Ray Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451 was published over seventy years ago, in 1953, and yet continues to be a source of ...
Are the loudest voices really the wisest? Doubt, not certainty, is the hallmark of true wisdom and so embracing uncertainty ...
Within days of his return to office, President Donald Trump unleashed a chilling display of authoritarianism, providing a ...
A British nonagenarian teams up with a French couple in an open relationship to put the United States on trial for crimes ...
The governments of Rwanda and South Africa must do everything possible to prevent any further escalation. Talks of war should ...
With echoes of Monty Python, the first feature from public domain fan and Mexican creative Aria Covamonas world premieres at Rotterdam: "There was no script for this movie but a method." ...
In the digital age, we face new questions about memory. In a world that’s staring at polarised histories and contested identities, the study of memory offers a lens for understanding the complexities ...
Bertrand Russell, for instance, serves as a reminder of intellectual bravery in dark times. Today, such moral clarity is rare but not extinct. Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, who led the National ...
There is an increasing trend of moral censure by courts, which has a chilling effect on people with alternative life ...
In politics as in life, the stupid person causes others to lose and gains nothing for himself.
Barton Swaim leads his anatomy of stupidity (“Biden, Trump and the Meaning of Stupidity,” op-ed, Jan. 13) with an astringent quip from Bertrand Russell: “The trouble is that in the modern ...