Stephen John worries about the government’s favourite slogan.
On Being Me: A Personal Invitation to Philosophy: a review
Emrys Westacott reviews On Being Me: A Personal Invitation to Philosophy, by J. David Velleman.
Pandemic Playlist
Jean Kazez on some philosophically interesting distractions.
Social Risk Preference and Pandemic Management
Don Ross reports on a way to match policy with preferences.
Privacy During the Pandemic and Beyond
Carissa Véliz on privacy challenges in a changed world.
Democracy and the Virus
Christoph Schuringa asks what concept the Covid-19 crisis demands.
Philosophy, in a sense
Constantine Sandis says, death to mortality.
Pandemic Transformative Experience
Havi Carel and Ian James Kidd explain how COVID-19 is changing us.
The Mind-Body Myth and Thinking in the Pandemic
Lauren Slater on the perils of online learning for essentially embodied thinkers.
Work Cut Out for Us
Alexander Douglas examines Covid-19 and the Job Guarantee.
Morality in the Time of a Pandemic
Barry C. Smith on how the present crisis hones our sense of right and wrong.
Issue 90 Reviews: introduction
We’re counting on pharmaceutical companies to save humanity from the virus that’s wreaking havoc with life around the world, but can they help in the more personal and intimate sphere of love and romance? Brian Earp and Julian Savulescu explore the question in the book Love Drugs, which is reviewed in this issue by Troy […]