Letters archive
Join the conversation in 51¶¯Âþ'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
25 June 2025
From Inés Antón Méndez, Madrid, Spain
To describe individuals with conditions such as ADHD, James Brown and Alex Conner want us to use new terms – "neurodivergent" instead of "neurodiverse", for example. They think that "vague or inaccurate language reinforces stereotypes"( 7 June, p 21 ). I beg to differ. History shows it is naive to think changing the term for …
25 June 2025
From Harry Lagoussis, Athens, Greece
You report that an algorithm can allow a camera to see around corners by decoding information reflected in a surface such as a wall. I wonder if this could be used on existing photos or videos, as long as the wall in question is still available to be mapped. If so, the privacy issues are …
25 June 2025
From Martin Welbank, Cambridge, UK
A book you review, Out of This World and Into the Next , suggests the sun's eventual wrathful death makes it wise to get our butts to Mars. We should be able to persist on Earth for the next billion years or so before solar changes get too bad. For perspective, a billion years ago, …
2 July 2025
From Sam Edge, Ringwood, Hampshire, UK
I agree with Adam Taor that some of the terminology used for female anatomy, especially reproductive parts, is extremely paternalistic, if not outright misogynistic, and could do with revision( 14 June, p 21 ). I remember a discussion on the subject involving Germaine Greer, who recalled that once she had found out "vagina" comes from …
2 July 2025
From Andrew Evans, Pembroke Dock, UK
Taor contends that male eponyms for female anatomical structures are somehow wrong. Actually, they are part of the rich history of nomenclature in anatomy. Since the 1960s, many have been supplanted by more descriptive terminology, but a lot of the enduring terms do bring to mind the lives of those long-dead anatomists and surgeons whose …
2 July 2025
From Alisoun Gardner-Medwin, Heddon on the Wall, Northumberland, UK
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein is right to remind us that in 1922, Germany was the global epicentre of science and that this pre-eminence was destroyed by the Nazi government. In the 1930s, British and US universities, to their credit and advantage, welcomed scientists fleeing persecution by the Nazis( 14 June, p 22 ). It appears that US …
2 July 2025
From Daniel Hunter, Hales, Norfolk, UK
Economics could also explain why Tutankhamun's tomb contained so many high-value goods. When his father Akhenaten closed the traditional temples, presumably he seized a lot of their gold. Gold has two key functions: decoration and a medium of exchange. If the temple gold was melted down and turned into a medium of exchange – perhaps …
2 July 2025
From Clive Bashford, London, UK
You don't need to go to a gym to do isometric exercise, where you tighten and hold certain muscles, for example in a plank. You don't even have to get out of bed, as no movement is needed. I started doing this when I noticed my arms getting weak – at 79, I am amazed …
2 July 2025
From Andrew Smyth, Los Angeles, California, US
The many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics may suggest that humans lack true free will, even though they feel as if they have it. Each choice a person makes splits them into parallel, pre-existing block universes, each with its own fixed past and future. While it may seem like we choose between alternatives, in reality we …