Most morally objectionable actions are so because they harm others. Stealing, lying, breaking agreements, causing physical ...
Tallis in Wonderland Revisiting the Ontological Argument Raymond Tallis contends that a definition of God cannot necessitate ...
Articles Quantum Physics & Indian Philosophy Punit Kumar and Sanjeev Kumar Varshney look into entangled worlds. Our deepening ...
Thus, for modern-day followers of both Rousseau and Locke, forced vaccination should be seen as ethically justified during ...
Articles Can AI Teach Our Grandmothers To Suck Eggs? Louis Tempany wonders whether the problem is with the machines or with ...
“But the primates?” James muttered. “What about them? Where do they fit into this ‘peace’?” He glanced at the row of cages ...
The ambition for de-extinction resonates with transhumanism – a movement that champions using technology to enhance human, ...
Articles Macmurray on Relationship Jeanne Warren presents aspects of John Macmurray’s philosophy of the personal. It was good to see an article on John Macmurray (1891-1976) in ...
Karl Sigmund is an emeritus professor of mathematics at the University of Vienna. He has made major contributions to evolutionary game theory and to the history of the Vienna Circle, who met regularly ...
Philosophy Shorts Philosophers on Chocolate by Matt Qvortrup ‘More songs about Buildings and Food’ was the title of a 1978 album by the rock band Talking Heads. It was about a ...
As well as de-extinction, our ‘moral issues’ theme includes articles on four other issues with a strong ethical dimension: vaccination; job searches; disabled rights and climate change.
We should all live according to Nature. No, I don’t mean that we should run naked into the forest and hug trees (though there’s nothing necessarily wrong with that). I mean that if we want to be happy ...