There are an awful lot of novels about new motherhood. There are considerably less about non-motherhood. Mare is the latter, ...
Can you be good without God? Americans now say yes. A Pew Research survey reveals how dramatically American attitudes about ...
Readers will extend sympathy to me if I return to last Saturday’s column about Pierre Poilievre’s recent rhetorical outings.
Judging as a survival mechanism From an evolutionary perspective, monitoring others’ behaviour once helped humans survive. Early human communities were small and tightly knit. Cooperation was ...
As we continue to celebrate the centennial of the birth of Murray Rothbard, Wanjiru Njoya reminds us that he never ...
In his 17th century book “Leviathan,” English philosopher Thomas Hobbes described life as “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” This describes the state of nature of which humans are a part.
New Hampshire Libertarians' support for usury, opposition to regulation, and alarming statements on political violence are examined.
After recently writing about Singularity in this column, I felt it was time to address the elephant in the room – the difference between Artificial Intelligence and Human Consciousness in the Age of ...
By the time he died last week at the age of 96, Jürgen Habermas had been teaching the Germans how not to be beastly for some ...
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Uncovering bizarre Bible conspiracy theories
To many, the Bible is a spiritual — and moral — guidebook, depicting the word of God in all its glory. But to others, it's a puzzle, loaded with secrets, codes, and mysteries waiting to be unraveled.
But moral authority is fragile. When principles appear to apply only to some victims, credibility collapses. In Tame’s case, ...
The concern here is not a single controversial remark but a recurring pattern of rhetoric visible across Owens own public ...
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