Articles

  • Jan 8, 2025 | the-tls.co.uk | Charles Foster |Noga Arikha |Robert Adès |Simone Gubler

    Why are we good? Why are we bad? What do those questions mean? Do they mean anything at all? Even if meaningless, these questions matter. They deserve a big book with a broad reach, written by an adroit, confident author, happy in many disciplines. They have it in The Invention of Good and Evil, a brilliant, acute, infuriating, uneven survey of the last five million years of history, courtesy of the German philosopher Hanno Sauer, sparklingly translated by Jo Heinrich.   Sauer’s structure is neat.

  • Dec 18, 2024 | the-tls.co.uk | Simone Gubler |Charles Foster |Noga Arikha |Robert Adès

    The initial work to categorize all of the dogs that live among us was suffused with the spirit of the Scientific Revolution. John Caius, a Cambridge physician, published one of the first attempts at canine taxonomy in 1570. There are five classes of dog, he tells us. He groups them not primarily in terms of physical characteristics, but rather by the useful stations that they hold in human lives.

  • Dec 4, 2024 | the-tls.co.uk | Costica Bradatan |Charles Foster |Noga Arikha |Robert Adès

    In The Faith of the Faithless (2012), Simon Critchley observed that “those who cannot believe still require religious truth and a framework of ritual in which they can believe”. Indeed, one of the broader points he made in that book was that philosophers, even if personally faithless – or, rather, because faithless – have much to gain, philosophically, from engaging in matters of faith. Philosophy should always maintain a respectful dialogue with religion rather than ignore or despise it.

  • Aug 14, 2024 | spectator.co.uk | Robert Adès

    Text size Line Spacing Comments Share Share Robert Adès In defence of strict teachers Linkedin Messenger Email Labour have become alarmed by the strict, ‘cruel’ approach to discipline in schools and the rise in the number of pupils being excluded. Teachers will need to be more relaxed about ‘bad behaviour’. But though moving the goalposts of acceptable behaviour may reduce the exclusion figures, it is bound to increase the burden of disruptive behaviour on teachers and other pupils. My own...

  • Jun 12, 2024 | spectator.com.au | Robert Adès

    ‘Women are more religious because they are socialised to be obedient and passive.’‘In Latin America, men often spend 20-40 per cent of the household’s income on alcohol, as well as further spending on tobacco, gambling and prostitutes.’‘The Challenger space shuttle disaster in 1986 is an example of state-initiated corporate crime.

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