
Enlightenment without end
If we no longer seek virtue and salvation, we should blame the triumvirate of Machiavelli, Hobbes and Adam Smith.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
If we no longer seek virtue and salvation, we should blame the triumvirate of Machiavelli, Hobbes and Adam Smith.
ByA new poem by Janet Murray.
ByBritain looks down on nations ruled by dictators and corrupt demagogues. But in Johnson we have a charlatan of…
ByKenneth Grahame charmed readers with The Wind in the Willows – but his personal life left tragedy in its…
ByStates such as Saudi Arabia, Russia and China are showing a brazen disregard for the rules-based international order.
ByIn the #MeToo era, a new biography examines the Indian leader’s strange relationships with women.
ByThe National Crime Agency is to investigate Banks over suspicions that he was “not the true source” of his…
ByThe novel is not a retelling of that great old tale, but rather a playful reconsideration, an invitation to…
ByThe rise of the flavoured sparkling water has been aided by increasing health-consciousness across the US.
ByAt times thematically heavy-handed, but nevertheless atmospheric, the film’s scaffolding is its three expansive central performances.
ByA new exhibition highlights the great difference between the two artists’ drawings: Klimt’s tend to be observations, Schiele’s are…
ByA hundred years after her murder, Luxemburg’s most vital insight remains that socialism and democracy are nothing without each other.
ByPlus: Royal Court’s ear for eye.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByMembership of independence group “Yes California” increased by 400 per cent in the wake of Donald Trump’s election.
ByMonogamy is difficult; desire waxes and wanes. Is “ethical non-monogamy” the answer?
ByThere isn’t much that Widows doesn’t do right or radically.
ByWe knew her name, the number of times her services had been engaged, and of a few short testimonials,…
ByThe new app replacing iPlayer Radio pushes the network’s podcasts to an exponentially growing audience.
ByThe villain of the piece is, of course, George Osborne – and it should be counted as part of his…
ByThe former Mail editor was a big beast of a Fleet Street that no longer exists. The very thought must make…
ByWhy are we so unable to deal with female intellectuals as complicated humans?
ByPaul’s memories are amazing, if erratic. He instantly recalls the first Catholic lord mayor, exchanges with several US presidents…
ByThe reality is that the Labour leader is not a soft touch and the shadow chancellor is not haunted…
ByA second referendum using a voting method that nobody understands would be a fitting end to the whole Brexit farce.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByToo many EU supporters are displaying the arrogance that led to defeat in the 2016 referendum.
ByThese strangely beguiling amphibious fish are fascinating for reasons that are hard to spell out.
ByI wasn’t pro-independence when there was a referendum on it, but now I’m here I begin to see the…
ByAs the KGB man tries to flee through a Moscow station, he is thwarted by crowds on their way to…
ByAn estimated one in 300 of the general population has an underlying heart condition predisposing them to SCD.
ByThe poet talks press freedom, Elvis Presley and The Simpsons.
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