With the discovery of several thousand new pages of Hegel’s lecture notes, fans are hoping his famously tricky philosophy may become easier to understand – this expert isn’t so sure.
Firefighters and residents battle a blaze in hot, dry conditions in Athens, Greece, in August 2021.
AP Photo/Petros Karadjias
John Locke and John Stuart Mill don’t provide much in the way of justification for ignoring public health advice in a pandemic. Mikhail Bakunin, however…
Susan Stebbing’s 1939 work is just as relevant today as it was then.
National Portrait Gallery, London via Creative Commons
A mother with underlying conditions wants to hug her children even if means risking her own life with COVID-19. Should they abide by her wishes or keep their distance?
And you, do you apply the #stayhome principle that is displayed everywhere on social networks?
Lionel Bonaventure/AFP
Involving family and friends in decisions or rethinking the meaning of “getting back to normal” helps protect against cognitive bias and its harmful consequences.
Tipping from a social distance at The Lucky Devil strip club in Portland, Oregon.
Steve Dykes/Getty Images
From human suffering to political chicanery to environmental degradation, the tide of bad news, blared in headlines every day, seems overwhelming. One poet and classics scholar asks: What can be done?
“Critique of Black Reason” offers readers insight into how the construction of race and racism underpins our understanding of modernity.
How many times do we wonder, ‘what’s the right thing to do’?
Ed Yourdon from New York City, USA (Helping the homeless Uploaded by Gary Dee, via Wikimedia Commons