Why people prefer bad news

Matt Ridley

The psychology behind global pessimism My article in the Wall Street Journal  on the persistent appeal of pessimism: Has the percentage of the world population that lives in extreme poverty almost doubled, almost halved or stayed the same over the past 20 years? When the Swedish statistician and public health expert Hans Rosling began asking […]

How to stifle innovation

Matt Ridley

A court case lays bare the EU’s bias towards existing technologies My article  on the Brexit Central website about the court decision in the Dyson labelling case: My biggest beef with the European Union has always been the way it stifles consumer-friendly innovation in the interests of incumbent businesses and organisations. Today’s victory for Sir James […]

The genes that contribute to human intelligence and personality

Matt Ridley

A crucial new book by a pioneer of behaviour genetics My Review in The Times of Robert Plomin’s new book: For a long time there was an uncomfortable paradox in the world of behaviour genetics. The evidence for genes heavily influencing personality, intelligence and almost everything about human behaviour got stronger and stronger as more […]

The secret lives of seabirds

Matt Ridley

Two fine new books on the journeys of birds and the first ornithologist     This is recent Times feature article I wrote on the incredible new discoveries of what seabirds get up to far from land, and on the man who first visited seabird colonies with a scientific eye in the 1660s. It’s sometimes […]

Electronic cigarettes and harm reduction

Matt Ridley

How the UK held off regulation that could have killed a life-saving technology My recent Times essay on the history of vaping and why the UK became such a hub of electronic cigarettes: Britain is the world leader in vaping. More people use ecigarettes in the UK than in any other European country. It’s more […]

Frustrate their knavish tricks

Matt Ridley

The plot to prevent Brexit is not being honest My Times column on the parliamentary battle over Brexit: Dominic Grieve, MP, and Viscount Hailsham are clever barristers both, and agreeable company. I was at Oxford with one, sit in the Lords with the other, and count them as friends. But what they are up to […]

AI in the UK: Ready, willing and able?

Matt Ridley

A House of Lords report on the opportunities for artificial intelligence My Times column on artificial intelligence: As a member of the House of Lords select committee on artificial intelligence, whose report is released today, I was struck by two things during the course of our inquiry: how well placed Britain could be to take […]

The coagulated economy

Matt Ridley

How public and private bureaucracies stifle innovation My Times column on the rent-seeking crony-capitalists who stifle innovation: While the world economy continues to grow at more than 3 per cent a year, mature economies, from Europe to Japan, are coagulating, unable to push economic growth above sluggish. The reason is that we have more and […]

Cities are the new Galapagos

Matt Ridley

Urban wildlife is expanding and evolving faster than expected My Times column on the evolution of urban wildlife:   Easter Monday bank holiday feels like a good moment to put aside politics and consider something far more portentous: evolution. Recently I was walking alongside a canal in central London, surrounded by concrete, glass, steel and […]

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