The row over a new memorial on Budapest prompts a personal reflection from Toby Lichtig.
The best long-reads from the New Humanist this month.
Stephen Eric Bronner, the author of "The Bigot", discusses the defining features of bigotry and how it can be tackled.
Culture is neither passively consumed, nor handed down from on high, as the work of Stuart Hall and Richard Hoggart reminds us.
Belief in conspiracies surely comes from the same place as belief in gods – the human need to reassure ourselves that the world is ordered.
A compelling, unusual study in intellectual history.
From robotic hands to crowd-funded literature, from extremism in schools to assisted dying reform, these are the subjects we've been talking about over the last seven days
He spent a lifetime opposing war – but how well does the legacy of our most famous peace activist stand up to scrutiny? By Jonathan Rée
Terry Eagleton and Roger Scruton are the latest in a line of thinkers to suggest that, without religion, something is missing in our lives. They’re wrong, argues Peter Watson