13 Mar2020

Cosmic catastrophe always there if you look for it

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
Cosmic catastrophe always there if you look for it

In one of his last works, written a decade after he had defined ­enlightenment as “daring to know”, Immanuel Kant identified what he regarded as one of the greatest threats to reason: the human tendency to seek, in ever-changing realitie­s, a sign of the End of Days.

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05 Mar2020

Ironically, the virus firms up Xi’s position – for now

Posted in Op eds

Ironically, the virus firms up Xiʼs position – for now

As governments and central banks scramble to restore confidence and support economic activity, the impacts of the coronavirus pandemic remain clouded in uncertainty.

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21 Feb2020

Foolish ‘alien’ ruling turns indigenous gap into a chasm

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Whatever its intentions, the High Court’s decision in Love and Thoms does indigenous Australians no favours.

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10 Feb2020

China’s flawed reaction to the coronavirus

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

When the great cholera epidemics of the 19th century began in 1820, no one had any idea what had struck. Here was a disease of astonishing ferocity, as terrifying as the plague and seemingly as unstoppable, that was rapidly making its way from the Far East towards Europe.

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27 Jan2020

Thinking for ourselves — precious and threatened

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Seventy-five years ago, as the war raged with unrelenting ferocity, Australia’s daily papers reported, typically in a snippet at the bottom of page 4, that on what is now Australia Day a “terrible concentration camp” had been captured at Oswiecim, in southwestern Poland.

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20 Jan2020

Roger Scruton, heroic champion of art and truth

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It may be the fate of most public intellectuals to become more and more public and less and less intellectual; it was never that of the late Roger Scruton.


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