First Impressions
This week's competition, in which you have to identify a book from its opening sentence, is from the best-known work of a poet and critic: "An ambiguity, in ordinary speech, means something very...
This week's competition, in which you have to identify a book from its opening sentence, is from the best-known work of a poet and critic: "An ambiguity, in ordinary speech, means something very...
The Hand
Thinking it Through
Intellectual Impostures
Sartre - Camus and Sartre
Modern French Philosophy
Friedrich Nietzsche - Nietzsche and the Fate of Art
The Quality of Freedom
Economics for an Imperfect World
Enemies of Promise
"Many university student complaint procedures may not conform to basic principles of natural justice" - The Times Higher, March 26. Next please. You must be Wayne Timmins. Is that right? Yes, sir....
After all the hot air that has surrounded Steven Schwartz's review of higher education admissions, this week's report will leave many observers asking what the fuss was about. The five principles of...
The latest enrolments on foundation degrees may be bad news for target-obsessed civil servants and their political masters. But the fact that almost half of those taking the courses are over 30...
David Watson is as wrong as it is humanly possible to be ("Expansion first, quality later", April 2). He claims that "higher education participation at the levels now being achieved around the world...
Sir Howard Newby (News, April 2) does not see the contradiction between his vision of the civilising role of universities and the role of his funding council. The closure of civilising departments...