Ideas
Our new financial masters
ByDangerous minds
ByDo we really need Rawls?
ByWhy Tocqueville matters
ByWho is criticism for?
ByThe problem with Peter Frankopan’s theory of history
ByWho is afraid of Martin Heidegger?
ByThe revolution will not be brought to you by ChatGPT
ByThe Washington consensus is dead
ByWe need a new history of the world
ByThe death of a church
ByYour own personal Jesus
ByThe farmers’ revolt against green politics
ByDune: Part Two depicts a world of ceaseless struggle – like our own
ByJudith Butler and the fear of gender
ByWhy men shouldn’t control artificial intelligence
ByThe narcotopian dilemma
ByThe QE theory of everything
ByLiberalism’s last laugh
ByBritain’s anti-Semitism problem
ByLabour’s “good jobs” agenda could be transformative
ByCaspar David Friedrich and the art of kitsch
ByThe man who lived at the end of history
ByJGA Pocock’s days of rage
By
Interviews and profiles
The climate crisis
The Battered Kingdom of Conservatism
Rescuing conservatism
A revival of civic institutions is needed to restore an alienated and divided country.
ByThe dark heart of the Tory Party
By reckoning with Britain’s nasty side, the Conservatives have claimed its soul.
ByThe uncertain future of the Tory party
If Rishi Sunak loses the next general election, who will inherit the battered kingdom of British conservatism?
By
Science and technology
Economics
The crisis of liberalism
History and Culture