Mark Sinclair
Mark Sinclair is a philosopher teaching at the University of Roehampton, London. He specialises in the history of French and German philosophy and is the author of Bergson (Routledge, 2020).
How the rise of digital technology facilitated lockdown
Philosopher Mark Sinclair warns against the slippery slope of technological thinking
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Grooming gangs and the truth
We should not give ammunition to deniers of the grooming gangs scandal
Why has Keir Starmer been so unpopular?
He was the perfect embodiment of a failing system
Babies need women
Leaving children with only men who are not their parents is foolish and dangerous
Stop ignoring the Islamisation of our democracy
The British state is bending to Islamism, not attempting to defeat it
Farewell to an intellectual giant
Patrick Nash pays tribute to the late
David Abulafia, fastidious champion of
Oxbridge’s academic standards
In defence of lunchtime drinks
Hannah Spencer is being a tedious puritan
Orbánism is not dead
The veteran Hungarian prime minister is going but his agenda lives on
Who wants to be a patriotic millionaire?
More taxation will not solve our economic woes
AI, religion and AI religion
Pope Leo is right to push back against the prophets of AI supremacy and AI doom
The Ghost Dance of Rejoin
There is no real argument for rejoining the EU — and nobody makes one
Leaving the ECHR would not make Britain like Russia
The case for opposing withdrawal is currently intellectually fatuous
Damaged brains and troubled souls
Dana White, of all people, should not be so dismissive of the salience of mental suffering
Paean to a green and pleasant land
The finest living example of that perennial English type, the countryman-writer
Our oriental roots
Marian Boswall salutes the early plant
hunters who revolutionised gardening
