Japanese Story

5th January 2026

Okay, so the title of this newsletter issue is another reference to a movie I like - but this reference is much more direct. “Japanese Story” is an Australian movie from 2003, starring Toni Collette, that tugged on my heartstrings when I watched it maybe 20 years ago.

I’m continuing my travels in Japan, and have to say that I’ve quite fallen in love with this country. An article that appeared in one of my social media feeds a few days ago summed it up quite nicely - Japan is a country that is naturally welcoming to introverts, as much of their infrastructure is built around not having to interact with other people. There’s self-checkout at many shops, self-ordering systems in restaurants, robot waiters, vending machines everywhere, “tap and go” gates for most transport nationwide, and much more. And all of these systems work with Japan’s simple contactless payment system, which originally covered train travel but now works on buses, trams, monorails and boats, as well as in shops, restaurants and vending machines. When you do have to interact with others, it’s always polite and deferential, with both sides being very mindful of the other person. I’m sure I’ve made a few embarrassing faux pas, but overall I’ve felt like my general anxiety in unfamiliar social situations has fit in well with how this country operates.

Given how busy my time has been in Japan - I was in Hiroshima a couple of days ago, and I’m off to Ghibli Park tomorrow - I haven’t managed to put together an article of my own. But, as I said a couple of weeks ago, thanks to some great contributions we still have a great collection of pieces for you to read. We start with another Skeptical History piece from Bronwyn, again covering the period from today until a fortnight’s time. Then we have an article from Katrina about people attempting to use AI to help them in court cases - both here in NZ and overseas. Patrick has written a book review of “Nature’s Last Dance”, as well as giving us some of his more general thoughts about climate change and CO2 levels. And finally we have the final part of John Maindonald’s excellent online book, “What Do the Data Say? – Traps to Avoid”, taken from chapter 9 - “Critiquing scientific claims”.

Mark Honeychurch

Can AI replace your lawyer?

Katrina Borthwick - 5 January 2026

Can AI replace your lawyer?

I was interested to read a recent news report about James Kelly (not his real name) and his legal adventures using generative artificial intelligence (AI).

Book Review: Nature's Last Dance

Patrick Medlicott - 5 January 2026

Book Review: Nature's Last Dance

I would like to make some general observations, and then review a recently published book which synthesises most of what Ben Reid (MEMIA) called a “polycrisis” in his book I previously reviewed.

Critiquing scientific claims

John Maindonald - 5 January 2026

Critiquing scientific claims

To be credible, scientific claims must be able to survive informed criticism. The nature of the critique that is needed will vary, depending on what is in question. It will vary, at a broader level, depending on whether what is in question is.