Good Faith
Daniel Lazare : Religion
Two authors posit very different views on the problem of religious conflict in a supposedly secular age.

Daniel Lazare : Religion
Two authors posit very different views on the problem of religious conflict in a supposedly secular age.
Two writers explore the perversion of our collective imagination and the ways that science and myth shape our understanding of spirituality.
Jackson Lears : Public Figures & Intellectuals
A new biography of William James portrays a man who made a brilliant career of asking tough questions.
Philosopher Walter Benjamin married Marxism and theology in an attempt
to give hope to the hopeless.
Nikolai Bukharin's Philosophical Arabesques is more than a
cul-de-sac on the road from Marx to Stalin; the book defines a
political path still not taken.
Jackson Lears : Cultural Criticism & Analysis
In Songs of Experience, Martin Jay examines modern debates over the relationship between theory and the lived world.
Two new books explore the work of philosophers Emmanuel Levinas and Martin Heidegger.
Hannah Arendt's The Origins of Totalitarianism is a political classic trapped in the era in which it was written.
John Gray : Cultural Criticism & Analysis
Kwame Anthony Appiah's Cosmopolitanism explores the middle ground between the universal laws of liberalism and relativism's blind respect for all differences.
The late socialist economist Harry Magdoff read Marx at
fifteen and never looked back. A self-educated co-editor of the
Monthly Review, he not only fought for a just and humane world;
he embodied his politics in the way he conducted his life.
Stefan Collini : Cultural Criticism & Analysis
Perry Anderson's Spectrum journeys through the abstract worlds of conservative and liberal intellectual thought, and leaves in its trail insights on the substance and style of ideas.
New biographies of Rousseau and Voltaire help us appreciate how
very fragile the eighteenth century's great movement of ideas was, and how remarkable it is that the Enlightenment not only survived but flourished.
Arthur Danto talks about art in America, the rise of pluralism and how The Nation changed his life.
Jonathan Rée : Islam & Muslims
Foucault and the Iranian Revolution details the story of Foucault's induction into journalism as a political correspondent in Iran.
Vivian Gornick : Feminism & Women
A new biography of one of the Enlightment's most remarkable thinkers.
Martha Nussbaum : Sex & Sexuality
A biography of Utilitarian philosopher Henry Sidgwick sheds new light on life in the Victorian era.
Philosophers get attention only when they appear to be doing something sinister.
Paul Savoy : George W. Bush Administration
The crimes at Abu Ghraib are a direct expression of the kind of war we are waging in Iraq.


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