Science

Science

New model science: how FROs can turbocharge scientific innovation

The UK BioBank is one of the most influential biomedical initiatives in the world. It contains genetic, health, and lifestyle data on half a million people and has been used to make extraordinary contributions to our understanding of human health. Over the past ten years, 28,000 researchers from 86 countries have used the BioBank to […]

Health

Sadiq Khan is backing obesity claims based on shameless junk science

Has banning junk food adverts on the Tube dramatically reduced obesity and saved the NHS £millions? That’s the claim made in a study published today – ‘The health, cost and equity impacts of restrictions on the advertisement of high fat, salt and sugar products across the transport for London network: a health economic modelling study’ […]

Science

When will I be able to upload my brain to a computer?

READER QUESTION: I am 59 years old, and in reasonably good health. Is it possible that I will live long enough to put my brain into a computer? Richard Dixon. We often imagine that human consciousness is as simple as input and output of electrical signals within a network of processing units – therefore comparable […]

Science

Battlefields of knowledge: how Britain’s coming debates over food and agriculture will play out

While Westminster has been fixated on the fallout from Partygate in recent weeks, one of the most consequential pieces of post-Brexit legislation was recently introduced in Parliament. The Genetic Technology (Precision Breeding) Bill comes at a time when food shortages are hitting the headlines. Warning signs were already evident in 2021: a combination of extreme […]

Science

Our awful planning laws risk squeezing the life science out of Britain

We’re used to railing against the iniquities of the planning system on these pages, more often than not when it comes to new homes being scrapped for some pathetic reason like the need to save a car park (or, indeed, a marginal Tory MP). Just last week we had the bizarre spectacle of the Lib […]

Coronavirus

Djoke’s aside – anti-vaxxers aren’t the biggest problem in the pandemic

It will come as a no surprise to students of Novak Djokovic’s career that he ‘has always supported the freedom to choose what you put in your body’. Here, after all, is a man who eschews gluten but is happy to eat the grass at Wimbledon. But it’s not the tennis player’s unusual diet that’s […]

Ideas

From social media spats to civil wars, status anxiety underpins everything we do

Late last year, I came across long-form chat-show Triggernometry’s interview with science writer Will Storr. In it, Storr applies research from his latest book, The Status Game, to the emergence of what we’ve now come to call ‘cancel culture’, especially as it manifests on social media. I do not want for items to review. Most […]

Science

Splice of life: why Brexit Britain must embrace genetic engineering

In his first speech as prime minister in 2019, Boris Johnson rightly declared that the time had come to ‘liberate the UK’s extraordinary bioscience sector from anti–genetic modification rules’. Now, his government is poised to take a significant step towards that goal by reforming some of the stringent agricultural biotechnology regulations imported from the European […]

Business

Chemical bothers – how Britain can get better at regulating synthetic substances

If there’s one area where Britain can benefit from better post-Brexit regulation, it’s pulling ourselves away from blanket bans on chemicals that are critical to making the modern world cleaner, cheaper and faster. PFAS, or Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances, are a group of over 4,700 individual chemicals, each with specific purposes, that are fundamental to […]

Technology

After the Budget, is Boris’ vision of a ‘science superpower’ intact?

Earlier this week former Science and Research Minister Chris Skidmore warned: “if there is not a clear plan from the Chancellor this week, then the Prime Minister’s vision of the UK as a ‘global science superpower’ would have been torn up by the Treasury.” Well, the Chancellor may not have torn up the Prime Minister’s […]

Science

Helen Joyce’s ‘Trans’ exposes the false promise of gender identity ideology

It’s startling how much public discourse is being driven by trans activism and trans issues. Not a week – or even a day – goes by without something trans-related scorching like a tracer bullet across the headlines. Last Saturday, transwoman Alana McLaughlan won her first MMA bout – to a decidedly mixed reception – against […]

Policy

The cold truth about freezing your eggs

Gynaecologically speaking, I’m practically geriatric. By 35, women are told we’re dangerously old to be mothers and at greater risk of miscarriage, stillbirth or having babies with conditions like Down’s syndrome. That’s if we’re able to get pregnant at all, which, if you believe the scare stories about the precipitous decline in fertility women experience […]

Technology

Why the billionaire Space Race is something to cheer

July has been a bumper month for rich blokes going into space. It’s therefore also been a bumper month for outrage and ridicule.  On July 11, Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic ‘spaceplane’ flew, not into space, but to the edge of it. The mission lasted two and a half hours, so about the same as my […]

Health

Advances in years? How Britain can lead the world in anti-ageing

There’s plenty to welcome in the Government’s newly launched Life Sciences Vision. Proposals on improving the use of public data, making it easier for innovative start-ups to win public contracts and equipping potential life science entrepreneurs with management training would all be positive steps forward. But what really excites me is the Vision’s emphasis on […]

Science

Why shouldn’t we ask scientists about their political beliefs?

The Covid pandemic has taught us all a lot about science, but it’s also reminded us of some unanswered questions about how science works. Here’s one from this week: how should we think about scientists’ political views? Monday saw a perfect illustration of this debate as Good Morning Britain co-host Richard Madeley collided with UCL […]

Science

Honours for innovators – the case for an Elizabethan Order

On Saturday, to coincide with the Queen’s official birthday, we learned the names of the hundreds of people newly admitted to the Order of the British Empire. Many of them are already household names, like Prue Leith, now a Dame, and footballers Raheem Sterling and Jordan Henderson, now both MBEs. The past few honours lists […]

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