Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

Thinking smarter, not harder

Something the Hanrahans of this world never seem to notice – over the past century the human race has been getting smarter, at least smarter at the sort of abstract reasoning that IQ tests measure. But interestingly in the most “advanced” human societies we have – the Scandinavian ones – this progress has stopped.

So says the researcher who found this:

If we are to make any further progress, we will have to start exercising different parts of our brain, particularly the parts controlling language acquisition and empathy, according to Professor Flynn, an emeritus professor at the University of Otago in New Zealand….
The challenge for humanity now is to enhance our ability to debate moral and social questions intelligently. One way to do this might be to concentrate on reading great works of literature which expand our vocabulary, critical acumen and emotional maturity.
But the fact that, as a society, we are unwilling to make the sacrifices necessary to preserve the environment, suggests we still have a long way to go on this front, Professor Flynn said.

Half of the saccharine

Over on My London Your London Robert has a review of Hellcab, now showing at the Old Red Lion. It is billed as a Christmas play with a difference, but it seems that they’ve just cut down the dose of saccharine, rather than eliminated it altogether.

Small, sad deaths

The fate of any individual animal, even any species, is not, in the big scale of planetary history, in any way notable. But that doesn’t mean we can’t, indeed shouldn’t, mourn their loss.

On the individual: close studies of the northern bottlenose whale that died in the Thames last year shows human actions were a big factor in her lonely, tormented death at the age of six. (Her natural lifespan would have been at least 40 years.)

An analysis of the whale’s blubber and liver by a government laboratory in Essex showed her body was laced with toxic chemicals used in paints, electronics, pesticides and detergents. The most toxic were PCBs, banned in the 1970s.=
This finding suggests pollution may be reaching farther out to sea than previously thought, as northern bottlenose whales are deep-sea feeders.

In Vietnam, it is a whole species that is at risk –the saola, “which looks like an antelope but is related to cattle” – a species that the world only learnt existed a decade ago.

It was the first new large mammal discovered in half a century, but while the population then was thought to be quite sustainable, it has now crashed to less than 200, and its chances look very poor.

Carnivalesque – what’s your tipple?

Over on Scribbling Woman (one of the first blogs ever on my blogroll) is Carnivalesque No 22, being, of course, a collection of early modern history posts. It is a feast of Christmas reading.

Among many other things I learnt from Raminagrobis that
‘vin de porceau’ in early modern France was ‘[wine] which makes the drunkard to sleepe, vomit, and tumble him in his vomit.’

So binge drinking hasn’t always been just a British thing then…

Women writers of the 20th century

Over on My London Your London I’ve an account of an exhibition of photos of 20th-century women writers at the National Portrait Gallery. You can almost watch the rising cult of “writer as celebrity”.

The first female recipient of the Military Cross

Private Michelle Norris has been awarded the Military Cross for her actions under fire as a medic in Iraq.

She’s been through a lot for a 19-year-old…