How the photographer Justine Kurland reframes utopia in the radical freedom of teenage girls, women and outsider communities ...
Should deaf parents be able to select for a deaf child? On the ethics of parental choice and ‘designer babies’ ...
Generative AI sheds new light on the underlying engines of metaphor, mood and reinvention in six decades of songs ...
Scientific progress depends on disagreement. So why are vaccine sceptics and other science critics not worth listening to?
In Southwestern China, a filmmaker follows her father on a search for his childhood home, reshaped by history and time ...
‘The longer the trip, the more healing occurs,’ says the geologist Peter Winn, who has been leading expeditions down the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon since the 1960s. ‘Healing happens for people ...
It’s a question that’s reverberated through the ages – are humans, though imperfect, essentially kind, sensible, good-natured creatures? Or are we, deep down, wired to be bad, blinkered, idle, vain, ...
is Board of Governors Professor of Law at Rutgers University School of Law in New Jersey, US; visiting professor of philosophy at the University of Lincoln, UK; and honorary professor of philosophy at ...
is an associate director of the Yale-Hastings programme in ethics and health policy at Yale University and a research fellow in the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford.
is a lecturer in philosophy at Royal Holloway, University of London. She researches in the areas of metametaphysics and the philosophy of logic, and has published her work in various philosophy ...
In 1979, a death-defying English handyman named Fred Dibnah (1938-2004) became something of a national folk hero after the BAFTA-winning documentary Fred Dibnah: Steeplejack first aired on the BBC.
This feminist housing collective has endured for 75 years. Now, a new generation is moving in, bringing change – and men ...
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