Insights and analysis on learning, teaching, educational systems, and the transformation of knowledge in society.
Christmas pits two moral worlds against each other: presence that forms character versus delivery that replaces it.
Education
+1
A critique of LSE’s “Impact Economy” orthodoxy, exposing how impact metrics mask structural injustice and financialise morality under the guise of system change.
Economics
+2
If business wants to serve humanity, it must rewire its legal, financial, and ownership systems—not just preach management orthodoxy.
Academics pretend their theories abstract from the real world. Managers pretend they have no theory. Together, they perpetuate the system neither claims to be responsible for.
Anti-intellectualism is not disagreement—it is a political and rhetorical strategy that neutralizes critique by delegitimizing intellectual rigour.
A rigorous critique of how diversity ideology undermines truth-seeking by replacing epistemic standards with identity-based relativism.
Philosophy
+3
To pretend businesses can avoid shaping people is to deny both the reality of work and the responsibility every organization owes to human flourishing.
A critique of business schools’ claim to value-neutral teaching: why refusing to “moralise” is itself a moral—and political—choice with far-reaching consequences
A demolition of epistemic relativism as a self-refuting ideology eroding science, democracy, justice, and the very possibility of reason itself.
A critique of apolitical systems thinking, showing why real social change requires conflict, power, and a realist model of structure–culture–agency.
Recommended
Why top graduates are fleeing public service for finance—and what it means for democracy’s future.
Every leadership fad hides a contested ethic—and only philosophy can expose which, and why.
A critique of digital culture where visibility, not truth, dictates authority, and deep thinking is drowned by popularity.
Explore 33 illuminating myths about capitalism, revealing how markets, finance, and innovation really work—and what they never told you.
Business schools have sanctified profit maximization as law—ignoring centuries of philosophy and mounting evidence of harm; it’s time to rediscover moral purpose.
From Scholarly Integrity to Academic Celebrity: How Market Forces, Metrics, and Media Are Hollowing Out the University
Personal Development
Inspired by Descartes’ Rule #1: True education is not the accumulation of skills, but the cultivation of sound judgment and wisdom.