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The Ethics of Fat Shaming
Charlotte Curran tells us precisely why fat shaming is unethical.
Recognition & Protest
Andrew Hyams recognises what fuels protest movements.
Deleuze & Guattari's Friendly Concepts
Karen Parham explores the collection of curious concepts Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari use in their organic perception of reality.
Is Election Meddling an Act of War?
Elad Uzan argues that although it may well be, this doesn’t necessarily justify a warlike response.
Phenomenology At The Beach
Chad Engelland philosophically analyses the experience of being at the seaside.
Abortion & Artificial Wombs
Ji Young Lee and Andrea Bidoli discuss how artificial womb technology will shape the abortion rights discussion.
Nonhuman Persons
Gerard Elfstrom asks what such creatures, if they exist, would be like and how much it matters morally.
Bicycling in Brussels
Seán Moran suspects simple stereotypes.
A Stoic Approach to Racism
Frank Thermitus says prepare for the worst to achieve the best.
Thinking About Thinking
Raymond Tallis reflexes his mind muscle.
Camus, The Plague And Us
Ray Boisvert on Albert Camus, Thomas Merton and a call to be a healer in a crisis.
Sci Fi & The Meaning Of Life
Shai Tubali sees how non-human minds mirror our condition back to us. [CONTAINS SPOILERS!]
From Conceptual Art To Social Art
Peter Benson watches this ‘art movement’ with raised eyebrows.
The Not So Benign World of Photography
Atika Qasim questions her own, and others’, motives for taking photos.
The Moore the Merrier
Gary Cox opens up G.E. Moore’s ethics, and his open question argument.
Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)
Hilarius Bogbinder thinks about a political theorist who saw action as good thought.
FLASH Philosophy
M.G. Piety quickly considers condensed contemplation.
Art & Morality A Bittersweet Symphony
Jessica Logue conducts an investigation into their relationship.
A Philosophical Autobiography
Robin Wynyard reflects on his philosophical journey, and how this has influenced his thoughts about ageing.
The Limits Of Argument
Howard Darmstadter asks why rational debate doesn’t often change minds.
The Limits of Computation
Apostolos Syropoulos goes back to BASICs to consider whether the human brain is a computer.
The View From Somewhere Else
Andy Owen travels to see various perspectives from various perspectives.
Plato (427-347 BC)
William Dante Deacon looks at the life of a founding father of Western philosophy.
I Don't Believe It!
Dene Bebbington presents a couple of bad but popular arguments.
Criticising Science
Martin Kusch and Alexander Reutlinger discuss the ways science is criticised.
Further Animal Liberation
John Tamilio III augments the arguments of Peter Singer.
Escaping Scepticism with Hegel & Heidegger
Benedict O’Connell asks, must reasoning ultimately rest upon mere assumption?
Elements of Truth
Michael Baumann lists eight essential questions for judging the reliability of information.
Anxious Idleness
Why are we incapable of guilt-free leisure? Jacob Snyder says, blame John Locke!
Do We Want To Be Free?
Siobhan Lyons discovers that free will doesn't come for free