Two new books – "Insurgent Empire" and "Hostile Environment" – take on Britain's national myths, confronting their racist legacy.
Q&A with Alice Roberts and Andrew Copson on "The Little Book of Humanism: Universal lessons on finding purpose, meaning and joy".
Many of us are currently self-diagnosing, but as philosopher Georges Canguilhem argued, disease is not a fixed category.
Q&A with Raymond Tallis
The pandemic has accelerated a trend ongoing for centuries. Let’s call it what it is: alienation.
Before writing her realist masterpieces, the novelist George Eliot spent much of her time translating the philosophy of Spinoza.
Five years after the deadly attack on the Charlie Hebdo magazine, trials have begun. Is it still meaningful to say "Je Suis Charlie"?
Q&A with William Davies, author of "This Is Not Normal: The Collapse of Liberal Britain".
The decision to not have kids on ethical grounds is no longer a fringe, Western trend
Out now – featuring Peter Geoghegan on the US funders of European hate, Kaya Genç on Turkey’s Covid-19 clampdown and Ting Guo on divide and rule in Hong Kong.