The zoo inside you

Matt Ridley

Microbes and worms that are necessary for the immune system to work My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal: One of the delights of science is its capacity for showing us that the world is not as it seems. A good example is the startling statistic that there are at least […]

Do Human Beings Carry Expiration Dates?

Matt Ridley

Few people get past 115, though many live to 100 Update: a couple of small corrections inserted in square brackets below. Thanks to Stephen Coles of UCLA.   My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal   After celebrating her 60th year on the throne in style this past week, Britain’s Queen […]

How Facebook captured capitalist “Kumbaya”

Matt Ridley

Free sharing on the net is not incompatible with markets My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal:   Human beings love sharing. We swap, collaborate, care, support, donate, volunteer and generally work for each other. We tend to admire sharing when it’s done for free but frown upon it-or consider it […]

Red tape hobbles a harvest of life-saving rice

Matt Ridley

Bio-engineered micronutrients may be the most cost-effective way to help the poor Latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal   This week saw the announcement of the latest conclusions of the Copenhagen Consensus, a project founded by Bjørn Lomborg in which expert economists write detailed papers every four years and then gather to […]

The economic defeat of tuberculosis

Matt Ridley

TB was not cured so much as prevented by better housing conditions My latest Mind and Matter column for the Wall Street Journal: Peter Pringle’s new book “Experiment Eleven” documents a shocking scandal in the history of medicine, when Albert Schatz, the discoverer of streptomycin, was deprived of the credit and the Nobel Prize by […]

High tech runs through it: the new science of fly fishing

Matt Ridley

Silicon nano matrix fishing rods My latest Wall Street Journal column is on the technology of fly fishing rods Moore’s Law is the leitmotif of the modern age: Incessant improvements in communication and computing are accompanied by incessant drops in price. Yet some quite low-tech devices are also experiencing Moore’s Laws of their own, especially […]

Games Primates Play

Matt Ridley

People behave just like the apes they are My latest Mind and Matter column in the Wall Street Journal is about how predictably “primate” we all are in the workplace: Generally, junior professors write long and unsolicited emails to senior professors, who reply with short ones after a delay; the juniors then reply quickly and […]

Time to start fracking

Matt Ridley

Opposition to shale gas is a storm in a teacup The Times has published my op-ed on shale gas: It is now official: drilling for shale gas by fracturing rock with water may rattle the odd teacup, but is highly unlikely to cause damaging earthquakes. That much has been obvious to anybody who has followed […]

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