"By challenging others and by allowing others to challenge us, especially on the big issues, we can deepen our understanding, correct errors, and get nearer to the fullness of truth."
Melissa Lane on the Philosophy Bites Podcast episode titled "Melissa Lane on Plato, Rule, and Office." "[F]ar from advocating untrammeled absolutist power, the whole concern of the republic is how
"As in debates about privacy, someone sooner or later will say that anyone who has nothing to hide should not hide their face. But in an age of ubiquitous surveillance
G. John Ikenberry joins Victor Cha and John Hamre in writing How Global Governance Can Survive: With the Right Reforms, the G-7 Can Sustain the Rules-Based Order for Foreign Affairs
Professor Grigore Pop-Eleches discusses his research on empathy and support for Ukraine in light of the growing war fatigue for a Stanford REDS seminar, co-hosted by CDDRL.
"The Trump-Musk rift will reveal much about what kind of regime the Trumpists are really creating, and how far governing as a form of personal revenge might be pushed." Jan-Werner
"Americans are learning the hard way that simply exposing corruption takes you only so far. There is a long-running pattern of right-wing populists coming to power as great anti-corruption crusaders
"Noem made it clear in her letter that her weaponization of the state will not be confined to campus; she wrote that the “evils of anti-Americanism” have to be rooted
"It is now within the realm of possibility that a fate I never thought I would see may come about: an end to American pre-eminence in science and scholarship. Such
Frances Lee & Stephen Macedo on Why Institutions Failed During COVID Yascha Mounk, Frances Lee, and Stephen Macedo also ask if “noble lies” can be justified.
Princeton Alumni Weekly spoke with Layna Mosley, whose research explores the connections between domestic politics and the global economy, about tariffs and the long term effects.