Fairness and equality

Photo of yellow taxis on Brooklyn Bridge with New York City skyline in the background on a cloudy day.

The mathematical case against blaming people for their misfortune

Complexity science reveals the hard limits of our predictive abilities, and makes a mathematical case for compassion

by David Kinney

Photo of a cobblestone street with colourful buildings and a red car. People are walking and talking on a sunny day.

What is a minimally good life and are you prepared to live it?

Would you be willing to swap your life with that of the least fortunate person in your society? A philosophical test for justice

by Nicole Hassoun

Photo of a child in a pink coat holding an adult’s hand in a room with crates containing canned goods.

Why we shouldn’t push a positive mindset on those in poverty

Living in poverty is not caused by a faulty mindset, it’s a response to scarcity and marginalisation

by Jennifer Sheehy-Skeffington

Photo of two men posing for a picture indoors, one in a red coat, the other in a colourful suit with a graphic design.

Adam Smith warned us about sympathising with the elites

Sympathy is both key to human psychology and source of much of our misery. For Adam Smith, the philosophical life is the cure

by Blake Smith

Photo of a pair of yellow rubber gloves on a white background.
LOVE

The problem with love is deciding who’s doing the dishes

The modern rhetoric of love is all about caring and sharing, and very little about equality and justice. Can philosophy help?

by Patricia Marino

A blue sports car and a grey luxury car parked on a city street with people and a Christian Dior shop in the background.
GENDER

The ‘masculinity crisis’ is actually a crisis of self-esteem

There’s a modern belief that talent or effort can carry anyone to the top. It’s a myth that’s especially harmful to men

by Leo Rogers

Photo of a large poster depicting a woman with blonde hair, with a person walking in the foreground.

The cult of being confident and why it doesn’t help women

By making women solely responsible for their own empowerment, the culture of confidence masks the true causes of inequality

by Rosalind Gill & Shani Orgad

A classical painting of two women and a man in a lavishly decorated room with ornate furniture and clothing, 19th century style.
ETHICS

The curious paradox in how we address each other today

While honouring people’s preferred pronouns, we’ve begun to neglect forms of formal address. Perhaps we need a rethink

by David Benatar

Photo of two elderly women walking together on a city pavement, with a red bus and two other people in the background.

Quit the millennial bashing – generationalism is bad science

‘Boomer’ and ‘Gen Z’ seem like handy ways of sorting people, but they are more cultural creations than natural phenomena

by Cort W Rudolph

Ancient Roman mosaic depicting a woman in ornate attire with a smaller figure holding a cornucopia beside her.

Musonius Rufus: Roman Stoic, and avant-garde feminist?

For Musonius Rufus, the Stoic feminist, enduring things as they are is no obstacle to striving for things as they should be

by Massimo Pigliucci

Futuristic painting with diverse people on a hill overlooking a cityscape blending nature, ancient monuments and advanced tech.

Let everyone sparkle: psychotechnology in the year 2067

In the year 2067, the decorations are not the only things that sparkle. We ourselves glow and fizz with psychotechnology

by Eric Schwitzgebel

Photo of a child in a blue gingham shirt with yellow badges featuring positive messages and symbols on the chest.

Teaching self-confidence can backfire and perpetuate inequality

It’s true that self-confidence is beneficial, but the way in which it’s often taught is misguided and can be harmful

by Eddie Brummelman & Kelly Ziemer

Painting of a forest at night with a small house and dimly lit sky visible through the trees.

Is modern asceticism about conformity or quiet revolution?

From detoxes to slow food, today’s asceticism is often about fitting in. But we can rediscover its transformative power

by Iryna Mykhailova

A judge with a stern expression in a courtroom wearing a black robe standing in front of a US flag.

A lawyer’s view of irrelevant influences in the courtroom

Psychology studies cast doubt on old assumptions about legal objectivity. Lawyers and laypeople alike should take notice

by Samu Czabán

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GENDER

In more prosperous societies, are men and women more similar?

How much the sexes differ psychologically depends on how fair and wealthy a country is. But not in the way you’d think

by Kåre Hedebrant & Agneta Herlitz

Photo of intense football match action with players crowded near the goal attempting to block or score a goal.

In sport, as in life, tactical fouling is fundamentally wrong

Tactical or professional fouling is a familiar, accepted practice in team sports. But is it ever the right thing to do?

by George Letsas & Saladin Meckled-Garcia