Arts & Humanities Cognitive Science and Classical Studies: The Chance for a Constructive Dialogue Read more
Academia & Publishing Rethinking Accessible Research with Subscribe to Open: The Story So Far Read more
Arts & Humanities Engaged Research: How Far Should We Go? Jehovah’s Witnesses are banned in Russia and seek support from the academic community. How far should we go to help them? A comment on the dilemmas of engaged research.
Arts & Humanities Lord Beaverbrook, the Business Tycoon Who Loved Tomato Soup William Maxwell Aitken, also known as Lord Beaverbrook, was one of the most influential figures in British politics and society in the first half of the 20th Century – and he had a little-known culinary passion.
Arts & Humanities Was Karl Marx Right All Along? 150 years after the publication of his most important book, Capital, Karl Marx’s works are still worth reading – but we shouldn’t jump to the conclusion that today’s economic realities are proving Marx right once and for all.
Science & Technology The Fall of the Apple and the General Theory of Relativity Can the basic concepts of the general theory of relativity be illustrated geometrically with almost no math? To answer this question, let’s reconsider Newton’s well-known problem of the falling apple.
Arts & Humanities ‘Forced Diversity’ In Movies Is Not a Thing – But Here’s Why Some People Are So Scared of It