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New Scientist recommends Togetherness, a radical new view of life

Togetherness Rowan Hooper (Fern Press, UK, out 4th June; Knopf, US, out 18th August) The best books are those that give you a new perspective, but Togetherness by my colleague Rowan Hooper has given me something more than that – not just a new view, but a new way of seeing. In essence a book about symbiosis, Togetherness zooms from the inner workings of our cells all the way out to how our planet functions as a whole and back in again, revealing how biological cooperation underpins all life...

New Scientist 8d ago

One in three employers set to make staff redundancies by early 2027, new survey finds

One in three employers set to make staff redundancies by early 2027, new survey finds New research has found a third of employers are planning redundancies by the start of 2027 - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments One in three employers are likely to implement staff redundancies by early next year, according to new research. A survey of 1,000 businesses, conducted by the conciliation service Acas, found that larger companies are more inclined to lay off staff than smaller firms. Kevin Rowan,...

The Independent UK 6d ago

How a radical new view of life could reveal its origin – and aliens

We've been looking at nature the wrong way, argues Rowan Hooper. If we stop focusing on the individual, we get a whole new picture of how life on Earth – and elsewhere – may have begun

New Scientist 15d ago

Suzanne Simard on the wood wide web, connectedness – and Avatar

Rowan Hooper met ecologist Suzanne Simard under an oak tree in Kew Gardens, London, to talk about her new book, criticism of her work, and getting a call from James Cameron's people

New Scientist 27d ago

Third of companies say they will be making redundancies by start of next year

Third of companies say they will be making redundancies by start of next year A new report has shown who is most at risk One in three employers are likely to make staff redundancies by the start of next year, new research suggests. A survey of 1,000 businesses by the conciliation service Acas found that larger ones are more likely to lay off staff than smaller firms. Acas director of dispute resolution Kevin Rowan said: “The results of our poll reveal that a third of businesses are...

Daily Mirror 6d ago

The forgotten organ that could predict how long you live

The forgotten organ that could predict how long you live A forgotten immune organ may be one of the strongest hidden predictors of longevity, disease risk, and cancer treatment success. - Date: - June 1, 2026 - Source: - Mass General Brigham - Summary: - A long-overlooked organ may hold surprising clues to healthy aging and cancer survival.

Science Daily 9d ago

The best new popular science books of June 2026

This is a month to look out for some powerful new books, with authors taking on challenges of all sorts and imagining whole new worlds. There are fresh ways to think about a cancer diagnosis, a book tackling the real inner world of hormones, in which we are all hormonal all the time, plus a major re-envisioning of the natural world where we abandon the shallows of competition for the depth and intricacies of connection and togetherness. Welcome to the symbiocene.

New Scientist 8d ago

Daily briefing: Trial to ‘de-age’ cells treats first person

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Nature 1d ago

Geoengineering can thicken Arctic sea ice, but for how long?

Each winter, Canada builds more than 7000 kilometres of ice roads, in part by drilling holes in lake ice and pumping water onto the surface, where it freezes and thickens the ice for massive vehicles, as seen in the TV series Ice Road Truckers. If we did the same thing on top of Arctic sea ice, could we thicken it enough to stop it from disappearing? That’s the question tested by geoengineering researchers in field trials in Canada and Norway in 2024 and 2025.

New Scientist 9d ago

Mysterious ‘cold blob’ in the Atlantic suggests the AMOC is weakening

Over the past 150 years, Earth’s entire surface has been warming, except for one patch of the north Atlantic. Located south-east of Greenland, this area has cooled by as much as 1°C and is known as the “warming hole” or the “cold blob”. Scientists have been split over why this cold blob exists, but the latest evidence backs up the idea that it is caused by a weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), the system of currents that transports warmth from the tropics to...

New Scientist 6d ago