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Le Sentier des Idées 22- 01- 25

Why Greenland Matters

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2025

The Hezbollah Wildcard

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2025

The Supreme Court Judges TikTok

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2025

Trade Restrictions On Kazakhstan Make No Sense

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-12-2024

South Korea’s Democracy Endured Yoon’s Authoritarian Nostalgia, but Trilateral Cooperation May Not

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-12-2024

The Hezbollah Wildcard

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-12-2024

What Will Hezbollah Do Next?

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-12-2024

Is Washington Serious About Leaving Iraq?

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-12-2024

Jonathan Haidt says he knows what’s driving the teen mental-health crisis: addictive, distraction-laden, horror-filled apps like Instagram and TikTok.

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 07-12-2024

Reassessing William the Conqueror
In the popular imagination, William the Conqueror is, without doubt, the villain, yet the sources we have for his life are ambivalent.

SOURCE:History Today
DATE: 07-10-2024

The Death of the Magazine
Or what happens when journalism forgets about quality writing

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 14-09-2024

Conservatives are rare among professors. Does it matter?

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 14-09-2024

We may be close to rediscovering thousands of texts that had been lost for millennia. Their contents may reshape how we understand the Ancient World.

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 14-09-2024

What Don’t We Know?
We have a lot to learn from studying our ignorance.

SOURCE:The New Yorker
DATE: 10-09-2024

Be Mean
The Case for Truth

SOURCE:The Hedgehog Review
DATE: 07-09-2024

Hayek, the Accidental Freudian
The economist was fixated on subconscious knowledge and dreamlike enchantment—even if he denied their part in his relationships.

SOURCE:The New Yorker
DATE: 07-09-2024

The Perpetual Quest for a Truth Machine
Why human attempts to mechanize logic keep breaking down.

SOURCE:Nautilus
DATE: 14-07-2024

ChatGPT will kill off the Romantic genius
Art has always relished the chaos of technology

SOURCE:UnHerd
DATE: 21-02-2024

How Anna Weyant Became The Most Talked About Painter In The Art World

SOURCE:GQ
DATE: 21-02-2024

An Open Marriage Manifesto?
Molly Roden Winter’s nonmonogamy memoir offers sadness in abundance

SOURCE:Commonweal magazine
DATE: 21-02-2024

Terry Eagleton on Hegel
Seeds of What Ought to Be

SOURCE:London Review of Books
DATE: 21-02-2024

Against the current
How Thoreau challenged our understanding of work, technology and the natural world

SOURCE:London Review of Books
DATE: 21-02-2024

We Need a Free Press. Do We Need The Free Press? Bari Weiss reinvents neoconservatism.

SOURCE:The New Yorker
DATE: 21-02-2024

Give Us Something to Look At
Why ornament matters in architecture

SOURCE:The American Scolar
DATE: 21-02-2024

The Homesick Composer
Sergei Rachmaninoff may have taken American citizenship in 1943, but his heart and soul remained in his Russian past

SOURCE:The American Scolar
DATE: 21-02-2024

The Hold of the Dead Over the Living: A Conversation with Jill Lepore

SOURCE:Los Angeles Review of Books
DATE: 21-02-2024

The Hezbollah Wildcard

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-02-2024

Why Turkey and Egypt are Friendly Again

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-02-2024

What the Ukraine War, Taiwan, and Gaza Have in Common

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-02-2024

Silk Road Rivalries

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 21-02-2024

Against Moral clarity
simplistic certitudes have no place at institutions of higher learning

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 14-02-2024

The Economists Who Found the Richest People of All Time
Branko Milanovic and Guido Alfani study inequality over the course of human history. The results are not good.

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 03-02-2024

Their Bodies Were Donated to Harvard. Then They Went Missing The generous donors gave their bodies to science — but they were snuck out of the morgue and sold to a dark and ghastly corner of the oddities world

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 03-02-2024

Revisiting Madonna-ology in the Era of Taylor Swift Studies

SOURCE:Los Angeles Review of Books
DATE: 03-02-2024

How 'woke' is the campus left?
New books by Yascha Mounk and Susan Neiman challenge trends in progressive politics

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 03-02-2024

Against the current
How Thoreau challenged our understanding of work, technology and the natural world

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 03-02-2024

The Fate of Free Will

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 03-02-2024

Galaxy brains
On Lenin Walked on the Moon: The Mad History of Russian Cosmism

SOURCE:The New Criterion
DATE: 03-02-2024

ANTIDOT TO MARX
America’s Philosopher: John Locke in American Intellectual Life

SOURCE:London Review of Books
DATE: 03-02-2024

Zola understood our lust for shopping 'The Ladies' Paradise' captures how consumerism was born

SOURCE:UnHerd
DATE: 14-01-2024

Why Some Academics Are Reluctant to Call Claudine Gay a Plagiarist
A political-science professor wrestles with his role in the drama surrounding the former Harvard president.

SOURCE:The New Yorker
DATE: 14-01-2024

Censorship is widespread among scientists and has grown worse in recent decades .

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 14-01-2024

The Oh-So Predictable Milton Friedman

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 14-01-2024

The Rise of the Sectarian University

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 14-01-2024

Their Bodies Were Donated to Harvard. Then They Went Missing

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 14-01-2024

The Hezbollah Wildcard

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2024

What Will Hezbollah Do Next?

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2024

Amid Global Transitions, Kazakhstan is an Emerging Swing Player

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2024

The Ukraine War Has Become a Giant Artillery Dual

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2024

$34 Trillion in Debt: Is America Headed for a Financial Crisis?

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2024

Israel Attacks Hamas Leadership in Lebanon: What’s Next?

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-01-2024

In 2024, the Tension Between Macroculture and Microculture Will Turn into War

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 14-12-2023

Amid Global Transitions, Kazakhstan is an Emerging Swing Player

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

Why TikTok is a National Security Threat

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

Latin America’s Hezbollah Problem

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

A Ticking Time Bomb in the East China Sea

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

Private Enterprise is America’s Key to the Modern Space Race

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

Silk Road Rivalries

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

Kazakhstan’s Lessons for the Climate Transition

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

France is Fueling the Flames of Conflict in the Middle East

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 03-12-2023

Fukushima Fallout Challenges Tokyo's Diplomacy with Seoul

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-09-2023

Ukraine’s Strongest Weapon Is Societal Resilience

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-09-2023

Why Republicans Are Increasingly Opposing Aid to Ukraine

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-09-2023

The Side of Huawei We Don’t Know

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-09-2023

SpaceX’s Starship Rocket Is Essential for America’s Space Ambitions

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-07-2023

America Should Not Follow Europe’s Terrible Example on Tech Antitrust

SOURCE:The National Interest
DATE: 12-07-2023

A Tale of Literary and Financial Debauchery: On Joel Warner’s “The Curse of the Marquis de Sade”

SOURCE:Los Angeles Review of Books
DATE: 17-05-2023

Family Matters
Everyday life in the Neo-Assyrian empire.

SOURCE:Lapham’s Quarterly
DATE: 17-05-2023

Birth is humanity’s greatest under-explored subject. I had that thought over thirteen years ago, when I first gave birth and realized how very little in my upbringing and education had prepared me for the experience

SOURCE:Commonweal magazine
DATE: 17-05-2023

When Junot Díaz was accused of sexual misconduct, he was working for Deborah Chasman at Boston Review. When she looked into the case, things got complicated... more »

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 29-04-2023

Behind the Scenes of Barack Obama’s Reading Lists Does the president really read all those books? The answer might surprise you

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 29-04-2023

Freud as Talmudist

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 29-04-2023

Orwell, Camus and truth
On honesty as an attitude

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 17-03-2023

Bemoaning breast enlargement, a philosopher makes the case for the “unmodified” body. But what of tattoos, cochlear implants, or even cutting one’s hair?... more »

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 17-03-2023

On the Need to Touch Grass
What happens when an entire generation loses itself in a world of abstractions?

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 17-03-2023

It’s Not Just Our Students — ChatGPT Is Coming for Faculty Writing And there’s little agreement on the rules that should govern it.

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 17-03-2023

John Guillory’s Nonalignment Pact
Is the prominent critic stuck in the ’90s — or the ’60s?

SOURCE:The Chronicle of Higher Education
DATE: 17-03-2023

The Art of the Shadow: How Painters Have Gotten It Wrong for Centuries

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 17-03-2023

From Frankfurt to Fox
The Strange Career of Critical Theory

SOURCE:The Hedgehog Review
DATE: 17-03-2023

The Mystery of Edgar Allan Poe
Nearly 175 years on, the writer’s death remains as mysterious as his literature. A new book reveals the roles of a jealous poet and a conniving doctor in keeping it so

SOURCE:Autres
DATE: 03-03-2023