Life (priest and poet say) is but a dream;
Articles of Note
“Nature and nurture aren’t separate forces — they’re a Möbius strip, endlessly looping back on each other”... more »
New Books
Through binges, bankruptcies, and depressive spells, Edgar Allan Poe knew where the best of him lay: in making art... more »
Essays & Opinions
Fairy tales are archetypal stories that seem to come from nowhere and to belong to everyone. This is an illusion... more »
Articles of Note
How to spot a fake masterpiece. In the exposure of artistic forgeries, it's the little things that give them away... more »
New Books
In the 18th century, hypochondria was a rarefied disease tied to leisure and luxury. Then the laboring classes began to develop it... more »
Essays & Opinions
Today we treat novels as salubrious stress relievers — kale smoothies for the soul. That overlooks their dark, diabolical potency... more »
Articles of Note
Toni Morrison’s audacious Dreaming Emmett.She planned to take the play to Paris, but it lasted only four weeks in Albany... more »
New Books
Dante’s divine… autofiction? The Commedia is not a “memoir” in the conventional sense, yet it’s a deeply personal reflection... more »
Essays & Opinions
The necessity of Martha Nussbaum. Her philosophy is never divorced from the messy, complex, and sometimes painful stuff of real life... more »
Articles of Note
The horrors of early pet food. In Victorian London, “cat’s meat men” pushed their carts of cheap offal and horsemeat up to 40 miles a day... more »
New Books
Van Gogh, age 32, arrived in Paris a "provincial rube" and “painter of no particular skill." Did the city really transform him?... more »
Essays & Opinions
Alice Gribbin: “Those who deem the nude in art a ‘sex object’ betray themselves as prudish and crass”... more »
Articles of Note
Disease that spreads through the air? In the words of one journalist in France in the 1860s, that was “just too fantastic to imagine”... more »
New Books
“The only people who connect ancient and modern Greece are tour guides, Fulbright scholars, and fascists”... more »
Essays & Opinions
What can the memoir of madness accomplish? It can force us to reckon with ugly things, not because they are titillating, but because they are true... more »
Articles of Note
“I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit.” Then came ChatGPT... more »
New Books
When it comes to sexual matters, the Bible is neither clear nor consistent. Diarmaid MacCulloch teases out the contradictions... more »
Essays & Opinions
“The alternative to a recovery of the liberal imagination … may be neither illiberalism nor the neoliberal status quo but a new barbarism”... more »
Articles of Note
“I have to prepare myself for a certain degree of loneliness.” In her 80s, Helen Garner focuses on her garden, her chickens, and her diary... more »
New Books
Many academics tolerate the metaphysical commitments of mainstream religionists. But a belief in the paranormal?... more »
Essays & Opinions
Technology has long been a boon to creativity, especially in film. But AI and its machine-managed flawlessness are different... more »
Articles of Note
As a utilitarian, Tyler Cowen believes that people do things for reasons. What’s his reason for wanting to know everything?... more »
New Books
Free speech and its discontents. “We cannot have truth and wisdom without accommodating error and folly”... more »
Essays & Opinions
What is intuition? The return of a lost memory? An unearned sense of certitude? A physician deals with losing his decisiveness... more »
Articles of Note
What Tom Wolfe wrought. Many journalists mimc his style. Few do the reporting that makes that style sing... more »
New Books
Here come the pedagogy gurus, with their gaseous abstractions and bureaucratic proceduralism... more »
Essays & Opinions
A victim of his own accessibility. Montaigne’s writing is categorized as “motivational self-help.” Don’t be fooled... more »
Articles of Note
Saudi Arabia’s pre-Islamic history, which it once condemned as idolatrous, is central to a new program encouraging tourism... more »
New Books
Experiencing an obscure, hyper-specific emotion? In some language, there’s probably a word for that... more »
Essays & Opinions
Dave Eggers’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius was a “big, huge mistake,” but one we should be grateful for... more »
Articles of Note
Most virtues come with no fine print, but the goodness of loyalty depends on its object. Vladimir Jankélévitch elaborated... more »
New Books
What is "woke"? An abundance of zeal, a lack of proportion, and self-interest masquerading as general interest... more »
Essays & Opinions
Social science has a rigor problem, and the common solutions — replication, public critique — are inefficient. It’s time for a new approach... more »
Articles of Note
Robert Caro has one sentence pinned to an index card above his Smith Corona Electra 210 typewriter: “The only thing that matters is on this page” ... more »
New Books
Stanley Fish goes to the movies. At 86, the "totalitarian Tinkerbell" is still at it, yoking legal theory to Hollywood production... more »
Essays & Opinions
When Fukuyama’s “The End of History?” came out over 35 years ago, it was roundly mocked. But he’s been proven right... more »
Articles of Note
Over time more species are seen as “intelligent” — dolphins, bees, and now, to some, even plants. Why?... more »
New Books
The debate over privacy has bogged down in stalemate between user agreements and opt-out buttons. We've lost sight of what privacy is for... more »
Essays & Opinions
Perry Anderson asks: Why is neoliberalism more powerful and pervasive an ideology than the liberalism on which it rests?... more »
Articles of Note
Decades before the internet, Harold Innis put his finger on a central paradox: Improvements in communication can make understanding more difficult... more »
New Books
Social psychology is a field in crisis. What’s the main problem: bad methods or bad ideas?... more »
Essays & Opinions
A plague of bad essays purports to explain how some distant historical event explains the present. Beware such relevance mongering... more »
Articles of Note
Among the hobbyists. They are often viewed as eccentric weirdos. They’re actually in the business of selling dreams... more »
New Books
A faithful pet, some liquor, books stacked just so — since Montaigne’s time the private library has been a place of quiet joy... more »
Essays & Opinions
The supremacy of finitude: Our lives, our species, and our universe will all someday come to an end. That should galvanize us... more »