The Critic Magazine

Not necessarily the end of the world

MARTIN REES GETS BRISKLY to the point on page two: “The Earth has existed for 45 million centuries, but this is the first century in which one dominant species can determine, for good or ill, the future of the entire biosphere.” That’s an alarming sentence: first, 45 million centuries is more vertiginous than the usual 4.5 billion years; even more vertiginous is the terrible truth that all life now suddenly depends on the sanity or otherwise of humanity. Would that we were all Martin Rees.

Rees, Astronomer Royal, former Master of Trinity, Cambridge, and President of the Royal Society, is certainly an establishment figure but, unusually for such folk, he is eminently sane. , like his previous books

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Critic Magazine

The Critic Magazine4 min read
Did QE Cost Taxpayers?
SO MANY MONETARY POLICY decisions have been wrong in the last few years that it is not surprising that politicians and journalists spend time looking out for yet another cock-up. According to numerous media reports, the Bank of England’s programmes o
The Critic Magazine4 min read
Posh Pinks
THE INSIDE OF CLOS DU TEMPLE winery in the Languedoc looks like a set from the original Star Trek. The wine is housed in a series of 10-foot black bauxite pyramids each topped with gold, or “gold pyramidion overcoming the vats” as the publicity mater
The Critic Magazine6 min read
The Best We Can Hope For
DANIEL KAHNEMAN DIED ON 27 MARCH AT the age of 90. He was one of the most perceptive and accurate psychologists of the last 100 years, and his analysis of the sorts of mistake we are liable to make when trying to decide what to do is permanently valu

Related