2025-03-14
27 分钟Science education is key to creating a successful future,
but the challenges have never been greater.
I'm Matt Kaplan, host of Safeguarding Sound Climate Change Edition.
Join us for outstanding conversations with the leading researchers,
policy experts and teachers who are fighting to keep misinformation
and pseudoscience out of our classrooms and off our screens.
Subscribe to Safeguarding Sound Science on Apple, Spotify, Amazon or wherever you like to listen.
Hello, and welcome to New Scientist Weekly,
where we discuss the most fascinating science news of the week.
I'm Penny Sato.
And I'm Rowan Hooper.
Today we're going to talk about why there's no such thing as memory,
not at least as we currently understand it.
Wow.
And we're also looking at the most important biochemical process ever invented by evolution
and how that's changing as a result of climate change.
We're going to start with the ongoing attack on science by the Trump administration.
We're going to talk about the threat to NASA, mostly,
but I also want to talk first about Johns Hopkins University.
This week it lost $800 million in grants.