,
only ones that took cold water that
was then heated. The rise in our
electric bills has been significant.
Meanwhile we have excess hot

Kate Shaw MA, MS, PsyD responds to a report that we can train
ourselves to better know when we are wrong (1 September, p 14).

>

One of the foremost physicists of
mid-Victorian Britain, John Tyndall’s
contribution to science underpin our
understanding of climate change, the
atmosphere, and glaciology. He was
also a pioneering mountaineer,
friend to the political and
literary elite of his day, and one
of the great popular science
communicators of his time.

Roland Jackson’s
biography makes
perfect summer
reading.

SUMMER READING

9780198788959 | 576 pages | £25

“If you want to understand AI, you need to
read The Deep Learning Revolution.”

—Erik Brynjolfsson, Professor at MIT Sloan
School of Management

mitpress.mit.edu/revolution

Free download pdf