Author name: Editor

Climbing the Real Mountain

Rebecca Glass on the importance of fables of ‘the really real world’. John Dewey criticizes our desire for the transcendental and supernatural as inimical to growth and education. Yearning for an otherworldly reality is “vicious in the separation of desire and thought,” an “asylum from effort,” and thus also from development (Human Nature and Conduct). …

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The Truth about Heresy?

Grant Bartley lays down the law in favour of the ‘right’ sort of heresy. “Religions are kept alive by heresies, which are really sudden explosions of faith. Dead religions do not produce them.” Gerald Brenan Thoughts in a Dry Season. “A heretic is a person who offers too good a criticism of the authorities,” Brant …

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Plato’s Myths

Neel Burton asks why the master reasoner turned to launching legends. Perhaps the most famous allegory in philosophy is Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, in which Plato, via Socrates, compares people who lack philosophical training to prisoners who have spent their entire lives in an underground cave and don’t realise that there is a vast …

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Hacking the Brain

Could advances in technology soon give us perfect knowledge of other minds? Bora Dogan investigates. I may not know what you’re thinking, but I know a machine that can – several, in fact. With names like Cerebus and BrainGate, these machines wouldn’t sound out of place in a sci-fi movie, but they’re real and they’re …

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