Thursday, 30 April 2026Live edition · Latest version
TheFrontier
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Section · 100 stories

Philosophy

§Signals

§ 02 Recent

Latest arrivals
The Calculus of Risk: Security, Openness, and the Future of Large-Scale Public Gatherings
Philosophy

The Calculus of Risk: Security, Openness, and the Future of Large-Scale Public Gatherings

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The Missing Middle: Why AI Hype Is Outpacing Economic Reality
Philosophy

The Missing Middle: Why AI Hype Is Outpacing Economic Reality

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The Grassroots Resistance to Artificial Intelligence: A Crisis of Social Trust
Philosophy

The Grassroots Resistance to Artificial Intelligence: A Crisis of Social Trust

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The Intellectual Reckoning of the Anti-Woke Movement Under Trump
Philosophy

The Intellectual Reckoning of the Anti-Woke Movement Under Trump

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The Architecture of Illusion: Fascist Propaganda and the Modern Political Lexicon
Philosophy

The Architecture of Illusion: Fascist Propaganda and the Modern Political Lexicon

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The Private Credit Expansion: Structural Shifts and the Illusion of Stability
Philosophy

The Private Credit Expansion: Structural Shifts and the Illusion of Stability

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The Architecture of Resilience: Emma Grede and the Economics of Radical Honesty
Philosophy

The Architecture of Resilience: Emma Grede and the Economics of Radical Honesty

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
The UK’s AI Regulatory Pivot: Navigating Divergence from the European Model
Philosophy

The UK’s AI Regulatory Pivot: Navigating Divergence from the European Model

27 de abr. de 2026 · 5 min
Anthropic's Mythos and the Economics of Artificial Scarcity
Philosophy

Anthropic's Mythos and the Economics of Artificial Scarcity

26 de abr. de 2026 · 4 min

§ 03 Editor's picks

  1. 01
    Philosophy · Bloomberg — Technology

    Beijing’s Regulatory Normalization of the Gig Economy Architecture

    China's new labor framework for platform workers signals a structural shift from ad-hoc intervention to a codified, state-managed model of the digital gig economy.

  2. 02
    Philosophy · Financial Times — Technology

    Musk v. Colorado: The Lawsuit That Asks Whether AI Can Be Held Accountable

    A legal challenge to Colorado's AI anti-discrimination law surfaces a question democracies have barely begun to answer: can a system that cannot explain itself be held responsible for harm?

  3. 03
    Philosophy · The New York Times — Technology

    When the Bettor Is Also the Player: Prediction Markets Face Their Integrity Crisis

    A soldier's alleged wager on a U.S. military operation he was part of reveals the structural vulnerability at the heart of prediction markets.

  4. 04
    Philosophy · The New York Times Magazine

    The Ethics Column as Moral Laboratory: What Adultery Dilemmas Reveal About Responsibility

    A reader's confession about an affair with a friend's wife reopens enduring questions about disclosure, complicity, and the limits of individual moral duty.

  5. 05
    Philosophy · 3 Quarks Daily

    The Long Lineage of Letting Go

    Modern mindfulness and psychotherapy are often presented as new-age breakthroughs, but their roots reach back to a shared ancient realization: the necessity of accepting impermanence.

§ 06 More stories

12 of 76
When Mathematics Hits Its Limits: Hamkins on the Multiverse of Truth
PhilosophyVídeo · 232min

When Mathematics Hits Its Limits: Hamkins on the Multiverse of Truth

The Explanatory Void of "Culture"
Philosophy

The Explanatory Void of "Culture"

When social scientists use a single word to explain every complex human phenomenon, they risk saying nothing at all.

The High Stakes of Foresight
Philosophy

The High Stakes of Foresight

In antiquity, failed prophets faced execution. Today, we trade capital for certainty, though the impulse to map the unknown remains unchanged.

The Case Against the Liberal Bogeyman
Philosophy

The Case Against the Liberal Bogeyman

Legal scholar Cass Sunstein argues that blaming a political framework for societal decay mistakes a set of principles for a malevolent historical actor.

The Neurophilosophical Case for Paul Churchland
Philosophy

The Neurophilosophical Case for Paul Churchland

As the world grapples with the ontological implications of large language models, the decades-old work of Paul Churchland provides a necessary, and often overlooked, conceptual map.

The Texture of Experience
Philosophy

The Texture of Experience

A violent encounter reveals the fundamental challenge of historical narrative: capturing the visceral reality of the moment.

The Porous City: Cape Town’s Baboons and the End of Urban Isolation
Philosophy

The Porous City: Cape Town’s Baboons and the End of Urban Isolation

In South Africa, intelligent primates are blurring the lines between human infrastructure and the natural world.

The Pathology of the Mind Virus
Philosophy

The Pathology of the Mind Virus

Elon Musk’s rightward pivot began not with traditional politics, but with a cybernetic theory of how ideas infect the collective consciousness.

The Cruel Beauty of Catherine Breillat
Philosophy

The Cruel Beauty of Catherine Breillat

A new collection of interviews reveals the surprising classical influences and uncompromising philosophy behind the French director’s transgressive cinema.

The Transactional Pivot: How Pakistan Decoded the New Diplomacy
Philosophy

The Transactional Pivot: How Pakistan Decoded the New Diplomacy

By leaning into critical minerals and cryptocurrency, Islamabad has transformed a fraught relationship with the U.S. into a strategic mediation role.

The Architecture of the End: Assessing the Realism of AI Doom
Philosophy

The Architecture of the End: Assessing the Realism of AI Doom

As researchers sketch out scenarios of total loss of control, the line between speculative fiction and existential risk assessment is beginning to blur.

Beyond the Invisible Hand: Adam Smith’s Moral Architecture
Philosophy

Beyond the Invisible Hand: Adam Smith’s Moral Architecture

Long before he became the patron saint of the free market, Adam Smith argued that the foundation of human society was not utility, but sympathy.