Protecting Women’s Volleyball—Then and Now When I played pro volleyball twenty years ago, I never heard anyone seriously argue that biological differences between men and women aren’t important. Such a claim would have been laughable. Megan Willis 4 Feb 2025 · 7 min read
Architecture as Revenge Brady Corbet’s panoramic epic, ‘The Brutalist,’ may be technically brilliant, but it is a cheat and a fraud. Charlotte Allen 3 Feb 2025 · 15 min read
Podcast #270: ‘The Politics of the Academy Have Been Defeated’ Quillette podcast host Jonathan Kay speaks with Yale English professor-turned-essayist William Deresiewicz, who argues that Americans—many Democrats included—are fed up with campus-style progressive radicalism. Quillette 1 Feb 2025 · 9 min read
Evolutionary Psychology in the Humanities: Shakespeare’s Othello Othello and Iago represent two enduring behaviours whose conflicts have shaped much of humanity’s theory of mind and moral emotions to the present day. Helen Pluckrose 31 Jan 2025 · 17 min read
The Open Society and Its New Enemies What Karl Popper’s classic can teach us about the threats facing democracies today. Matt Johnson 29 Jan 2025 · 27 min read