Culture news, articles, and features | New Scientist /section/culture/ Science news and science articles from New Scientist Thu, 09 Jul 2026 19:03:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0.1 242057827 This book is essential reading before watching the new Odyssey film /article/2531908-this-book-is-essential-reading-before-watching-the-new-odyssey-film/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 08 Jul 2026 17:00:33 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2531908 Jimmy Gonzales as Cepheus, Matt Damon as Odysseus and Himesh Patel as Eurylochus in Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey
Jimmy Gonzales as Cepheus, Matt Damon as Odysseus and Himesh Patel as Eurylochus in Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey
Melinda Sue Gordon / © Universal Studios

“You don’t acquire Homer; Homer acquires you.” So writes Adam Nicolson in , his paean to that indispensable pair of ancient epics, the Iliad and the Odyssey. Christopher Nolan’s of the latter makes Nicolson’s book essential reading now for anyone interested in the story’s greater significance.

Nicolson’s work follows three trains of thought. In the first, he waxes philosophical about what Homer – always referred to in the singular, but acknowledged to have been multiple people, spanning generations – has to say about the meaning of life and the clash between civilisation and depravity. He delves into the fascination literary giants have had with Homer, including John Keats, whose poem Endymion gives the book its title, and Alexander Pope, whose translations leave much to be desired.

The other two strands are more rooted in the tangible world. Nicolson digs into the text of the Iliad and the Odyssey and parses out variations in the Greek, tracing the language’s structure back to the Linear B of the Mycenaean era and beyond, and uses this linguistic examination to attempt to pin down exactly when the poems were first composed – much earlier than we’d previously thought, he argues. The standardised, written Homer that we know came down from a much older oral tradition, says Nicolson, as far back as even 2000-1800 BC.

The Mighty Dead: Why Homer matters by Adam Nicolson

Finally, he finds traces of Homer’s writing in archaeological treasures from around the ancient Mediterranean, from a papyrus found at the Hawara site in Egypt to a pottery shard discovered in a tomb on the island of Ischia, one of the oldest surviving examples of written Greek. The papyrus dates to about AD 150; the pottery, to the 8th century BC. Much attention is also paid to the shaft graves of Mycenae, and what they can tell us about the world before the Bronze Age collapse.

Nicolson isn’t interested in the historicity of the poems themselves – they are myths, after all – as much as he is in the world that produced them. He draws a compelling portrait of a complex ancient realm, and of people for whom these stories provided a link to their nomadic, warrior-centred past.

Rereading The Mighty Dead, with its focus on relics and remnants, reminded me of my honeymoon to Crete. My husband and I visited the archaeological museum in Heraklion and saw a boar-tusk helmet on display; in book 10 of the Iliad, you will find Odysseus described wearing one, too. It is a reminder, as Nicolson’s book impressively contends, that the world of Homer is still very much all around us, if we know where to look.

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The 4 best science-fiction shows of 2026 so far /article/2533003-the-4-best-science-fiction-shows-of-2026-so-far/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 08 Jul 2026 18:00:00 +0000 http://mg27136031.100 2533003 The 5 must-watch science shows of 2026 so far /article/2533004-the-5-must-watch-science-shows-of-2026-so-far/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 08 Jul 2026 18:00:00 +0000 http://mg27136031.200 (UK: Channel 4; US: not available) In 2015, an amateur trophy hunter from the US shot and killed the largest lion in Africa. The vitriol unleashed after Cecil’s death isn’t surprising (or entirely unwarranted), but what is remarkable is how this delicately-crafted film uses the case as a locus for all sorts of arguments about conservation. A symbol in life and in death, Cecil and other large, charismatic animals exist in a complex balance with humans who, one way or another, invariably stake a claim on them. TX DATE:23-02-2026,TX WEEK:8,EMBARGOED UNTIL:17-02-2026 00:00:00,PEOPLE:Hannah Fry,DESCRIPTION:,COPYRIGHT:Curious Films,CREDIT LINE:BBC/Curious Films/Rory Langdon Down (UK: BBC iPlayer; US: not currently available) Almost everyone in the world now needs to have some knowledge of how AI technologies work, from all the chatbots they encounter to driverless cars and more. Mathematician Hannah Fry is an excellent person to impart such knowledge: across three episodes, she guides us through recent cases where AI has become entangled with very human problems. The series breaks down complicated topics through clear metaphors, and it benefits from Fry’s warmth, humour and complete lack of judgement towards those at the sharp end of this ultimate technological revolution. TX DATE:15-04-2026,TX WEEK:15,EMBARGOED UNTIL:07-04-2026 00:00:00,PEOPLE:(l-r) Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, Jeremy Hansen,DESCRIPTION:Artemis II Crew,COPYRIGHT:NASA,CREDIT LINE:BBC/NASA/Wall to Wall (UK: BBC iPlayer; US: Discovery+) While we eagerly await Artemis III in 2027, why not revisit this year’s Artemis II mission, which returned humans on a flyby of the moon for the first time in more than 50 years? This all-too-brief film is the product of three and a half years of filming with the Artemis programme, and it’s the story of countless humans – all those behind-the-scenes engineers and designers who worked on the mission alongside the four astronauts who travelled further from Earth than anyone before them. TX DATE:03-05-2026,TX WEEK:18,EMBARGOED UNTIL:27-04-2026 18:00:00,PEOPLE:David Attenborough,DESCRIPTION:David Attenborough during filming for the 1979 Life on Earth series.,COPYRIGHT:BBC,CREDIT LINE:BBC (UK: BBC iPlayer; US: PBS) The best of the many, many documentaries released to celebrate David Attenborough’s centenary was this behind-the-scenes look at the most iconic natural history series ever made. Released in 1979, the structure and tone of Life on Earth became the blueprint for almost every nature documentary that has been made ever since, and consequently has helped to define how we view the world around us. Making Life on Earth is crammed full of fascinating details from the production process, from a terrifying near-miss with armed guards in Rwanda, to Attenborough discovering that he has an allergy to donkey fur while riding the animals to the bottom of the Grand Canyon – and how it ended up ruining a close-up. Fukushima: A Nuclear Nightmare (UK: for rent; US: HBO Max) Fifteen years ago, a devastating earthquake and subsequent tsunami killed 20,000 people across northern Japan and caused vital cooling systems at the Fukushima nuclear power plant to fail. Told through the most stomach-churning footage and eye-witness accounts, this film sets out exactly what went wrong and charts how a natural disaster turned into a nuclear emergency. Amid the grim details, one bright spot is the bravery of the so-called Fukushima 50, who remained onsite and risked their lives to prevent a full-scale meltdown that would have rendered vast swathes of Japan uninhabitable. Because of their actions, only one person has so far died as a result of the accident.]]> 2533004 New Scientist recommends a vital look at the science of fatherhood /article/2533006-new-scientist-recommends-a-vital-look-at-the-science-of-fatherhood/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 08 Jul 2026 18:00:00 +0000 http://mg27136031.400 2533006 Why Schrödinger’s 1944 classic What Is Life? still feels prescient /article/2533430-why-schrodingers-1944-classic-what-is-life-still-feels-prescient/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 08 Jul 2026 12:00:18 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2533430 2533430 Chris Packham: ‘I’d throw myself in front of a T. Rex to be consumed’ /article/2533235-chris-packham-id-throw-myself-in-front-of-a-t-rex-to-be-consumed/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Tue, 07 Jul 2026 11:00:08 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2533235 2533235 Musical take on The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is moving and charming /article/2533058-musical-take-on-the-boy-who-harnessed-the-wind-is-moving-and-charming/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 06 Jul 2026 11:00:54 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2533058 2533058 The best new popular science books of July 2026 /article/2532793-the-best-new-popular-science-books-of-july-2026/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Thu, 02 Jul 2026 14:00:55 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2532793
Australia’s tiger quoll – as featured in Dan Werb’s Our Wild Familiars, out this month
Shutterstock/Craig Dingle

It’s a hot month in London – in oh so many ways. Life, being alive and death are big themes in the new popular science books out in July, not to mention that small thing of being a human and all the messy feelings and sensory stuff that goes with it. Then there’s also AI filling the future – in ways that worry one of the world’s leading forensic scientists, as well as ethicists who are paid to think about this sort of thing. I’m looking forward to delving into the worlds of volcanoes and pharmacology, which look positively safe and stable in comparison…

by Valerie Tiberius

Can friendship with a chatbot ever be as good as friendship with a gang of flesh-and-blood besties? Is there still and will there – can there – always be something about human friendships that will elude the smartest of simulations? Ethicist and University of Minnesota professor of philosophy Valerie Tiberius sets out to argue the human case. She defines the ideal friendship as an enjoyable, close relationship built on shared activities between people who care about each other for their own sake. It will be interesting to see where her book goes with this – especially since Shannon Vallor, author ofThe AI Mirror: How to reclaim our humanity in an age of machine thinking, thinks it “provides a nuanced philosophical survey of the possibilities for human-AI relationships by highlighting their considerable risks and benefits”.

by Richard Coker

It may sound a bit gloomy, but Timor Mortis (literally “fear of death”) could hardly be more timely as we increasingly worry about the quality of end-of-life care for everyone we care about (including ourselves). Then there’s what we mean by “a good death” – and perhaps the biggest question of all, how do we live in the hyperteched 21st century in the visceral shadow of our own death? Public health doctor Richard Coker probes death’s complexities from different perspectives: biological, psychological, moral and historical. Coker has certainly done the rounds, latterly as a professor at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and earlier as a doctor working with people who had TB or HIV/AIDS.

by Tamie Jovanelly

This is one of the latest in the redoubtable What Everyone Needs to Know series from Oxford University Press, covering everything from gender to robots. And how could you go wrong with the subject of volcanoes? Geology professor Tamie Jovanelly has over 20 years of global research experience in volcanism, climate change, water systems and natural hazards to guide her as she answers those simple questions we might be too embarrassed to ask anyone else. Where do we find volcanoes? Can we predict when and where they will erupt? Can we harness their energy? With 1350 active volcanoes on Earth, between 50 and 70 erupting annually, not to mention climate change in the mix, explaining what makes one of nature’s most powerful forces work isn’t a simple task. Jovanelly also gives us GPS coordinates for locating volcanoes, high-definition photographs for identifying volcanic minerals and rocks – and there’s an appendix featuring 100 of the world’s most active volcanoes.

by Rod Flower

This book sounds like it might be a great companion to a title we featured in May: Nick Barber’s How to Take Drugs: A new approach to medication for better results and fewer side effects. And given the staggering 1 billion-plus prescriptions written in the UK every year – and, even more staggeringly, over five billion in the US – members of the prescribed-to public can stand all the help they can get to understand why they take the drugs they do, and what those drugs do. This is more of a history and context-builder, as Rod Flower, emeritus professor of biochemical pharmacology at Queen Mary University of London (with a big interest in inflammation and anti-inflammatories) takes us through the astonishingly fast evolution of our drug use, from healing plants and herbs to a global market just under $2 trillion – and the rise of pharmacology as a discipline. Flower also shows us how drugs really work in detail, the process of medicine development and what makes scientists think that their therapies will work as, er, advertised.

A clay counting board from Uruk, Iraq, dated to the fourth millennium BC. Data as power is explored in Roopika Risam’s new book, out this month
Osama SM Amin FRCP(Glasg)

by Roopika Risam

“Groundbreaking and provocative” is how its publishers describe Data Empire. This exploration of data as power tracks back millennia to the first clay tablets of Mesopotamia, through knotted strings keeping account to the algorithmic modern state. Their purpose sounds oddly familiar: helping states govern people/empires, and helping institutions to decide who appears on the official record and who doesn’t. As we stare, often helplessly, at the plethora of hyperconnected, pervasive, personally extractive tech heading at us, shaping the future needs the insights of people like Risam, working from her multiple perspectives, including a digital humanities and social engagement professorship at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire. Any writer would be thrilled to have the kind of applause she has attracted, with Lewis Dartnell (author of The Knowledge: How to rebuild our world from scratch) calling the book “Breathtaking in its scope” and one of the founders of VR, Jaron Lanier, describing it as the “new history of mankind demanded by our times… This book asks what we will do about data now that we have no choice but to do something.”

by Ian Bogost

In a time of excess consumption, enforced efficiency and fear of missing out, it sounds distinctly quixotic to be pursuing a more gratifying life. But Atlantic columnist and computer academic/designer Ian Bogost’s The Small Stuff is pitched as just that. From digital tickets to automated taps, say its publishers, life’s simple pleasures have been stripped away, replaced by sleek, soulless design. Bogost “uncovers how modern conveniences not only fail to deliver on their promises but also rob us of small, satisfying tasks and moments that keep us grounded and human”. So it isn’t just a matter of smelling the roses, and sitting under more trees, but reinvesting in your interactions with the material world and more labour-creating devices. Small pleasures instead of flat giant screens… can’t wait!

by Dan Werb

Brown rats, raccoons, and urban foxes; house flies and cockroaches; even dandelions and kudzu vines; they are wild creatures living alongside humans, hence the lovely Greek noun that describes them: synanthrope (syn meaning “with”; anthropos “man”). These and more exotic creatures, such as the tiger quoll or the collared delma, are at the heart of what looks like a really fascinating book. Writer and epidemiologist Dan Werb goes beyond examining the everyday roles these wild animals play in our lives: from annoyance at the activities of houseflies and urban foxes, to replacing lids in raccoon country or watching out for disease vectors from brown rats and others. He’s also interested in how we are reaching a key moment as these creatures are “arbiters of our planet’s future”, and “a key influence on the continuing evolution of our species”. Environmental destruction means that their urban habitats will increase and their numbers soar. We are going to have to stop resisting them and learn how to live in harmony. By the way, the collared delma is a tiny legless lizard, but the tiger quoll is a metre-long carnivore – a cross between a cat and a rat. Interesting futures ahead then.

Forensic anthropologist Sue Black has a new book out this month
Peter Jolly/Shutterstock

by Sue Black

This is the third book in a trilogy by Sue Black, one of the UK’s most eminent forensic scientists with 40 years of experience working on the evidence used in criminal cases. This time she’s putting science in the dock as she uses landmark cases to unpick what went wrong, where justice was served, what we should fight to preserve – and asks how AI and other forms of automation will work in court. And while there have been huge leaps forward – the discovery of DNA fingerprinting, and Black’s own vein-pattern identification work – cases like that of Andrew Malkinson, wrongly convicted and jailed for 17 years, show what happens when things go wrong. She asks if we’ll be able to cope with the future coming at us fast. “Are we prepared for AI to redact police files before they are sent to the CPS? Are we ready to accept instant interview translations? If they are incorrect, who will correct them? Who will notice? We will certainly all care,” she writes. We will indeed.

by Eleanor Drage

Confusion and fear around the fast encroachment of AI and where it may lead is completely understandable. But ethicist Eleanor Drage is exploring, as her book’s subtitle puts it, “How to stop catastrophising and build an ethical future”. She reckons we need a whole new language and some fresh ideas to determine what AI is and how we should use it. That translates into adding feminism, reparative justice and climate politics into the debate. Early endorsements include broadcaster Sandi Toksvig (“A wise and purpose-driven book to steer us out of AI doom”) and N. Katherine Hayles, author of From Bacteria to AI (“Eleanor Drage dismantles prophecies of both apocalypse and transcendence to show how we can achieve liveable futures with AI”).

by Melanie Challenger

This is one of our biggest conceptual problems: what does it mean to be alive? Researcher and natural philosopher Melanie Challengerprobes the latest discoveries in biology and physics “to reveal a radical truth: to be alive is first and foremost a way of being a body”, say the book’s publicists. This sounds great and it will be interesting to see how the argument plays out – how far Alive lives up the claims and restores “agency, purpose and meaning to organisms in an age of artificial intelligence and biodiversity loss”.

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The 4 must-watch science-fiction films of the year so far /article/2532439-the-4-must-watch-science-fiction-films-of-the-year-so-far/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 01 Jul 2026 17:00:52 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2532439 2532439 This thoughtful book will make you look at the wonders of trees anew /article/2530952-this-thoughtful-book-will-make-you-look-at-the-wonders-of-trees-anew/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=culture&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 01 Jul 2026 17:00:13 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2530952 2530952