The Earth as lab
Scientists are increasingly confident that they can pinpoint the culprits of global warming, says Stephen Schneider Awareness that pollution can degrade our environment is hardly new. That was...
Scientists are increasingly confident that they can pinpoint the culprits of global warming, says Stephen Schneider Awareness that pollution can degrade our environment is hardly new. That was...
Peter Coveney says there is a growing breed of scientists using computers to formulate the universal features of"complexity" defined as the behaviour of large collections of single units with the...
Complexity influences the arts in many ways. In contemporary literature, there are numerous examples. There was the cartoon caricature of a "chaos mathematician" who warned of the dangers of meddling...
Of all the sources of inspiration that computer scientists have drawn on, none can compare with the brain. It has long been a goal of those working in computer science to endow a machine with...
More than 60 years ago, the young Irish crystallographer John Bernal anticipated the possibility of machines with a life-like ability to reproduce. "To make life itself will be only a preliminary...
Can Clinton win? Huw Richards looks into the American political scientists' crystal ball It's my job you're after" says the banner toted by the grim-looking chap on the cover of the programme for...
Over the next few days university registries will be waiting anxiously to see how many of their old and new students fail to enrol. But this wastage is far from unavoidable, even with the advent of...
FRIDAY. Arrive Compton Durville, Somerset, in good time for supper with the convent Sisters. Most meals used to be silent, now only breakfast is. Even that is a strangely moving experience but...
As Britain entered the post-colonial age some four decades ago, Dean Acheson, principal architect of postwar United States foreign policy, made his notorious comment that while Britain had lost an...
Current concerns about higher education refer too little to defects in its basic function. While research (as well as being right in itself) can bring quick cash, self-gratification and league table...
I was interested to read your article (THES, September 29) on the support and training for new academics. South Bank University has been at the forefront of these developments, offering an 'M' level...
Several questions are raised by the unfortunate pillorying of Exeter University's MA course in English on your front page (THES, September 29). Clearly the administrative systems governing these...
The concluding statement in Diana Green's articles (THES, September 15) that "perhaps the best use of management tools in this area would be to make a positive link between quality, evidence of its...
Your article on university access and support for disabled people (THES September 29) took a narrow focus. It is correct to highlight the continuing personal struggles by students with disabilities...
Your report on Professor Monk's architectural course at Luton (THES, September 22) has a surprisingly philistine ring. It is also gratuitously insulting to Richard Rogers and Norman Foster in...