20 November 2021 | New Scientist | 1This week’s issue
Features
36 Tell me why!
The human mind loves to
ask “why” and it doesn’t stop
when we become adults.
For our 65th anniversary,
we ask 13 of the biggest
whys about ourselves, the
cosmos and our place in it51 The science of cooking
In praise of oysters53 Puzzles
Try our crossword, quick quiz
and logic puzzle54 Almost the last word
Are cats at the top of the
evolutionary ladder?56 Feedback
Net-zero elephants and more
highlights from COP56 Twisteddoodles
for New Scientist
Picturing the lighter
side of lifeViews The back pages
25 Comment
Bill Posters on stopping climate
change misinformation26 The columnist
Global climate action must be
just, says Graham Lawton28 Aperture
Striking photos cross the fine
line between ocean and air30 Letters
How to solve the growing
problem of space debris34 Culture
Jacob Aron prepares an alien
world for colonisationNews
7 New quantum contender
The largest superconducting
quantum computer yet12 Is it Planet Nine?
Candidate spotted in telescope
data from 1980s16 People who ghost
Abruptly stopping
contact is linked to
certain personality traits32 Drunken monkeys Inside the world of animal intoxicationANUP SHAH/GETTY IMAGESCulture
36 Why...
13 of the most profound
questions about the cosmos
(and us)8 The verdict on COPOn the
coverVol 252 No 3361
Cover image: Peter Crowther“The
remarkable
thing is that
the world is
not arbitrary
or absurd”
36 Features
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